BLM Ditches 2024 Rule to Ease Public Lands Red Tape
Published Date: 5/12/2026
Rule
Summary
The Bureau of Land Management is canceling the 2024 Conservation and Landscape Health Rule to make land use simpler and more balanced. This change helps local leaders make decisions, boosts access to public lands, and cuts red tape that slowed down projects. The new rule takes effect on June 11, 2026, affecting anyone who uses or manages federal lands, with no new costs expected.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 2 mixed.
ACEC Rules Reverted to 1983 Framework
The BLM is restoring Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) regulations to the pre-2024 (1983-era) text, including reinstating prior procedures such as the earlier comment framework. This change governs how ACEC designations are made and managed under land use planning.
Restoration and Mitigation Leasing Removed
The final rule eliminates the 2024 Rule's restoration and mitigation leasing provisions (including 43 CFR 6102.4 and 6102.4.1), so third parties cannot obtain the specific mitigation/restoration leases created by the 2024 Rule. The BLM says existing authorities and partnerships remain available to support conservation without those leasing mechanisms.
Land Health Standards Requirements Rescinded
The rule rescinds the 2024 Rule provisions that expanded Land Health Standards (LHS) and related timing requirements (including a 10-year evaluation interval introduced by the 2024 Rule). The BLM will rely on the pre-2024 LHS framework in the grazing regulations and may consider future refinements in a separate rulemaking.
BLM Rule Cancelled; Effective June 11, 2026
The Bureau of Land Management is fully rescinding the 2024 Conservation and Landscape Health Rule, effective June 11, 2026. The rescission applies to anyone who uses or manages federal lands (BLM manages about 245 million acres) and the agency states there are no new costs expected from this regulatory change.
Cleanup, Mitigation, and Reclamation Obligations Stay in Place
Rescinding the 2024 Rule does not change existing obligations for cleanup, mitigation, or site restoration for permittees and lessees engaged in extractive uses; operators remain accountable for reclamation under current regulations and lease stipulations, and the BLM will continue to monitor compliance.
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