WASHINGTON, D.C. — Margaret Everson’s appointment as Director of the National Park Service by Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt violates the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, ruled by a D.C. District Court yesterday, Sept. 30. 

The expedited motion was brought forward by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and the Western Watersheds Project. The organizations argue that her position requires “advice and consent” of the U.S. Senate under the Constitution.

The position may only be filled on a temporary basis by a qualified official appointed directly by the president, not Secretary Bernhardt. President Trump has refused to put forth a nominee for NPS Director to the Senate or to appoint an “acting Director,” which only he can do under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act.

“Margaret Everson is the latest in a carousel of illegal appointees to be shuffled through the Department of the Interior,” stated Tim Whitehouse, Executive Director of PEER. “We are asking the Federal court to stand up to Secretary Bernhardt’s self-serving word games and show Everson the door.” 

Everson’s appointment follows a series of other unconfirmed lower-level officials put in the NPS job during this Administration. This will be the first presidential term since the Service was created in 1917, in which it will have no actual Director. Everson has never even worked in the NPS before – and she still doesn’t. She claims to exercise the Director’s power while also keeping her “day job” as Counselor to the Secretary.  

The Trump administration recently lost a similar legal challenge on Sept. 25 when the Chief Judge of the Montana District Court directly ousted William Pendley from his de facto Director position atop the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and Western Watersheds Project also had sued to oust Pendley but they are deferring to the Montana ruling unless it changes.

“We’re gratified with William Pendley’s removal, but the Trump Administration has been engaging in a pattern of illegal appointments as a means to dodge the transparency and accountability of the Senate confirmation process,” added Erik Molvar, Executive Director of WWP. “It is critical that appointees are able to pass the test of Senate scrutiny before they are put in charge of important federal agencies.”

The District Court that ruled Pendley’s tenure at the Bureau of Land Management is illegal is now trying to identify all of his actions that will be invalidated. A similar ruling involving Everson could nullify all actions she has taken during her short tenure at NPS and block her from further decision-making. The net result is that many actions taken by these unconfirmed appointees are null and void.   

The NPS Director has broad powers. He or she is responsible for protecting and preserving 85 million acres of public lands system, with 420 separate Park System units occurring in every state.