Thursday, March 07, 2013

NY Times: Secretary of the Interior Nominee Sally Jewell Advances in Senate Confirmation Hearing

Interior Dept. Nominee Is Questioned on Public Land Use

WASHINGTON — Sally Jewell, President Obama’s nominee for interior secretary, deflected many of the questions she faced at her confirmation hearing Thursday but made clear she supports expanded oil and gas development on public lands and waters, including exploratory drilling off the North Slope of Alaska and seismic testing in the Atlantic Ocean.
“Leaning into oil and gas development is an important part of the mission of the Bureau of Land Management and also of the Department of Interior,” Ms. Jewell said, one of the four times she used a phrase popularized by Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook and author of “Lean In,” a book on the challenges confronted by women who are executives.
Ms. Jewell, chief executive of Recreational Equipment Inc. in Seattle, also faced questions on climate change, protection of endangered species, energy development on Indian lands and her role as a board member of a national parks advocacy organization.
The questions were generally polite from Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, and Ms. Jewell’s responses were for the most part noncommittal. She referred frequently to the need for balance between exploitation of federal lands for resource extraction and preservation of wilderness.
She also said climate change was real, but dodged questions about whether she supported a carbon tax to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases responsible for the warming planet. “A carbon tax is not something that would come before me, and the president has made it clear he is not pursuing a carbon tax at this point,” Ms. Jewell said.
She said she supported Mr. Obama’s so-called all-of-the-above energy strategy, including increased production of oil and gas as well as renewable energy on public lands.
Several Republican senators questioned her about her association with the National Parks Conservation Association, an advocacy organization for employees and visitors at national parks. Ms. Jewell is vice chairwoman of the board of directors of the group, which frequently sues the department over land-use decisions, parks policy and employee rights. Senator John Barrasso, Republican of Wyoming, said her work at the group was “unsettling” and demanded a pledge that she promise to recuse herself from any legal or regulatory matters involving it.
Ms. Jewell said she was one of 30 board members and had no authority on matters of litigation. She said that if she were confirmed and issues involving the conservation organization arose she would consult with Interior Department ethics officers before taking any action.
Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee, noted that Ms. Jewell’s résumé cites her work as a young woman as a construction worker on the Alaska oil pipeline, as a petroleum engineer in Colorado, as a commercial banker for 19 years and as chief executive of a billion-dollar company.
“My question is this,” Mr. Alexander said. “How’d you get appointed by this administration? You sound more like a nominee of a Republican administration.”
“I thought you were going to ask, ‘Why can’t you hold a job?’ ” Ms. Jewell responded.
Many of the committee members asked about home-state issues. Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, the senior Republican on the panel, said she was concerned about a recent Fish and Wildlife Service decision to block the building of a gravel airport access road through the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge in the Aleutian Islands. Ms. Murkowski called the decision an example of federal overreach.
“We need you to affirm that public lands provide not just a playground for recreational enthusiasts,” Ms. Murkowski said, “but also paychecks for countless energy producers, miners, loggers and ranchers.”

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