The resignation of EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt leaves Deputy Administrator Andrew Wheeler in charge of the agency. While Wheeler is most notable for being a lobbyist for coal companies, he also has a track record of lobbying to reduce protections for public lands in the name of expanded uranium mining. Wheeler joins a scandal-plagued cabinet led by investigation-prone Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.
As a lobbyist for Energy Fuels Resources, Andrew Wheeler asked the Interior Department to gut Bears Ears National Monument to allow for more uranium mining.
With Scott Pruitt’s resignation, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is now the most scandal-plagued cabinet member remaining.
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To the Editor:
In a recent article about Energy Fuels and Andrew Wheeler, now the acting administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Sentinel News left out several key facts that provide important context for our work together that we think is important for your readers to understand.
Mr. Wheeler represented Energy Fuels only for a few months in 2017, and our work was limited to matters related to the Department of the Interior and Department of Energy. None of this work was before EPA, and Mr. Wheeler withdrew from representing Energy Fuels completely when he was asked to stand for nomination as the EPA’s deputy administrator.
As for the Bears Ears National Monument, we have no claims or mines within its original boundaries. Energy Fuels proposed minor boundary adjustments to create buffers between the monument and our operations. This proposal affected only 2.5 percent of the monument. We never sought the 85 percent reduction the administration ultimately enacted.
We have consistently underscored the need for protecting culturally and historically important land in the region, and we support a permanent limit on future mining activity inside the monument’s original boundaries.
Mark Chalmers is president and CEO of Energy Fuels.