Sunday, June 14, 2026
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Senate passes defense spending bill ending Pentagon’s vaccine mandate; Sullivan and Murkowski duck issue

The $858 billion in national defense spending passed by the Senate on Thursday also rolled back the U.S. military’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate. Thirteen Republican senators fought to end the vaccine mandate for military members, but neither of Alaska’s senators were among them.

The bill now heads to President Joe Biden, after the House already approved the $858 billion National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2023.

“President Biden’s draconian military COVID vaccine mandate is a slap in the face to the men and women who pledged to serve our nation. My @SenateGOP colleagues and I led the fight to repeal the mandate,” wrote Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee.

The repeal of the military’s Covid vaccine mandate was the work of Republicans who pushed for it, including Sen. Ron Johnson, who also offered an amendment that would force the military to reinstate those it discharged for refusing to accept the Covid vaccine. His amendment did not pass.

The 13 GOP senators led by Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky who dug in their heels and said they would not vote for the annual defense bill if the vaccine requirement was not rescinded were Senators Lindsey Graham, Rick Scott, Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, Ron Johnson, Mike Braun, Roger Marshall, M.D., Tommy Tuberville, Marco Rubio, Steve Daines, Cindy Hyde-Smith, and Josh Hawley.

President Biden opposes the repeal of the vaccine mandate in the military.

New source of revenue for Alaska: Carbon credits

In all the decades that Alaska sold timber, it only received a few tens of million of dollars in revenues. But in the Clinton Administration, the federal government locked up the Tongass National Forest and the timber industry in Alaska all but dried up. There was just not enough in state forests alone to ever be commercially viable.

Now, Gov. Mike Dunleavy is looking at selling carbon credits for at least some of the forested land that is not harvestable. It’s done in other parts of the world and, with carbon credits, the state could make up to $1 billion a year in revenue. It will take years to roll out but if Alaska can’t cut the trees, can it profit from that sequestration of carbon in this new business of carbon credits? Gov. Mike Dunleavy wants to find out, and he needs the Legislature to pass a bill allowing him to develop contracts.

What he will propose is a carbon credit program for some forest lands and depleted oil basins, and even for seaweed forests off of the coast of Alaska.

Dunleavy said a firm has approached the state and said that such a program could yield more than $30 billion over 20 years, if Alaska will leave some forests intact. It would not prohibit other uses of the land, such as recreation, but the trees would not be cut in exchange for billions of dollars.

State budget stays flat: Spending down 4% since 2019

Gov. Mike Dunleavy rolled out his state budget for fiscal year 2024 today, a budget year that starts July 1. The proposed budget reflects a flat spending strategy, with fully funded essential state services during a time when oil revenues are down by $1.8 billion year over year.

Dunleavy is again funding a “statutory Permanent Fund dividend” of about $4,000 per eligible Alaskan, and the overall budget has a deficit of about $265 million, which, after tapping the Constitutional Budget Reserve, will leave about $2 billion in that reserve fund.

The numbers underscore a commitment to fiscal discipline, which is what the governor ran on. This in the face of inflation running at over 7%, the overall budget reduction year over year is 15%.

The Capital Budget is pegged at $200 million to leverage $1 billion in federal dollars. Capital spending is seeing a $457 million in reduction, and the operating budget will have about $378 million in reductions, for an overall spending reduction of $836 million year over year.

Over the course of his administration, Dunleavy has retired millions of dollars in debt, which frees up some financial flexibility for the state. By using the bigger revenues in past years to pay off debt and liabilities, the state is no longer making the same kind of debt payments. It’s like the state doesn’t have credit card debt, so has more liquidity.

He’s asking state agencies to use their existing unfilled positions, or PCNs, to help keep operational costs flat.

Other highlights include: Fully funded Power Cost Equalization programs for rural areas, fully funded education, but no increases and no forward-funding, due to revenue shortfalls.

