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Letter: Donald Trump is no Teddy Roosevelt

FILE - In this 1904 file photo, Theodore Roosevelt campaigns for the presidency in 1904. Roosevelt was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906 for negotiating peace in the 1904-5 war between Russia and Japan. Roosevelt, who was U.S. President for eight years from 1901, also resolved a dispute with Mexico. This year's winner is due to be announced on Friday, Oct. 6, 2017. (AP Photo, File)

When Donald Trump was elected president, sportsmen had high hopes that the president and his cabinet would commit to, in Trump's words, “honoring the legacy of Theodore Roosevelt.”

As our 26th president, Roosevelt worked tirelessly to stop special interests from developing and privatizing our public lands and waters, conserving more than 230 million acres by establishing 150 national forests, 51 federal bird reserves, four national game preserves, five national parks and 18 national monuments.

Sportsmen have applauded the administration for some Roosevelt-like actions, such as their proposal to expand hunting and fishing on 10 national wildlife refuges and their calling on Congress to create a permanent solution to the practice of "fire borrowing."

Yet we will continue to hold administration officials accountable for pursuing the rollback of conservation protections on millions of acres of national monuments, scrapping collaborative habitat management plans for sage grouse and not fighting proposals to cut popular public access programs like the Land and Water Conservation Fund.

These actions threaten to undermine Roosevelt's legacy, and I join Backcountry Hunters & Anglers in urging the Trump administration to do the right thing and stand up for our public lands.

Noah Bodily, Provo

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