Moratorium on Federal Coal Lease Sales

Senate Roll Call Vote 901

1982 Scorecard Vote

Pro-environment vote

Yes

Votes For

47

Votes Against

48

Not Voting

5

The vote is on the Bumpers (D-AR) amendment to the Interior Appropriations bill (H.R. 7356), to delete $2.13 million from the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in order to delay two scheduled western coal lease sales. Though directly affecting only these two sales, this was in effect a confidence vote on Interior Secretary Watt’s energy leasing policies. A few days before, the House removed money for the sales, pending a Congressional investigation of whether BLM had been mismanaging coal lease sales and failing to get a fair market value for its coal. In the largest coal lease sale in history, BLM sold 8 of 11 leases without competitive bids, and received only 25% of what comparable coal had sold for in private sales two years earlier.

The two sales covered by this amendment involved billions of tons of coal in Montana, North Dakota, and New Mexico, where thousands of acres of fragile, semi-arid land will be strip mined once the coal is leased. New coal fired power plants near the mines would also violate federal air standards. There is now a glut of coal on the market and no need to lease any more until we can ensure more responsible development of this public, non-renewable resource on public lands. Amendment rejected 47-48; December 14, 1982. YES is the pro-environmental vote. (A House-Senate Conference Committee compromised on the issue, allowing only one of the two leases to go forward.)

Votes

Show
Show
Export data (CSV)
  • Pro-environment vote
  • Anti-environment Vote
  • Missed Vote
  • Excused
  • Not Applicable

Vote Key

Sort by
Alabama
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Alaska
2025 State Scorecard Average

11%

Arizona
2025 State Scorecard Average

89%

Arkansas
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

California
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

Colorado
2025 State Scorecard Average

93%

Connecticut
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

Delaware
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Florida
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Georgia
2025 State Scorecard Average

93%

Hawaii
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Idaho
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Illinois
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Indiana
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Iowa
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Kansas
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Kentucky
2025 State Scorecard Average

6%

Louisiana
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Maine
2025 State Scorecard Average

63%

Maryland
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Massachusetts
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Michigan
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

Minnesota
2025 State Scorecard Average

94%

Mississippi
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Missouri
2025 State Scorecard Average

4%

Montana
2025 State Scorecard Average

6%

Nebraska
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Nevada
2025 State Scorecard Average

94%

New Hampshire
2025 State Scorecard Average

93%

New Jersey
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

New Mexico
2025 State Scorecard Average

94%

New York
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

North Carolina
2025 State Scorecard Average

6%

North Dakota
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Ohio
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Oklahoma
2025 State Scorecard Average

1%

Oregon
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

Pennsylvania
2025 State Scorecard Average

40%

Rhode Island
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

South Carolina
2025 State Scorecard Average

1%

South Dakota
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Tennessee
2025 State Scorecard Average

0%

Texas
2025 State Scorecard Average

1%

Utah
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Vermont
2025 State Scorecard Average

96%

Virginia
2025 State Scorecard Average

97%

Washington
2025 State Scorecard Average

99%

West Virginia
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%

Wisconsin
2025 State Scorecard Average

49%

Wyoming
2025 State Scorecard Average

3%