Budget highlights:

  • FY23 revenue estimate is down $1.8 billion from when the govenor signed the current budget in June.
  • The statutory PFD should be almost $4,000 per eligible Alaskan
  • FY 2024 projected deficit is $265 million
  • The Constitutional Budget Reserve will have a $2 billion balance
  • $25 million – Energy projects for Alaska Energy Authority, including rural power system upgrades, bulk fuel upgrades, hydro development and renewable energy/efficiency projects, and grid resiliency
  • $5 million for marketing of Alaska through Department of Commerce Community and Economic Development
  • $14.2 million for Public Safety capital investments, including post remodel and expansion, patrol vessel replacement, investigative and forensic electronic equipment
  • $3.3 million – 30 DPS Trooper support and administrative positions, to help get troopers out doing their jobs
  • $5 million – Rural professional housing (expanded scope and funding)
  • $10 million – University of Alaska drone program, with the idea that Alaska can become drone technology research capital
  • $2 million – Expand the WWAMI program to add 10 more physician training slots
  • $11 million – Statehood defense investment, including funding for research, science, and legal, to be prepared to fight the federal government if it tries to cut off the ability of the state to access resources
  • $4 million – New cabins and park sanitation stations, to make them more accessible to those with disabilities
  • $9.5 million – Healthy Families Initiatives to address things like congenital syphilis and tuberculosis, recruitment and retention of health professionals to Alaska, and expand postpartum Medicaid coverage
  • $6.4 million – Year 2 of the Department of Education reading program approved last year
  • $4.6 million – DGF capital projects for food security programs, including animal bank, Alaska marine salmon program, Arctic fisheries, and Central Region fisheries management sonar replacement
  • $3 million – Three-phase power extensions and upgrades to Delta Farm Region and Co-op
  • $4.1 million – Department of Corrections capital projects, including Point Mac Correctional Farm produce processing plant and statewide security doors and windows
  • $2.5 million – DMVA State Defense Force
  • $2 million – Labor Business Enterprise program, including a political program for a new day care in Mat-Su
  • $1.5 million – Department of Health community-based senior grants cost of living
  • $1 million – Alaska Native Science Engineering partnership

The budget was due today to the Legislature, whose main job is to debate and vote on the budget and return some version of it back to the governor before the fiscal year begins. From the way it’s shaping up in the Legislature, it appears that both the House and Senate will be controlled by Democrats, who are planning to increase spending and offer an income tax to pay for the increases. The Legislature convenes Jan. 17 for a 90-day session that usually stretches past 120 days. The makeup of the Legislature is primarily Republican but it appears many of the Republicans are going to give control to the Democrats, as they have already done so in the Senate.

Sen. Gary Stevens posted an immediate response to the governor’s budget proposal. Stevens, long an advocate for an income tax, said in 2018 that the state could not rely on oil taxes to fund the state budget, and would need additional revenue. Today he expressed concern that the budget is not big enough, and that he wants to see more spending on education. As the incoming Senate president, he is telegraphing to the public that it will be a difficult negotiation season with the governor to get to an agreed-upon spending plan.

Victor Davis Hanson: Two antithetical billionaires

The hatred of the accomplished Elon Musk and the worship of the hollow man Sam Bankman-Fried are sad commentaries on how liberalism has descended into progressivism and ultimately into Stalinism

By VICTOR DAVIS HANSON | AMERICAN GREATNESS

Before the midterm November elections, Sam Bankman-Fried was a left-wing billionaire heartthrob. 

He properly grew up on the Stanford campus, where his parents were well-known left-wing activist law professors. He went to a tony prep school and on to MIT. 

Bankman-Fried mocked society’s bourgeois capitalist conventions by dressing and looking like a slob in cut-offs and T-shirts. 

Indeed, he bested the nose-ring, Charles Manson-esque appearance of former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. He outdid the all-black, Steve Jobs copy-cat get-up of another fallen leftist icon, the now-convicted felon Elizabeth Holmes of Theranos infamy.

The Left canonized Bankman-Fried for the hundreds of millions of dollars he created out of thin air and channeled to left-wing congressional and state candidates, Joe Biden, and a host of “progressive” causes under the cool slogan “effective altruism.” 

For decades hence—or so Bankman-Fried promised—his cryptocurrency company FTX would churn out billions. Its politically correct gifting won exemptions from the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and Democratic-controlled congressional oversight committees.

The loud-talking, left-wing slob promised billions of dollars more in gifts to come. He was knighted as the successor to the kindred financial market manipulator and progressive “philanthropist” George Soros. 

