The
federal government owns 640 million acres of land, which is 28 percent of the
land in the United States. It owns 61 percent of the land in Alaska and 47
percent in the 11 coterminous western states, but just 4 percent of the land in
the other 38 states. The federal agencies with the largest land holdings are
the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) in the Department of Agriculture and the Bureau
of Land Management (BLM), National Park Service (NPS), and Fish and Wildlife
Service in the Department of the Interior (DOI).
Americans
generally support federal ownership of the major national parks, such as
Yellowstone. But many westerners have grown frustrated with the top-down
controls on much of the federal land within their states. They want more local
control because the economic and environmental decisions made in faraway
Washington, D.C., often do not reflect their needs. Federal land and resource
management has been bureaucratic, restrictive, and inefficient.
For
more than a century after the nation's founding, the federal government's
general policy was to sell or give away western lands to individuals,
businesses, and state governments. The federal government privatized 792
million acres of land between 1781 and 1940. Some of those acres, for
example, were privatized under Abraham Lincoln's Homestead Act of 1862. In
addition, the federal government has transferred 471 million acres of land to
state governments. The federal government, for example, transferred huge tracts
of land to "western" states such as Illinois and Missouri when they
gained statehood in the 19th century. The federal share of land in those middle
states went from about 90 percent to less than 4 percent. Yet states farther
west, such as Utah and Nevada, did not gain substantial ownership of their
lands; instead, those lands remain mainly in the hands of the federal
government.
By
the turn of the 20th century, federal policy came under sway of progressives,
who favored retention of lands and increased federal control. That approach
continues today. The federal government's Land and Water Conservation Fund, for
example, spends hundreds of millions of dollars a year on land
purchases. In addition, the federal government has increasingly restricted
the use of western lands by state residents through such actions as
"national monument" designations. By 2015, President Obama had
"established or expanded 19 national monuments for a total of more than
260 million acres of public lands and waters, more than any previous
president."
Such
designations generally reduce the use of lands for activities such as cattle
grazing, logging, hunting, fishing, and off-road recreational vehicles. A slew
of federal environmental laws passed since the 1960s adds another layer of
restrictions on land use. The overall effect is that westerners have less
control over their lands, resources, tax base, and economic development than do
easterners.
Federal
agencies are increasingly putting up roadblocks to longstanding uses of federal
lands. Since the 1950s, for example, the amount of grazing on BLM's 155 million
acres of grazing lands has been cut roughly in half.
Some
recent land-related protests against the federal government in the western
states have attracted criticism because of the tactics that protestors used.
But recent news articles have also captured the frustration of westerners about
federal power grabs. The Wall
Street Journal, for example, profiled a north Texas rancher whose
family had been grazing cattle on 900 acres of its own land for more than 70
years; then, to their shock, the BLM swooped in and grabbed 650 of those acres,
claiming that the land was actually federal.
When
the government does allow the use of its lands and resources, it often does not
price them in a sound manner. It generally sets fees for grazing, water,
recreational activities, mineral extraction, and other resources at below
market levels, which encourages overconsumption. As a result, federal lands
cost taxpayers billions of dollars a year for administration costs, rather than
producing a net return. Economists Terry Anderson, Vernon Smith, and Emily
Simmons noted, "It is remarkable that the federal government actually
loses money in the course of managing federal land assets estimated to be worth
billions. Moreover, the federal government has a poor record of ecological
stewardship."
A
2015 study by the Property and Environment Research Center compared western
land management by the BLM and the USFS with land management by four western
state governments. It found that federal agencies generally lose money
managing their lands and resources, while state governments earn a positive
return. For example, the USFS generates just 32 cents for each dollar it spends
on timber management, whereas state agencies earn an average $2.51 for each
dollar they spend. On rangeland management, the BLM earns just 14 cents for
each dollar it spends, whereas state agencies earn an average of $4.89 for each
dollar they spend. The federal grazing fee in 2014 was just $1.35 per
"animal unit month," but the fees charged by the four state
governments ranged from $2.78 to $11.41 per animal unit month.
In
2005 the GAO reported, "The grazing fees BLM and the Forest Service charge
are generally much lower than the fees charged by the other federal agencies,
states, and private ranchers." The auditors found that grazing fees
collected by the BLM are only about one-fifth the level needed for the agency
to break even. The Congressional Budget Office came to similar conclusions:
"The current formula appears to result in fees that are well below-market
rates and below the costs of administering the grazing program."
