CEDAR CITY — The Bureau of Land Management is holding an open-house meeting in Cedar City on Feb. 12 from 5-7 p.m.

Sunrise over wind and solar farms in Southern Utah, location and date not specified | Photo by Jeremy Dyer/Utah BLM, St. George News

According to a media release, the meeting is to provide information on the Department of the Interior’s ongoing efforts to support appropriate renewable energy development on our nation’s public lands through an updated Western Solar Plan.

The public meeting will preview the BLM’s proposed revisions to the agency’s Utility-Scale Solar Energy Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, also known as the updated Western Solar Plan, which would streamline the BLM’s framework for siting solar energy projects and expand BLM’s solar energy program to cover five additional states across the West.

“The BLM is committed to ensuring public lands do their part to meet our nation’s clean energy goals,” BLM Director Tracy Stone-Manning said. “We can and must do so responsibly, and we look forward to hearing from the public on how to achieve that balance.”

By directing development to areas that have fewer sensitive resources, less conflict with other uses of public lands, and close proximity to transmission lines, the BLM can permit clean energy more efficiently while maintaining robust public and Tribal engagement, which are central features of all BLM reviews of individual projects, officials stated.

The Festival Hall is located at 96 N Main St. in Cedar City. The venue is in a strip mall area with free parking. There will be signs to the meeting room at the entrance and throughout the building. Festival Hall will have a security guard on site.

Stock photo | Photo by Gary Kavanagh/iStock/Getty Images Plus, St. George News

Individuals who need special assistance, such as sign language interpretation or other reasonable accommodations, should contact the BLM in advance at solar@blm.gov.

The updated Western Solar Plan evaluates six alternatives, each proposing to make different amounts of public land available to solar development applications under different criteria such as proximity to transmission infrastructure, designated critical habitat, or other important ecological and cultural resources. Public input will inform a Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement and Record of Decision.

More information about the updated Western Solar Plan and BLM’s ongoing work to facilitate sustainable solar energy development on public lands across the West is available on BLM’s Solar Program website.

The Draft Solar Programmatic EIS was published in the Federal Register on January 19 opening a public comment period that extends until April 18. In addition to this public meeting, BLM will hold two virtual and five other in-person public meetings during the comment period.

Public meetings will commence with the first virtual meeting on February 5 and end with the last virtual meeting on March 6.

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