SBF may have been a sloppy, immature fool, but he was no dummy. 

He had learned early on that loud leftist talk, big promises of philanthropy, and huge cash infusions to the media and leftist candidates—all under the veneer of “effective altruism”— ensured de facto immunity for his Ponzi schemes from both bad press and government investigation. 

Then, suddenly, the midterms were over. Powerful financial interests were screaming their millions had vanished at the hands of SBF. 

The Republicans took the House. They promised embarrassing hearings, with Bankman-Fried the loose-talking star villain. And so—presto!—he was finally indicted by the Biden Department of Justice. 

Bankman-Fried, in desperation one last time, had turned to his old props of raggedy dress, nerd talk, and contrived naivete.

His schtick no longer worked. Too many leftists were embarrassed that they got too much money from him. Too many exposed “regulators” had known what this wannabe Madoff character was up to before the midterms. 

The now albatross Bankman-Fried was loud and everywhere, then suddenly not—and won’t be again. 

Read the rest of this column at American Greatness.

Sen. Rand Paul: Republicans in Senate are ’emasculated,’ have ceded all their leverage in omnibus spending bill

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said on Wednesday he opposes the new omnibus spending bill, and wants his Republican colleagues to take a stand against runaway spending that Democrats are going to put into the bill.

On Fox Business’s Kudlow show, Paul said that his fellow Republicans are “emasculated” and have ceded power to the Democrats.

The way the Republicans can get spending in line, he suggested, is to “divide the spending into 12 bills and then decide to hold one of them hostage or two of them hostage. And then apply policy changes in the House. But they’ve got to do it.”

“They’ve got to capture this, and we’d have to do the budget the way it’s supposed to be. Budget — 12 appropriation bills, then try to attach some policy like removing the 87,000 IRS agents from the IRS budget,” Paul said.

Paul, a conservative Republican who ran for president in 2016, pointed out how Republicans always cave.

“When we try to do it in one bill, Republicans don’t have the intestinal fortitude. They always collapse, and they fear shutting government down, so no policy objectives ever get added,” he said.

Senate negotiators on Tuesday reached what they call a bipartisan framework agreement for funding the remainder of the federal government’s fiscal 2023, and avoiding a government shutdown on Friday

Congress is expected to pass a continuing resolution by Friday to avoid the shutdown and give the lawmakers until Dec. 23 to finalize and pass the final agreement.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who will be the incoming House Speaker, has reportedly told his caucus members that he was a “no” on the omnibus bill and had asked Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell to approve continuing resolutions into January, when Republicans can at least take control of the House and have more leverage in negotiations.

But it appears that the fix is in with McConnell and the Democrats — and some Republicans — in the Senate.

Can wind turbines change vegetation patterns? This study says yes

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The wakes of wind turbines can alter downwind temperatures and humidity, according to a U.S. Geological Survey study, which concluded that the disturbed air downwind can and does impact vegetation in the area.

The study reported that with wind energy expanding rapidly, scientists know little about the impacts on vegetation and surface temperatures of land and sea, and how a small change in verdancy can impact birds and other wildlife.

“We are just beginning to understand how the wakes from wind turbines affect both the terrestrial and offshore environment,” said the U.S. Geological Survey’s research ecologist Jay Diffendorfer. “The next step will be to better understand where and why these effects occur.”

In the study, scientists modeled wake and non-wake zones around 17 wind facilities across the United States, to test if wakes influenced vegetation condition, which was measured using data from USGS’s Landsat satellites. The study was designed to isolate the effects of turbine wakes from other factors that could affect vegetation condition around wind facilities, such as new roads or agriculture.

The wake-induced changes in vegetation condition were found for part or all of the growing season at 10 of the 17 facilities studied.

Researchers found that wakes may have both positive and negative effects on vegetation greenness, a measure that is often used in remote sensing to assess vegetation density and crop health, and that the magnitude of the change in greenness depended primarily on earlier precipitation, the study’ author said. The changes observed at some facilities were consistent with levels that other studies found can affect breeding bird clutch size, species richness, and ungulate (hoofed animal) abundance.

