Public Lands in Public Hands Agency Funding and Staffing – Who Will Manage the Public Lands
Автор: Colorado Law
Загружено: 2025-11-29
Просмотров: 44
Описание:
Agency Funding and Staffing – Who Will Manage the Public
Lands
Moderator: Matt Lee-Ashley, Former Chief of Staff and
Director of Policy and Programs, White House Council on
Environmental Quality
Dr. Mamie Parker, Former Head of Fisheries, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Services
Tim Whitehouse, Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility
Scott Fitzwilliams, Former Supervisor, White River National
Forest
"Public Lands in Public Hands – Reflections on 50 Years of Retention Policy" on Thurs, Oct 23rd and Fri, Oct 24th University of Colorado.
Public Lands in Public Hands: Reflections on 50 Years of Retention Policy
The Federal Land Policy and Management Act marked a new chapter in the history of public lands in the United States. In that 1976 law, Congress declared a national policy that public lands be retained in federal ownership and control for the benefit of the American people. Over the last 50 years, that retention policy has led to far reaching consequences for people and places across the country. Today, public lands provide critical support for
economic, environmental, social, and cultural values, contributing to the vitality of both urban and rural communities. Yet, the nation still struggles with the effects of dispossession and forced removal of Indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands, most of which remain in the hands of the Federal government. Retention of public lands also presents certain challenges to states, localities, and private property owners.
Despite 50 years of retention policy and widespread public support for keeping public lands in public hands, the future of public lands remains uncertain. Some want the federal government to sell off federal public lands or give them to the States. Others are keen to defend and celebrate the retention policy and their love of public lands.
The legal landscape has also changed dramatically over the past 50 years. Public land planning has proved to be a mixed bag, but it engages the public on the critical issues
facing public land planners, including resource development, grazing policy, land conservation, endangered species conservation, and the protection of cultural resources, among many other things. Modernizing the decision-making process has also taken center stage, with debates about strategies for making faster and smarter decisions. Adaptive management has also entered the public lands lexicon, although it sometimes seems more aspirational than real.
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