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A Republican push to sell public lands in the West is reigniting a political fight
A Republican push to sell public lands in the West is reigniting a political fight

Boston Globe

time11-05-2025

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

A Republican push to sell public lands in the West is reigniting a political fight

Who should control such sites has long been a burning source of disagreement in the West, where about half the acreage is under federal control and cities that sprawl across open landscapes face Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The GOP plan is rekindling the fight and generating strong blowback from Democrats and conservationists. They see the measure as a precedent-setting move that would open the door to sales in other states. Advertisement 'We have grave concerns that this is the camel's nose under the tent,' said Steve Bloch with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. 'If it can happen in Utah, if it can happen in Nevada, it's not going to stay here. It's going to spread.' Some Republicans also signaled opposition, setting up a political clash as the budget process moves forward. The majority of land in the House provision is in Nevada, including the counties that encompass Reno, Las Vegas, and the fast-growing city of Fernley, according to maps released by the measure's sponsors, Republican Representatives Mark Amodei of Nevada and Celeste Maloy of Utah. Advertisement Fernley City Manager Benjamin Marchant said the opportunity to buy 12,000 acres of federal land at the edge of the community was 'good news.' The city's size tripled since its incorporation in 2001 and is expected to double again over the next decade, he said. There is hope to emerge as a technology hub, but Fernley needs space to grow. 'We can't even talk about projects when it's federal land,' Marchant said. 'We can't sell what we don't own, and this is the first step.' Other parcels to be sold are farther from developed areas. They include sites bordering Zion National Park and tribal lands such as the Paiute Indian Tribe reservation in Utah and the Pyramid Lake Paiute reservation in Nevada. 'That means the tribe can't grow,' said Mathilda Miller with Native Voters Alliance Nevada, an advocacy group for the state's tribes that opposes the sales. 'They can't reclaim the land that was stolen from their tribe, and it brings development right up to their doorstep.' Roughly 100,000 acres in western Nevada's rural Pershing County could be sold to private companies with mining claims or mining infrastructure, according to Amodei's office. The legislation also requires federal parcels in that area to be exchanged for an equal amount of nonfederal land. Many of the communities near sale locations share a common theme: Their expansion is hemmed in by federal property, which makes up 80 percent of the land in Nevada and 63 percent in Utah. Some states in the Midwest and East have 1 percent or less federal land by comparison. Advertisement Public parcels often are interspersed with private holdings in a 'checkerboard' fashion that further complicates development efforts. Housing advocates caution that federal land is not universally suitable for affordable housing. Generally, the farther away the land is from cities and towns the more infrastructure is required — roads, sewage, public transportation. 'It's a costly way to go because of the infrastructure needs, because of the time it will take,' said Vicki Been of the Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy at New York University. 'I'm not saying that there's no place on federal lands that would make sense, but one has to really look carefully.' The Republican proposal seeks to identify suitable lands in coordination with local municipalities. That has left some concerned there aren't enough assurances that the land, or enough land, will end up going to affordable housing. 'The devils in the details,' said Tara Rollins, executive director of the Utah Housing Coalition. 'It could just be a land grab. There just needs to be a lot of checks and balances.' The wholesale transfer of federal lands to local or private entities is something many Western conservatives have long sought. Republican officials in Utah last year filed a lawsuit seeking to take over huge swathes of federal land in the state, but they were There also are strong voices within the GOP against public land sales, notably Montana lawmakers Representative Ryan Zinke, who was interior secretary in President Trump's first term, and Senator Steve Daines. Colorado Representative Jeff Hurd was the lone Republican on the Natural Resources Committee to vote against the lands provision. Advertisement The legislation would sell about 10,000 acres of land in two Utah counties. Maloy said it avoids areas that should be conserved and would help ease demand for housing and water, by creating space to build new homes and expand reservoir capacity. Smaller land sales are a common practice for the Interior Department's Bureau of Land Management. 'Not all federal lands have the same value,' Maloy said. 'In both Democratic and Republican administrations, for decades, we've been disposing of appropriate lands in a manner that's consistent with what I propose to do here.'

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