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COLUMN: Polis appointment threatens rural Colorado

Twin Lakes in Rural Colorado Photo Credit: Ruth Peterkin (iStock). (copy) (copy)

By placing one of his cronies in control of the State Land Board’s 2.8 million surface acres and 4.0 million mineral estate acres, the last thing standing between Gov. Jared Polis and his renewable energy goals — production agriculture – can be hamstringed. His appointment of Nicole Rosmarino as the new SLB director will solidify him as the nation’s most anti-rural, anti-agriculture governor.

According to an email sent May 13, 2025, by Department of Natural Resources Director Dan Gibbs, Rosmarino is the sole finalist for the director of the agency that is the state’s second largest landowner. Gibbs said, per statute, the Board provides public notice for 14 days prior to a formal appointment which will occur at the next regularly scheduled public Board meeting, which is June 11 and 12 in Denver. An email sent to DNR garnered no response.

The mission of the SLB is to generate a reasonable and consistent income over time and protect and enhance the long-term productivity and sound stewardship of working trust lands, thereby supporting the financial needs of Colorado public schools.

The SLB achieves this through leasing its trust lands for agriculture, commercial real estate, ecosystem services, mining, oil and gas development, recreation, renewable energy, rights-of-way, tower sites, and water. Part of the second goal of SLB is to support future generations of agriculture lessees.

Rosmarino, who I have criticized as one of Polis and First Gentleman Marlon Reis’ cronies, is, ironically enough, the Governor’s Policy Advisor for Wildlife, Agriculture, and Rural Economic Development. She is a board member of The Rewilding Institute’s Rewilding Leadership Council and founded the Southern Plains Land Trust, of which she is the executive director. She was previously a scientist (Wildlife Program Director) with Wild Earth Guardians.

Jay Tutchton, a Polis appointee to the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission, was previously an attorney for EARTHLAW that represented groups including Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, Wild Earth Guardians, Friends of the Earth, and others. Tutchton works at the Southern Plains Land Trust which was founded by Rosmarino. SPLT has received $1.3 million in funds from lottery proceeds via Great Outdoors Colorado (GOCO). Follow the money, as they say.

Rewilding is purchasing agricultural land, preferably contiguous, to return it to what advocates have called the “American Serengeti.” In an earlier iteration, it was called Buffalo Commons. Ranches to purchase and convert to private wildlife refuges are ripe for the picking, as she wrote in Bringing Back the American Serengeti, “given that the region has seen declining human populations since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, much of the habitat remains intact, and land prices are low.”

In Montana, the early leaders of the former American Prairie Reserve, which shares similar goals with SPLT, began purchasing ranches to conserve the land. The connotation was that their intent was to save the land from the ranchers, many of whom had been conserving and managing the land for generations. It was a complicated position for ranchers who believe in private property rights. They support their neighbor’s ability to sell the ranch to whomever they wish. They also pray it won’t be to the rewilding groups. The tension continues to roil in Montana as APR purchases ranches far above the value a buyer who isn’t backed by philanthropists’ millions can afford. And rural communities lose.

According to Rosmarino, public lands in the southern Great Plains are insufficient to preserve biodiversity: “as they are broadly utilized for livestock grazing and energy development, 90% of the land within our region is private, and the wildlife is often heavily hunted on public and private lands alike. Large-scale private refuges are vital to prevent the conversion of native grasslands to crop agriculture, energy development, and other land uses that would irreversibly alter shortgrass prairie plant communities.”

Stripping agriculture, oil, and gas lessees of their contracts with Rosmarino at the helm would kick open the door to renewable lessees. That would leave the surface acres ready to rewild and convert to ecotourism destinations. And rural communities lose.

Taking agricultural lands out of production starves rural communities through decreased tax revenue and fewer agricultural dollars circulating in the communities, from the feed dealer right down to the steak fry benefiting the local FFA chapter. It is cows that build towns in rural areas, not billionaires or prairie dogs or wind turbines.

Perhaps the keystone species most in need of protection from the wildly inappropriate string of appointments from the Governor’s office is the Colorado rancher.

Rachel Gabel writes about agriculture and rural issues. She is assistant editor of The Fence Post Magazine, the region’s preeminent agriculture publication.

Rachel Gabel writes about agriculture and rural issues. She is assistant editor of The Fence Post Magazine, the region’s preeminent agriculture publication.

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