As wind energy expands, understanding where and when wind turbines positively or negatively affect vegetation may aid decisions about where to site wind energy infrastructure. For example, careful placement may benefit agriculture or grazing while minimizing unwanted reductions to the vegetation greenness in the vicinity. 

“Wakes induced increased or decreased vegetation greenness at ten of 17 facilities based on BACI ana- lyses, maps of the anomaly in greenness and the difference between expected and observed green- ness in wake zones. While the observed changes in NDVI were relatively small, in some cases the change in greenness were of a magnitude previously docu- mented to affect ecological processes such as clutch size, population abundance, and species richness. The magnitude of wake effects depended primarily on precipitation and to a lesser degree aridity. Future research should advance spatial modelling of pre- dicted wake zones, improve our ability to predict the directionality of the wake impact, and concurrently track microclimate, vegetation, and other ecological variables,” the study concluded.

Global wind energy has expanded 5-fold since 2010 and is expected to expand another 8–10-fold over the next 30 years. With some of the effects on verdancy exceeding 3%, studies such as this one may inform communities and countries as they adopt these so-called green technologies.

The full publication, Wind turbine wakes can impact down-wind vegetation greenness,” authored by Diffendorfer, is found in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

Biden’s gender-fluid nuke expert arrested in Vegas

A Biden administration nuclear waste official has turned himself in to Las Vegas police today, arrested for theft of a suitcase at the Harry Reid Airport in Las Vegas. It is the second airport suitcase theft Sam Brinton is accused of committing.

Brinton, the deputy assistant secretary for spent fuel and waste disposition at the Department of Energy, made his first court appearance in Clark County. He was booked and released on $15,000 bond, ordered by the judge to “stay out of trouble” as a condition of his release.

Sam Brinton, right, with Rachel Levine, United States assistant secretary for health, in France earlier this year for Bastille Day.

Brinton’s connection with Alaska was as the advisor to the liberal majority of the Anchorage Assembly as it crafted its ordinance that prohibits therapists from counseling youth who have gender issues. The ordinance, passed in 2020 while the Assembly locked the public out of its meetings, has a $500 a day fine for any therapist who attempts to dissuade youth from having gay sex. On the other hand, therapists in Anchorage may counsel youth to pursue a gay lifestyle, and they face no similar legal sanctions.

Earlier this year, the nuclear expert, who says he is gender-fluid [he does not accept his genetic gender], was appointed by the Biden Administration to lead the division that oversees the disposal of nuclear waste. He also has a deep history with kink sex, and recently taught a class on sexual spanking to kink gay audience members, and has posed for publications with men dressed in doggie costumes, as part of illustrating sado-masochism “pup play.”

All of his sexual proclivities and gender confusion has been known and celebrated by the Biden White House.

Brinton has been charged in two luggage thefts — one in Las Vegas, and the other in Minneapolis-St. Paul. Brinton is on video in both airports leaving with suitcases that were not his. He faces felony charges that could lead to more than 10 years in prison.

Earlier this week, the Department of Energy released a terse statement that said he is no longer with the department.

Biden’s nuke official who advised Anchorage on ‘Don’t Say Straight’ counseling ban gave kink-spanking seminar last week, even after being charged with luggage theft

‘Tom Sconce’ scandal: Assembly covers up 590 pages of email trails to a fake person, a secretive blog, and the Anchorage Press

Tom Sconce affair: Biden’s gender-fluid nuke waste officer on leave from Dept. of Energy; charged for theft of luggage

Who is third in line to governorship? This guy.

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Now that Gov. Mike Dunleavy and Lt. Gov. Nancy Dahlstrom are sworn into office, who is third in line, should something happen to either of them?

That would be Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation Jason Brune. Brune was appointed third in line after former Education Commissioner Michael Johnson resigned earlier this year and moved out of state.

By law, the governor of Alaska appoints that “third in line” person from his cabinet, and it’s something this governor takes seriously, sources told Must Read Alaska, especially after former Gov. Bill Walker’s disastrous end to the term of the late Lt. Gov. Byron Mallott. Not that Dunleavy expects anything to happen to his lieutenant governor.

