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Report: House Natural Resources Committee Wants To Transfer Federal Lands To States, Tribes

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A move is expected this week to get the House GOP on the record for transferring federal lands to states and tribes in a bid to both eliminate some red ink in the federal budget and to help grow local economies.

A memo prepared by the House Natural Resources Committee, chaired by Utah Rep. Rob Bishop, asserts that, "Federal lands create a burden for the surrounding states and communities. These lands cannot be taxed and are in disrepair (agencies estimate a $22 billion-and growing maintenance backlog). Often mingled with private land, federal lands isolate communities, limit growth and adversely impact private property rights."

According to the memo, which was published Monday morning by the Think Progress non-profit on the Climate Change page of its website, also asks that Congress appropriate $50 million "to allow for these conveyances to start immediately."

According to the report, Rep. Bishop wants the memo to be included in the House GOP's budget resolution when it is drafted Wednesday.

The House Committee on Natural Resources (the Committee) recognizes that real reductions in spending must occur in order to solve our budget crisis and reduce the national debt. While careful consideration must be given to ensure that valued federal activities and lands are protected and that necessary cuts do not impede economic growth, tough decisions have to be made. Wasteful, duplicative, and unnecessary spending should be eliminated.

In addition to spending cuts, the President’s budget should also acknowledge that our public lands and natural resources are not only job creators, but economic boosters that bring new funds to the federal Treasury to help pay down the national debt. But imposing new taxes, new regulations, and new fees – as the President’s budget does – will have the opposite effect. It will stifle growth, send American jobs overseas, and forfeit opportunities for new revenue.

Keeping public lands and waters open to public enjoyment and recreation, along with the smart management of our resources, is vital to a strong and healthy economy. This budget should focus on promoting new energy production, implementing active forest management, ensuring an abundance of water resources, and taking care of federal lands we already own. Instead it once again seeks to impose new taxes and new layers of red tape while blocking public access to our lands and resources.

The document does not specify how much land, if any, the National Park Service should release. But it does castigate the Park Service for the way it manages its budget.

The Committee is concerned that NPS is diverting funds away from critical needs of the existing majestic and historic park units and into projects that do not further the NPS’ essential mission to serve visitors and to preserve these parks for the future. It is disappointing that despite increases to NPS’ budget the maintenance backlog on existing parks continues to balloon and visitation continues to decline.

The President continues to propose hundreds of millions of dollars for land acquisition programs administered by NPS. These funds would be better directed toward maintenance projects addressing aging and neglected infrastructure.

After years of expanding budgets, NPS has done little to show for this in terms of increased public use and enjoyment of parks or reduction in the maintenance backlog. The Committee also notes that Obama NPS operations budgets continue to increase, which leads us to conclude that pleas of inadequate park funding may have more to do with management priorities than actual funding levels. President Obama’s unilateral creation of new park units has only put us further behind in the effort to adequately maintain the system.

The Committee’s strong support for our country’s unparalleled system of parks notwithstanding, it is important to recognize the need, in coordination with NPS, to commit to finding areas of waste and lower priority spending within the budget.

Comments

Well,  if Bishops true motives aren't evident then one needs look no further than the capitalist catch phrases of "forest management" eg timber companies and "natural resource" insert land raping by oil and gas companies and you have the true Republican agenda for US public lands.

  Ironically, it is the devious practices of Jarvis NPS that paved the way.   Karma.


Except for the last sentence, Smokie's comment is right on the mark.

 


f "forest management" eg timber companies and "natural resource" insert land raping by oil and gas companies

Smokies said as he left his stick built home and drove his gas driven car. (metaphorically, as I don't know for sure that he lives in a stick built home or drives a gas driven care but given the vast majority of  Americans do, the chances are good)


I'm with Lee here.


Giving control to individual states would spell disaster for sure. I don't believe the states can be trusted to manage our public lands. Way too much local politics and self-interst groups controlling the local situation. This is nothing more than a ploy to control our national lands for local and personal exploitation. This idea must be fought as much as possibly.


Rob Bishop is a Utah socialist.

 


The major reason to give public resources to states  is it increases the opportunities for corruption by state and local officials. Those remote federal employees are harder to corrupt because they don't have to answer to as many relatives and close friends. And EC is right have no proof of specific cases. I also know there are many on this website who will cite examples of corrupt government officials. But I still contend that the closer decison making is to local people the more corruption increases because the opportunities also increase. That is just human nature.


But I still contend that the closer decison making is to local people the more corruption increases because the opportunities also increase.

I would argue the opposite. The closer the decison making is to the local people, the more likely the people are to be aware of what is being done and the more likely they will respond. 


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