Public Land Policy

41
Public Land Policy

description

Public Land Policy. Resource Exploitation 1865-1890. Goal--encouraged the settlement of the land Means-- Privatization. Homestead Act of 1862. 1872 mining law. Efficiency Movement 1890-1920. Bureau of Forestry- G. Pinchot. Taylor Grazing Act of 1934.  Gospel of Efficiency - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Public Land Policy

Page 1: Public Land Policy

Public Land Policy

Page 2: Public Land Policy

Resource Exploitation 1865-1890

Homestead Act of 1862

1872 mining law

Goal--encouraged the settlement of the landMeans-- Privatization

Page 3: Public Land Policy

Efficiency Movement 1890-1920

Taylor Grazing Act of 1934

Bureau of Forestry- G. Pinchot

Gospel of Efficiency

“Conservation is the greatest good for the greatest # of people for the longest time”

Page 4: Public Land Policy

Federal Reclamation Service, 1902

Page 5: Public Land Policy

Preservation Movement

-Creation of National Park System,

Antiquities Act, Fish and Wildlife Service

Page 6: Public Land Policy

"The man should have youth and strength who seeks adventure in the wide, waste spaces of the earth, in the marshes, and among the vast mountain masses, in the northern forests, amid the steaming jungles of the tropics, or on the desert of sand or of snow. He must long greatly for the lonely winds that blow across the wilderness, and for sunrise and sunset over the rim of the empty world."

Theodore Roosevelt

Page 7: Public Land Policy
Page 8: Public Land Policy

Big QuestionsWhat is land good for?Who makes the decision?How to balance competing values?Role of public sector?Role of private sectorRole of science/values

Page 9: Public Land Policy

Public LandsAdministered by different agencies

National Park Service (NPS)Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) Bureau of Land Management (BLM) in Interior Forest Service (FS) Agriculture

Different mission 29% of US land92% of lands are in 12 western states

Page 10: Public Land Policy

National Park ServiceMost restrictive limits on usage77 million acresDiverse categories of units

National ParksNational PreservesNational MonumentsMisc

Page 11: Public Land Policy

National Parks

Page 12: Public Land Policy
Page 13: Public Land Policy
Page 14: Public Land Policy
Page 15: Public Land Policy

National Preserves

                                                                                                                                                                          

Aniakchak Caldera Bering Land Bridge

Big Cypress                                                         Tallgrass Prairie

Page 16: Public Land Policy

National Monuments

Canyon de Chelly

Page 17: Public Land Policy

Saratoga National Battlefield

Pt. Reyes National Seashore

Page 18: Public Land Policy

Recreation Conflict

Page 19: Public Land Policy

National Wildlife Refuge System

Managed by Fish and Wildlife Service Responsibilities include

93 million acres in 512 national wildlife refuges, 198 waterfowl production areas, 50 wildlife coordination areas114 other sites

Mission- conserve and enhance fish and wildlife and their habitats

Page 20: Public Land Policy
Page 21: Public Land Policy

Bureau of Land Management

Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA)"multiple use"

"management of the public lands and their various resource values so that they are utilized in the combination that will best meet the present and future needs of the American people."

Page 22: Public Land Policy

Multiple (!) Users

Page 23: Public Land Policy

Resource UtilizationMining development and energy production

leasing of Federal oil and gas and geothermal mineralsmaintaining mining claims or sitesOil shale development

Livestock grazing

Page 24: Public Land Policy

Overseeing production of oil and gas resources, geothermal resources, helium, solid minerals, coal, wind power, solar power, and minerals

Page 25: Public Land Policy

Recreationhunting fishing camping hiking horseback riding boating white water rafting hang gliding

off-highway vehicle and pleasure driving mountain biking birding and wildlife viewing winter sports climbing visiting natural and cultural heritage sites

Page 26: Public Land Policy

Bureau of Land ManagementNational Management Strategy for Motorized Off-Highway Vehicle Use

Bureau of Land ManagementNational Management Strategy for Motorized Off-Highway Vehicle Use

Bureau of Land ManagementNational Management Strategy for Motorized Off-Highway Vehicle Use

Page 27: Public Land Policy

                                                                                                                                                 

                                                             

Page 28: Public Land Policy

California Desert

Page 29: Public Land Policy
Page 30: Public Land Policy

Wilderness AreasDesignated by Congress

“an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain…”

Designation criteriaimprint of man’s work substantially unnoticeableoutstanding opportunities for solitude may contain ecological, geological, other features

UseCommercial activities prohibitedPrimitive recreation only

Managed by BLM, NFS, NPS, & FWS

Page 31: Public Land Policy
Page 32: Public Land Policy
Page 33: Public Land Policy
Page 34: Public Land Policy
Page 35: Public Land Policy

Roan Plateau, CO

.

Page 36: Public Land Policy
Page 37: Public Land Policy

National Forest ServiceMotto: Caring for the Land and Serving Peoplearea similar to Texas - 8% of U.S. land massEarly mission: protect forest reserves from unrestrained logging

Multiple UseRecreation vs. Timber production

Page 38: Public Land Policy
Page 39: Public Land Policy

OverviewBLM & NFS big 2

60%+ public landsMultiple Use criteriaPolitically controversial

NPS11%

BLM36%

FWS13%

NFS26%

Wilderness14%

Page 40: Public Land Policy

Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument designated by Clinton 2000Utah Geological Survey- $223 -$331 billion in energy and mineral resources

                                                                

           

Page 41: Public Land Policy

Forest Service- Multiple Use