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Group Identifies 20 "Anti-Public Lands" Politicians

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A key group of 20 members of Congress is responsible for marshaling legislation aimed at shrinking the federal landscape and attempting to block the president's authority to establish national monuments under the Antiquities Act, according to a left-leaning public policy think tank.

In a paper (attached below) released Monday morning, the Center for American Progress said the 20 politicians run counter to public opinion polls that show a vast majority of Americans value the country's public lands. Their philosophy when it comes to opposing federal ownership of lands can be traced to one of three attributes, the Center maintained: they are members of the Tea Party; they recently were challenged by a Tea Party candidate in a primary election, or; they come from congressional districts in which they face little competition.

"By launching an ideological attack on the government's authority to protect and preserve lands, waters, and wildlife, the anti-parks caucus is proving to conservative primary voters that it is opposed to the federal government in every way," the paper stated.

According to the paper, The Rise to Power of the Congressional Anti-Park Caucus, "between January 2013 and March 2016 members of Congress filed at least 44 bills or amendments that attempted to remove or undercut protections for parks and public lands, making the 114th Congress the most anti-conservation Congress in recent history."

(Traveler footnote: While the paper's title calls the politicians the "Anti-Park Caucus," most of the legislation cited by the group involves U.S. Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service lands, not those managed by the National Park Service.)

One of the 20 identified by the group is U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop, a Utah Republican who chairs the House Natural Resources Committee and is a founding member of FLAG -- the Federal Lands Action Group, which the Center said "has stated its goal is to 'develop a legislative framework for transferring public lands to local ownership and control.'"

Interestingly, according to an article earlier this year in The Atlantic, "Yes, the government owns nearly a third of America. But after mapping federal holdings to county populations, it becomes clear the majority of government land is remote and unpopulated, far from even most rural residents."

To buttress its position that the 20 are going in a direction contrary to public opinion, the Center for American Progress cited a poll from January in which 77 percent of those surveyed in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming were of the opinion that the country benefits either a "great deal" or a "fair amount" from national parks, and 55 percent said they personally benefited either a "great deal" or a "fair amount" from national parks.

Nearly half of those surveyed were of the opinion that the federal government wasn't doing enough to protect or strengthen the National Park System. Additionally, when asked how they would view an elected representative who took a strong stand on national park lands, 83 percent said they would view them favorably. Broken down by political affiliation, 88 percent of those bullish on national parks identified themselves as Democrats to the pollsters, and 79 percent as Republicans. Eighty-nine percent had visited a national park within the last year, according to the survey.

While the Center for American Progress identified the reasons it believed were behind the anti-public lands stance of the 20 politicians, it did not have a solution for how to move them back to bipartisan support of public lands.

"The report doesn't necessarily go into types of solutions to this. I think that's kind of a next step," said Jenny Rowland, the paper's author. "We looked into the issues of gridlock and this kind of far-right pandering that drives these congressmen further right than towards the center where this has historically been an area of bipartisanship, public lands and things like (the Land and Water Conservation Fund)."

The group also didn't explore whether campaign contributions were driving the politicians' positions on public lands.

Comments

While I'm not supporting LaMalfa, he has introduced H.R. 4387: Tule Lake National Historic Site Establishment Act of 2016. The bill would break off the Tule Lake Unit from the WWII Valor in the Pacific NM and make the Tule Lake NHS it's own site. Senator Boxer has sponsored a similar bill in the Senate.


While the paper's title calls the politicians the "Anti-Park Caucus," most of the legislation cited by the group involves U.S. Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service lands, not those managed by the National Park Service.)

A very good point.  I read through the first several names and didn't see a thing in the report that identified a threat to the parks or the supposed "anti-parks statements. 


An article from today's Salt Lake Tribune about some comments made by the Outdoor Recreation Industry Council:

http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/3752255-155/rolly-outdoor-recreation-indus...


We are having significant problems with tea party diminishing our public parks. The probate judge has appointed all tea party members and they are bent on making these natural environments profit making entities. They stopped collecting local taxes to support the parks, changed the by laws to  include logging, drilling and fracking.  We are a small group trying to combat this effort and are looking to join a national group who is fighting this nationwide travesty. Can you recommend anything. 


Thanks to the writer of this article. I appreciate your effort in making this informational blogs. I know it's not easy to do this but you have done a really great job. I'm pretty sure your readers enjoying it a lots.


The lead story on one Salt Lake TV news show this evening was a squabble in the Utah legislature over the lawsuit idea that is being funded with taxpayer dollars.  A Louisiana law firm is being paid $1700 per hour and have apparently recently released a secret report.  The Republican leadership refuses to make it public.  They are claiming doing so would violate attorney / client privilege.

People on the other side are arguing that because the money paying for it is public money, then the public should be permitted to see the report.

But we all need to remember, there is absolutely no secrecy and no backroom dealings in any of our lawmaking in America.  All our politicians are completely open and honest.

Meanwhile, Sally Jewel is coming to Utah soon and there is rampant speculation that it has something to do with Bears Ears National Monument.  There is apparently a great deal of consternation in some of the Capitol's back rooms.

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865652634/GOP-Democratic-lawmakers-ge...


The Salt Lake Tribune carries a tragic story today.  Terry Tempest Williams, a long time environmental sciences professor a the University of Utah, best selling author, and well known for her opposition to extractive industries, is leaving the U.

It looks like the politicians finally managed to exert enought pressure through financial threats to push the university's administration to dump Terry.  She has been in the crosshairs of the Utah state legislature's anti-environmental wing for quite some time.  Of course, as is the usual case, much of this is carefully hidden deep in the dark dank recesses of Capitol and University back rooms.  Truth is hard to come by in those places.

Here's a link to the article.  Be sure to read her resignation letter.

http://www.sltrib.com/home/3845389-155/terry-tempest-williams-leaving-us...


Here's the latest news from around the Big Salty Puddle:

http://www.sltrib.com/home/4062922-155/rolly-dont-think-utah-has-a

 

 


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