Good Government
Trent England | December 30, 2014
States can manage public lands
Trent England
This is the fourth article in a five-part series about federal lands. Legislation adopted in Utah calls on the federal government to transfer certain of these lands to the state. It set a deadline of December 31, 2014.
A division cuts across the continental United States. In the 11 western states, the federal government owns nearly half the land (47.3%). In the 37 states to their east, just 4% of the land is federal. In five states, including New York, the federal government owns less than 1% of the land.
Given these numbers, Utah’s insistence that the federal government turn over resource lands in that state is hardly radical. All Utah wants is to be treated like every other state east of Colorado.
This East-West division is the result of a history of federal foot-dragging and eventual reneging on a policy of treating states as equals by giving them control over their own lands (other than those retained by the federal government for a constitutionally enumerated purpose; more on the history is in parts two and three of this series).
One claim made in defense of the status quo is that the federal government is a better land manager than the states. This contention is an affront to constitutional government and to the very idea of self-government, and it also flies in the face of experience.
The Constitution established a bias in favor of government at the state level (or below). From the beginning of Article I to the end of the Bill of Rights, the Constitution makes clear that the federal government would have just a few powers. Everything else was left to work out in the states, where people would be closer to their government and thus government would, hopefully, be closer to the people.
Of course, all states already manage some public lands. The evidence suggests states do this well. State parks receive far more visitors each year than national parks. A recent congressional hearing found that state forests are more productive than national forests. Cities and counties also manage public lands, including Phoenix, Ariz.’s network of hiking trails and desert preserves (in all, Phoenix boasts 33,000 acres of parks with 200 miles of trails) and Philadelphia’s Wissahickon Valley Park.
As it happens, the first state park, Michigan’s Mackinac Island State Park, was originally the second national park. It was designated as such in 1875, three years after the designation of Yellowstone. Both parks were initially overseen by the military. When the army closed its base on Mackinac Island, however, that park was turned over to the state. It remains a state park today, a successful effort to conserve unique natural beauty and history.
New York offers perhaps the best argument for freeing the western states from federal land management. The state’s Department of Environmental Conservation manages 4.4 million acres of land. This includes the Adirondack Forest Preserve (2.6 million acres, larger than Yellowstone National Park) and Catskill Forest Preserve (286,000 acres, larger than Rocky Mountain National Park. The state’s parks department operates an additional 214 state parks and historic sites.
If New York can do it, why not California, which already manages 1.59 million acres of parklands as well as additional state resource lands? Or perhaps the question is, if New York, why not Utah? It is easy, but not pleasant, to guess at the answer: urban elitism or just downright bigotry.
States, whether New York, Michigan, California, or Utah, all manage public lands. The governments of those states are all closer and more responsible to their own citizens than is the federal government in Washington, D.C. The status quo gives New York politicians more say over most of the land in Utah than the state’s own elected leaders. This is unfair and unnecessary.
More about Utah’s effort to become an equal with states like New York is available from the American Lands Council, run by Utah State Rep. Ken Ivory who developed and sponsored the Transfer of Public Lands Act, and the Sutherland Institute’s Center for Self-Government in the West.
Trent England
David and Ann Brown Distinguished Fellow
Trent England is the David and Ann Brown Distinguished Fellow at the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, where he previously served as executive vice president. He is also the founder and executive director of Save Our States, which educates Americans about the importance of the Electoral College. England is a producer of the feature-length documentary “Safeguard: An Electoral College Story.” He has appeared three times on Fox & Friends and is a frequent guest on media programs from coast to coast. He is the author of Why We Must Defend the Electoral College and a contributor to The Heritage Guide to the Constitution and One Nation Under Arrest: How Crazy Laws, Rogue Prosecutors, and Activist Judges Threaten Your Liberty. His writing has also appeared in the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Washington Times, Hillsdale College's Imprimis speech digest, and other publications. Trent formerly hosted morning drive-time radio in Oklahoma City and has filled for various radio hosts including Ben Shapiro. A former legal policy analyst at The Heritage Foundation, he holds a law degree from The George Mason University School of Law and a bachelor of arts in government from Claremont McKenna College.