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Polling Shows Most Westerners Approve Of Federal Land-Management Agencies, Oppose Giving Lands Over To The States

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Most voters -- except those in Utah and Wyoming -- oppose efforts to transfer federal lands, such as this area of Canyonlands National Park, over to the states/Kurt Repanshek

A public opinion poll of eight Western states has produced somewhat contradictory results when it comes to federal lands in those states. While strong numbers voiced positive views of agencies such as the National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service, equally strong numbers held their state governments in higher esteem than the federal government. Overall, though, a slight majority opposes proposals to turn federal lands over to the states.

The polling conducted earlier this month comes as legislators in Utah are threatening to sue the federal government if it doesn't hand over federal lands in the Beehive State and as some congressional delegations in the region chafe at federal land ownership and management.

In Utah, state Rep. Ken Ivory two years ago sponsored the Transfer of Public Lands Act and Related Study, which was signed into law by Gov. Gary Herbert in March 2012. The bill established a deadline of this coming December 31 for the federal government to turn over Utah'™s nearly 20 million acres of public lands to the state, or it will sue. (It should be noted, though, that Utah's Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel advised the Legislature that the measure has "a high probability of being held unconstitutional.")

According to the Center for American Progress, which conducted the polling, similar legislative efforts are under way or in development in seven other Western states. And yet, the group's polling Sept. 10-14 found that 52 percent of the 1,600 voters contacted oppose a transfer of federal lands to their states. That majority feared, the pollsters said, that such a transfer would lead to higher state taxes or would lead their legislatures to sell off the lands rather than bear the costs of managing them.

'œIn New Mexico, we have a deep connection to our public lands. They are part of our history, our culture, and our economy,' said Sen. Martin Heinrich in a release outlining the polling results. 'œThese lands belong to all of us, and it is imperative that we keep it that way. Efforts to seize or sell off millions of acres of federal public lands throughout the West would bring a proliferation of closed gates and no trespassing signs in places that have been open and used for generations. These privatization schemes would devastate outdoor traditions such as hunting and fishing that are among the pillars of Western culture and a thriving outdoor recreation economy.'

The polling found that:

* 76 percent of the respondents thought the National Park Service was doing a good job managing the parks;

* 73 percent approved of the jobs being done by both the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Forest Service;

* 48 percent approved of the job being done by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (vs. 34 percent who disapproved);

* 68 percent had a negative view of the federal government.

Among the states surveyed -- Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon and New Mexico -- only Utah and Wyoming respondents favored a transfer of federal lands to their states. In Utah, 52 percent of the respondents were in favor, while in Wyoming 48 percent backed such a proposal vs. 46 percent opposed. Overall, a slight majority (47 percent vs 44 percent) of respondents who had never visited a federal landscape during the past year were in favor of the lands transfer.

Another aspect of the polling found that a strong majority of respondents (72 percent) "consider public lands like national forests and BLM lands to be more 'American places' than 'state places.''

You can find the questions for the survey here.

 

Comments

The Ivory family has a very negative reputation. Whether it's Ken or his kin.

You made specific allegations about Ken which were false.  What his family - if in fact it is his family - has done is totally irrelevant. 

I ask for proof that there has not.

Typical- you make an allegation and then ask others to prove it isn't true.  Fact is you don't have any basis for the allegation or you would provide it.

Kurt - I apologize for this digression but when people make baseless, defamatory and slanderous allegations, I believe they need to be called out.  I did it with Smokies who is attacking the NPS and I am doing it with Lee who nominally is on the other side. 


ec, Utah's politics are filled with good ol' boy self dealing that is so convoluted and well hidden that it's nearly impossible for anyone but a seasoned investigative reporter to sort any of it out.  But it's there.  And the Ivory family is an active part of it.  The recent indictments of our last two attorneys general are but a tip of the iceberg that floats on the surface of Utah's political scene.  There are plenty of basis for legitimate allegations, but the power and wealth of the network make it nearly impossible to expose it.  You and I can argue forever, but the truth is that throughout Utah -- and the rest of America, unfortunately -- there is a culture of political corruption that has existed since the beginning and will probably never be stopped.

How about calling out the corrupt politicians?  You might do much more good if you would.


How about calling out the corrupt politicians? You might do much more good if you would.

When I have evidence of corruption I will call them out.  But I won't stoop so low in the name of idealogy to make unsubstantiated accusations of fact against politicians with which I disagree. 


Okay.  Give my regards to the ol' boys in Colorado.


Here's how "non-partisan" the CAP is. Its board of directors includes Tom Daschle, Carol Browner and Tom Steyer. Ted Strickland is on its executive committee. Even the New York Times calls it liberal. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/07/us/major-research-groups-given-low-marks-on-transparency.html?_r=0


And, Mr. Bick, in which world of yours is 'liberal' a swear word?


It's not a swear word at all. Someone called CAP nonpartisan. I pointed out that it's not. If you saw a poll on the use of public lands from an oil company, you'd question the poll, right? Same thing here.


We live in a world of relative and overwhelmingly subjective definitions. To most Americans moderately conservative Republicans are considered moderately conservative Republicans, however to the Tea Party extremists they are derided as RINO's. News sources that I - who self-identifies as a long-ago former conservative but current for many year progressive - consider fairly objective, folks on the far right consider "commie-lib" whatevers. I was just trying to get some context in how you're using the term.


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