As the lieutenant-governor successor, Brune will need to be confirmed in that role by the Alaska Legislature this session, which starts in mid-January. He has been in the successor role since July without confirmation. Brune has been the commissioner of DEC since December, 2018. Prior to his appointment, Brune was the senior director of land and resources at Cook Inlet Region Inc. (CIRI), an Alaska Native Corporation. Brune oversaw and participated in the development and administration of CIRI’s 1.6 million acres of subsurface resources, including oil, gas, minerals, sand and gravel, and coal. He supervised the team’s staff, environmental contractors, stakeholder management, and legal review, while building relationships with CIRI’s villages. Brune also worked to identify priorities for addressing contaminated lands. Prior to working at CIRI, Brune worked for Anglo American as the company’s public affairs and government relations manager.

Sullivan asks Sec. Haaland to withdraw red-tape limits that are delaying energy infrastructure projects

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan and several colleagues sent a letter to Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland urging the Biden administration to withdraw draft guidance proposed by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management that severely limits energy infrastructure projects from taking advantage of permitting benefits.

The BOEM guidance imposes cost and delay on job-creating energy projects and makes it hard for energy projects to use a structured process of coordination with agencies that are available to them under the law.

“Affordable and abundant energy is critical to our national defense, to our economic future, and to the daily life of every American. One of the biggest barriers to building energy infrastructure is the red tape and bureaucracy that allows the permitting process for new energy projects to drag on for years,” the senators wrote. 

“The recent proposed guidance by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management would put onerous requirements on the sponsors of infrastructure projects before allowing them to take advantage of permitting benefits… that are available to them under the law. This proposed guidance is flatly inconsistent with the law, and imposes additional cost and delay on energy projects that our country simply cannot afford. We urge the Department of the Interior to withdraw this proposed guidance and to take no additional action to make it final.”

Since arriving to the Senate, Sullivan has made permitting reform a top priority, most recently by passing a Congressional Review Act resolution to reverse President Biden’s updated NEPA regulations that delay American infrastructure and energy projects.

Timeline of Senator Sullivan’s efforts on permitting reform:

  • May 16, 2019 – Sullivan Introduced the Rebuild America Now (RAN) Act.
  • July 15, 2020 – Sullivan Applauded Trump Admin. Modernizing NEPA Environmental Reviews, Incorporating Sullivan’s Rebuild America Now Act.
  • August 10, 2021 – Sullivan Ensured Permitting Reform Included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
  • November 2021 – The Federal Permitting Reform and Jobs Act to make FAST-41 (Title 41 of the 2015 Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act) permanent, improve the federal permitting process for some of the largest infrastructure projects, and build on efforts to update this process created in 2015 is signed into law as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
  • July 13, 2022 – Sullivan Introduced S. J. Res. 55.
  • August 2, 2022 – Sullivan Led Press Conference on NEPA Reform.
  • August 2, 2022 – Over 40 Organizations Support S.J Res. 55 and Hard-Working Americans.
  • August 4, 2022 – Sullivan Led Colleagues in Passing S.J. Res. 55 Overturning Onerous Biden NEPA Regulations.


The text of the letter:

Dear Secretary Haaland:

As sponsors and proponents of the FAST-41 permitting improvements, we write to express serious concern about recent draft guidance proposed by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management on October 24, 2022. This guidance puts onerous requirements on the sponsors of infrastructure projects before allowing them to take advantage of permitting benefits (such as a structured process for enhanced coordination with agencies) that are available to them under the law. As such, this proposed guidance is flatly inconsistent with the law. It also imposes additional cost and delay on energy projects that our country simply cannot afford. We urge you to withdraw this proposed guidance and to take no additional action to make it final.

Affordable and abundant energy is critical to our national defense, to our economic future, and to the daily life of every American. One of the biggest barriers to building energy infrastructure is the red tape and bureaucracy that allows the permitting process for new energy projects to drag on for years.

