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Lodestar

(2,388 posts)
Sun Feb 28, 2016, 02:24 AM Feb 2016

National Park Lands Need Us Now More Than Ever

This land is your land...

It's Not Just Militia Members Who Want to Take Over Federal Land
Republicans are latching onto this man's crusade to claim millions of acres in the West.


As a young man, Ken Ivory served as a Mormon missionary in Guatemala. These days, he's still looking for converts. Ivory, a Republican state representative from a Salt Lake City suburb, has spent the past three years traveling the American West to convince state and local officials that they can claim millions of acres of federal land to use as they wish.

The federal government owns 47 percent of the 11 Western states. Much of this land is controlled by the Bureau of Land Management and is open for hunting, ranching, logging, mining, and drilling. Usually, these public lands can only change hands with approval from Congress—something that isn't going to happen anytime soon.

Nevertheless, Ivory's concept has caught on beyond the militia types who are demanding that the feds give up control of their holdings such as the eastern Oregon wildlife refuge currently held by armed occupiers. The Republican National Committee has endorsed the idea of turning over federal land to the states, and in March, the Senate passed a budget amendment sponsored by Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) that would create a fund for selling or transferring the land. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) has set forth a proposal that the federal government cannot own more than half the land in any state.

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has also endorsed state or private control of federal land. "You run into problems now with the federal government being, you know, this bully," Paul told a crowd in June before meeting with Cliven Bundy, the Nevada rancher who refused to pay more than $1 million in fees for grazing his cattle on federal land. The meeting, Bundy said, helped show Paul "the difference between Cliven Bundy's stand and Ken Ivory's stand." Bundy's son Ammon is currently leading the armed occupation in Oregon.'

The idea of taking over federal property makes for an easy sound bite, says David Garbett, staff counsel for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, a preservation group. But, he explains, "Every time people look at the arguments, and they have time to think and to evaluate what this is all about, it fails." Ronald Reagan campaigned as "one who cheers and supports" the late '70s Sagebrush Rebellion, but once he was in the White House, the push to sell off federal land stalled.

cont'd
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/01/ken-ivory-federal-land-bundy


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National Park Lands Need Us Now More Than Ever (Original Post) Lodestar Feb 2016 OP
K&R for exposure!! 2naSalit Feb 2016 #1
and vise versa tk2kewl Feb 2016 #2
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