THE ASSOCIATED PRESS December 19, 2016
SALT LAKE CITY — Conservatives who have long complained about the government’s control of vast Western lands hope they will have a new ally in President-elect Donald Trump, who has sent mixed signals about how he might manage land and whether he would relinquish federal authority over millions of acres.
Trump has pledged to honor Theodore Roosevelt’s tradition of conservation in the West, with its expansive deserts, snow-capped mountain ranges and red-rock canyons. But he has also said he will “unleash” energy production there and has railed against “faceless, nameless bureaucrats” in land-management agencies.Dozens of demands for land handovers have surfaced in Western state legislatures in recent years, and more are sure to be offered in Congress during the Trump administration.
“Those who are championing these issues certainly see this as a rare opportunity,” said Karla Jones, director of a task force for the American Legislative Exchange Council, a Washington-based organization that develops bills for conservative lawmakers.
On Tuesday, Trump offered the post of interior secretary, the nation’s top custodian of public lands, to Republican Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana, who has not said whether he will accept. The retired Navy SEAL insists that he does not favor relinquishing federal control of the land, as Democrats allege.
Twelve Western states contain more than half of the nation’s 640 million acres of federal public lands. Those lands comprise more than 60 percent of Alaska, Idaho and Utah and more than 80 percent in Nevada.
Resentment of government control has simmered across the West for decades, occasionally boiling over into showdowns such as the armed standoff between Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy and federal agents on April 12, 2014, several miles from the Bundy ranch near Bunkerville.
Many conservatives accuse federal managers of putting more value on endangered wildlife than on people and jobs. Trump’s election raises hopes for more oil and gas drilling, mining, grazing and timber harvesting.
How far the Trump administration will go is unclear. But those who have long dreamed of overthrowing a system they consider tantamount to colonialism say the time is now.
Environmentalists and their supporters in Congress are gearing up for a fight, saying strong federal regulation is needed to protect water and wildlife habitat.
“Any admin that tries to reverse 100-year history of #PublicLands that belong to every American is going to have to do it over my dead body,” U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich tweeted after Trump’s election.
The Democrat from New Mexico said cash-strapped states would probably sell at least some lands to help cover fire suppression and other management costs. “No trespassing” signs would pop up in places where public access has been taken for granted, he said, raising the ire of outdoor sports enthusiasts.
Supporters of state or local control seethed as the Obama administration created or expanded more than two dozen national monuments that protected hundreds of millions of acres, imposed a moratorium on new coal production and canceled dozens of oil and gas leases.
“I don’t like the idea because I want to keep the lands great, and you don’t know what the state is going to do,” Trump said. “I mean, are they going to sell if they get into a little bit of trouble?”
Yet he endorsed state control in a guest column for a Nevada newspaper, a position the Republican platform strongly backs.
Zinke, Trump’s choice for interior secretary, has walked a tightrope in Montana, where opinions about federal dominion are more divided than in some Western states.
During his re-election campaign, Democrats accused him of signing a pledge in 2012 declaring Montana’s lands sovereign and not subject to federal control. He said he did not remember doing so and resigned as a GOP convention delegate over the platform’s stance. Yet he has criticized federal land management and voted for demonstration projects allowing states to manage portions of national forests.
Republican Rep. Diane Black of Tennessee plans to reintroduce a measure from last year that would authorize states to administer energy leasing and permitting on federal lands. The previous version of the bill was never called for a vote.
Another bill that could be offered again would allow the transfer of 2 million acres of national forests to the states. U.S. Rep. Mark Amodei, R-Nev., has sought to reduce the portion of Nevada land under federal control from more than 80 percent to about 75 percent.
Amodei’s bill would transfer millions of acres of federal land to the state of Nevada. Proponents say the measure would provide state and local officials more control over public land.
But conservation groups say it would undermine important federal oversight on land throughout the state. The bill is “a gift-wrapped package to private developers and other wealthy interests yearning to make a quick buck by closing off our lands,” said Bob Fulkerson, the state director of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada, which opposes any such land transfer.
Even a Trump administration and a GOP-controlled Congress probably will not bring any “radical” change in public land management, said Travis Joseph, president of the American Forest Resource Council.
Similar predictions arose when George W. Bush was elected, he noted. The logging industry, he explained, is more concerned about shortages of money and agency personnel that prevent timber harvests allowed under existing federal policies.