Federal
grazing fees have remained at low levels in recent decades even though grazing
fees on private lands have risen substantially in response to changing market
supply and demand conditions. Another interesting factor is that, whereas
the BLM sets its grazing fee annually for the entire western United States,
private fees vary substantially in different locations, as one might expect in
the marketplace.
Government
pricing often causes distortions, and federal grazing fees are no exception.
Artificially low federal grazing fees may encourage harmful overgrazing.
However, the situation is complicated. Federal grazing permits are generally
attached to particular parcels of private ranch lands, or base
property. As such, low grazing fees are partly or fully capitalized in the
value of those private lands. Therefore, current ranchers may not receive the
benefits of the low federal grazing fees because they would have paid a premium
when they purchased their private land.
This
economic feature of western lands is the source of a lot of tension. The
long-running battle between the BLM and Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy apparently
stemmed from a 1993 BLM decision to cut back on his grazing on federal lands
because of concerns about desert tortoises. Bundy and his family had long grazed the lands and
had a valid permit to do so attached to his base private property. The tortoise
decision imposed a large capital loss on Bundy's base property because its
value is directly related to the amount of grazing it can support.
In
a recent study, Shawn Regan of the Property and Environment Research Center
noted that similar battles are going on all over the western United States because
the current grazing system "encourages conflict, not
negotiation."
The
BLM and USFS, under pressure from environmentalists, are imposing increasing
restrictions on grazing lands, which is disrupting longstanding ranching
activities and imposing capital losses on ranchers' private property. Part of
the solution, according to Regan, is to allow ranchers more secure and tradable
property rights in their use of grazing lands and allow them to transfer those
rights directly to environmental groups that want to protect sensitive areas.
Under that system, rather than lobbying politicians and officials and filling
the courts with litigation, the energy of environmentalists would be channeled
into voluntary conservation efforts in the marketplace.
A
more thorough reform would be to begin privatizing BLM and USFS grazing lands.
Economist Steve Hanke pursued BLM land privatization as a member of President
Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers. He proposed that ranchers be offered the
option to buy the grazing land that they currently rent from the government. The price would be set so that the ranchers were
charged for only that portion of the BLM land value that has not already been
paid for through private ranch land premiums.
Privatization
would create the benefit of secure property rights. The fact that grazing lands
are currently government-owned makes ranchers insecure about their tenure, so
they have an incentive to overstock grazing lands and a disincentive to make
long-term investments to improve the lands. Such counterproductive
incentives have increased as the government has made grazing tenures more
precarious in recent decades. Thus, an advantage of privatization would be to
provide ranchers more incentives to plan their rangeland management for the
long term.
It
is true that the BLM, USFS, and other federal agencies have difficult tasks.
They are supposed to optimally manage the use of vast rangelands, timberlands, minerals,
wildlife, water, and other resources. But rather than trying to price the use
of those resources to ensure efficient use, federal agencies — under sway of
politicians — generally misprice and misallocate resources.
Now
let us consider the National Park System. The NPS operates more than 400 parks,
monuments, historic sites, and other areas. The total acreage of NPS holdings
has quadrupled from 20 million in 1940 to 85 million today. That is far too
large an inventory to manage efficiently, and many NPS sites suffer from
deterioration. Visitor centers are aging, artifacts are being vandalized, and
historic structures are getting damaged. About 60 percent of the 27,000 NPS
historic structures need repairs. The NPS and other DOI agencies have accumulated
somewhere between $14 billion and $20 billion in deferred maintenance.
The
primary blame lies with Congress because it keeps adding to NPS holdings
without paying for the upkeep. In a report on the NPS, former U.S. Sen. Tom
Coburn (R-OK) said, "Politicians would rather take credit for creating a
new park in their community than caring for the parks that already
exist." As a result, we end up with NPS sites such as the Eugene
O'Neill facility in California, which receives only eight visitors a day but
has nine full-time staff. Most of the least-visited parks and sites were
established in recent decades, and these facilities steer NPS resources away
from the older "national jewels" such as Yellowstone.
Another
problem is that NPS does not charge visitors in an efficient manner. Some NPS
parks and sites charge users, but others do not. Great Smoky Mountains National
Park is the most visited national park, yet it does not charge an entrance fee
at all, even though a modest fee of just $2 would cover its operating
costs. The overall average charge for almost 300 million annual NPS
visitors in 2012 was just 63 cents. The study by the Property and
Environment Research Center found a similar pattern of low fees that do not
cover expenses for USFS and BLM recreation areas.
