ICE Subpoena; Wolf tracking info released; BLM nominee sparks opposition

Headlines Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

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    ICE Subpoena; Wolf tracking info released; BLM nominee sparks opposition KGNU News

ICE Subpoena

Governor Polis says he’s done trying to comply with a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement subpoena for Colorado employment records. The data was requested by federal immigration officials nearly a year ago. Polis believed complying with the ICE subpoena was warranted. However, a former state employee sued to block the governor last summer, claiming ICE would use the information to justify deportations.  Attorneys for Polis reversed their position last week and urged a Denver judge to block the release of information. A spokesperson for the Governor’s Office said it was time to move on from the matter after getting no additional input from ICE on the request.

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Wolf tracking info released

Colorado Parks and Wildlife released the latest wolf location map tracking activity from Jan. 27 through Feb. 24.  Colorado’s collared gray wolves have pushed further south along the Front Range, according to the map. CPW states that some wolves continue to make broad movements, while packs have developed territory and tend to stay put. Two individual wolves moved separately through several watersheds in the San Luis Valley near the southern part of the Front Range. Data also show wolves moving into southeast Colorado. No wolves have crossed I-25 or spent time near urban centers, reports the agency. 

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BLM nominee sparks opposition

Public lands and environmental advocates, as well as outdoor recreationists, have opposed the nomination of New Mexico’s Steve Pearce to head the Bureau of Land Management. Senators brought the concerns about energy development and public lands to the forefront during his confirmation hearing.

Pearce owned an oilfield services company in New Mexico before he was elected to Congress. In 2012, he wrote a letter to congressional leadership supporting the sale of public lands to reduce the deficit, writing that most of the BLM land in the west is land that “we do not even need.” Senators on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee questioned Pearce on those remarks, asking if he still believed them. Pearce said that at the time, he represented a district that was frustrated with how federal lands were managed.

But when asked for his current personal opinions on a sell-off, Pearce did not provide a clear answer, instead saying that the law prohibits very large sales of public lands. The committee will vote on whether to advance Pearce’s nomination to the full Senate.

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