The permitting improvements reflected in the FAST-41 legislation were the result of a bipartisan effort to improve and clarify/demystify the federal permitting process while retaining all environmental protections. To accomplish this, the legislation made several significant benefits available to our nation’s most important infrastructure projects—defined as “covered projects” in the statute. Under FAST-41, covered projects are posted to a “permitting dashboard” and the agencies involved are required to coordinate with the project sponsor and each other to timely develop and maintain a coordinated project plan and publicly posted “permitting timetable.”  If the agencies miss deadlines, they are required to explain why. The legislation also created a Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council (“the Council”), composed of representatives from 15 government agencies (including the Department of the Interior) and the Council Executive Director. This Council standardizes interagency consultation and coordination practices, resolves interagency conflicts, and reduces inefficiencies for covered projects.  We enacted this legislation to ensure that complex “covered projects”—including renewable and conventional energy projects—could easily obtain the early and ongoing coordination and transparency benefits that FAST-41 and the Council provides.

The recent draft guidance proposed by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management flouts the law and undermines the very benefits that FAST-41 offers. Under the law, a project qualifies as a “covered project” and is entitled to FAST-41 coverage if certain defined criteria are met. Additionally, the “final and conclusive” authority to determine whether these criteria are met is vested in the Executive Director of the Council, and the specific information that must be submitted by a project sponsor in support of this determination is defined by statute.

In spite of these clear statutory requirements, the proposed guidance by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management purports to require the completion of a “checklist” where all responsibility for coordinating with regulatory agencies falls solely on project sponsors before the Bureau will “consider” a project a FAST-41 “covered project.” This checklist includes, for example, consultations with numerous different federal agencies and at least nine different studies, assessments, or reports. The guidance also requires project sponsors to identify and provide all federal, state, and local authorizations, approvals, consultations, or permits necessary to conduct the proposed activities and states that the applicant should meet with all agencies that must either permit or be consulted regarding the proposed action at least once. These very activities are captured by the FAST-41 process for covered projects and assigned to the facilitating or lead agency, and not the project sponsor. Within 60 days of FAST-41 coverage, the facilitating or lead agency is required to communicate with each coordinating and participating agency to develop the Coordinated Project Plan. This includes: a list of, and roles and responsibilities for, all entities with environmental review or authorization responsibility for the project; a permitting timetable; a discussion of potential avoidance, minimization, and mitigation strategies; and plans and a schedule for public and tribal outreach and coordination. The plan provides a formal coordination process to ensure all agencies’ critical needs to timely complete FAST-41 requirements are addressed and documented in a singular place that can be relied upon for schedule and resource planning for all agencies involved in the environmental review and authorization process. The extra-statutory requirements imposed by this new guidance are an improper attempt to limit access to the FAST-41 process and its considerable efficiencies.

The recent draft guidance also appears to be an attempt to usurp the statutory authority of the Executive Director to make a final determination concerning whether a project qualifies as a “covered project.” In a recent written decision, the Executive Director of the Council applied the text of FAST-41 to conclude that an offshore wind energy project qualified as a “covered project” notwithstanding the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s attempts to prevent coverage by imposing extra-statutory requirements. This determination was both correct as a matter of law and within the authority of the Executive Director to decide. Nevertheless, we are concerned the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is attempting, under the guise of new guidance, to circumvent this decision and undermine the authority of the Executive Director. This is improper and inconsistent with the statutory scheme.

In addition to being unlawful, this guidance is also poor policy.  Although many of the required items on the “checklist” would benefit from the interagency coordination and scheduling provisions provided by FAST-41, the guidance requires project sponsors to complete them before the Bureau will consider a project for coverage and coordination under the statute that would require the agency to perform these functions.  The FAST-41 process enhances transparency for all involved entities through the development and maintenance of a Coordinated Project Plan and permitting timetable for covered projects identifying all relevant completion dates for agency action on any environmental review or authorization required for a covered project.  The filings identified in this guidance can and should be identified, coordinated, and tracked according to the transparency and accountability mechanisms provided by FAST-41.

With families experiencing record energy costs, the United States government should make every effort to encourage and facilitate new energy infrastructure.  The draft guidance promulgated by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management seems to take the opposite approach.  It limits access to existing permitting transparency and efficiency measures while imposing even more red tape, cost, and delay on energy permitting.  This is deeply concerning.

In light of these serious legal and policy concerns, we urge you to withdraw this proposed guidance and to take no additional action to make it final.

In addition to Sullivan, the letter was signed by Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Mitt Romney (R-Utah), Angus King (I-Maine), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.), Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), and Steve Daines (R-Mont.).