This
discussion only scratches the surface of the complex issues surrounding federal
land holdings. There are contentious issues regarding wildlife management,
endangered species, wildfires, energy and mining activities, and allowable
recreational activities. Many industries and jobs depend on the use of federal
lands and resources, so legislative and regulatory restrictions on access
affect state economies and many state residents.
As
noted, there is great frustration about the heavy-handed way that federal
officials impose rigid regulations on western lands and resources. The core problem is that federal politicians and
agency leaders are far removed from the costs and benefits of their decisions.
They cannot fairly balance all the economic and environmental concerns within
each state.
What
the federal government essentially tries to do is centrally plan the
interactions of millions of citizens with 640 million acres of land and
resources. A recent example showing the difficulty of central planning is the
government-created overpopulation of wild horses on BLM lands. A 1971 statutory change sought to protect the horses;
but the change eliminated all the population-balancing mechanisms, so now there
are far too many horses in some western states, and BLM has failed to find an
administrative solution. A similar overpopulation problem with federally
protected burros on BLM lands is playing out in Arizona.
A
final problem with federal land management is that federal land agencies are
subject to all the usual bureaucratic failings. For example, DOI's inspector
general testified before Congress in 2006, "Simply stated, short of a
crime, anything goes at the highest levels of the Department of the
Interior." He lambasted the ethics failures of DOI leaders and
their "bureaucratic bungling" of oil and gas leases that cost
billions of dollars in lost revenues. That case was typical of a "culture
of managerial irresponsibility and lack of accountability" at DOI, he
noted. Another example of DOI mismanagement was the negligent way that it
mishandled billions of dollars of royalties that were supposed to be
accumulating in Indian trust funds during the 20th-century.
The
best reform for federal lands is the original one — transferring them to state
governments and private owners. Many parks, grazing lands, historical sites,
and other assets should be either privatized or transferred to state and local
governments. Residents of the western states can better balance the competing
needs of agriculture, ranching, industry, recreation, wildlife, and
environmental stewardship than policymakers in Washington, D.C.
For
many NPS parks and sites, most of the visitors live in state; thus, state
ownership makes more sense than federal ownership. Alternatively, individual parks
and sites could be transferred to private nonprofit organizations. Yet another
option would be for state governments to retain ownership of lands but devolve
operation and maintenance of parks to private concessionaires. For some parks,
the USFS and numerous state governments currently use that sort of partial
privatization.
For
environmentally sensitive lands, an important development is the growth of
conservation land trusts. These organizations "have emerged in recent
years as central actors in land conservation," noted Resources for the
Future in 2009. The number of land trusts in the nation soared from 400 in
1980 to more than 1,700 today. These organizations include well-known
groups such as the Nature Conservancy and Ducks Unlimited. Currently, 50
million acres are being conserved by land trusts through ownership, easements,
or other means.
Nonprofit
groups offer a more efficient way to manage environmental resources than
governments. One reason is that nonprofits usually benefit from extensive
volunteer efforts. The Land Trust Alliance estimates that almost 350,000
volunteers nationwide take part in managing land trusts. The private,
charitable sector is unique in the way it taps this vast workforce of low-cost,
flexible, and dedicated individuals.
New
York City has numerous examples of volunteer park efforts. The Central Park
Conservancy has managed Central Park since the 1990s. The group raises the
bulk of funding for the park's maintenance from donations, and it relies
extensively on volunteers in its operations. Bryant Park, which was restored
from dereliction in the 1980s by private efforts, is now managed and funded by
a nonprofit corporation. And the very successful High Line Park was
conceived by a private group and partly funded by $44 million in private
donations.
Privatizing
federal parks would increase transparency. As already noted, Coburn's study
found that the NPS provides almost no detail to the public about how individual
parks spend their money. By contrast, the private, nonprofit association that
runs Mount Vernon, home of George Washington, publishes audited financial
statements. Mount Vernon relies on private support and does not receive
government funding.
In
recent years, numerous western states have passed legislation calling for the
transfer of federal lands to the states. At the federal level, the next
administration should create a detailed inventory of land and resource holdings
and identify those assets that can be moved to state and private ownership.
Congress and the administration should then work with the states and begin
paring back the vast federal estate.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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