seeth07
Well-known member
I think it's important to understand this.Wisconsin was granted 10 million acres at statehood. Your state land board (BCPL) was put in charge of managing those lands, and has retained 78,000 of those acres. So, the elected officials of Wisconsin sold 99.22% of the lands granted at statehood. Fortunately, the Feds stepped in a reserved 1.5 million acres of National Forests and your DNR has been purchasing fee title lands.
Here's a good reference for Wisconsin from your legislature - https://bcpl.wisconsin.gov/bcpl.wisconsin.gov Shared Documents/Press/LRBPublicLands-June_2010.pdf
That's not much different than the other states with great agricultural lands. The productive lands were sold to settlers with the proceeds retained by the state land/education boards. That's what Congress had in mind when they established the Northwest Ordinance in 1787.
That paper is old but is found right on the state dnr website under public lands and I've shared it on the site already as it's very informative on the history of the public lands in WI and helps show the growth of them recently from our state department. From it is this quote:
"The majority of this land was sold over 100 years ago, the proceeds of which established
four trust funds that continue to grow to this day."
The value and intended purpose of the lands in the late 1800s when most of this land was sold is entirely different than where it's at in this age. Instead of selling land to establish the state and allow it to provide for its citizens the state is instead investing and purchasing land for it's citizens.
An investing thing of note about WI public lands is the county land. It is a bit deceiving to say WI sold all 10 mil when a lot of that land was indeed sold but it was sold to the county so they could manage it to generate revenue for the county roads and public water and sewer departments. 2.6m acres are owned by counties and the recreational use is very similar to the state lands.
Lastly, a lot of that 10 mil acreage wasn't part of what was "given" to the state at statehood. It has been awhile since I've been to the WI maritime museum but there is some really cool history there explaining the history of rivers in WI and their use for commerce. The state owned them and sold them as power companies built dams to build reservoirs. So 1 mil may have been lost but was replaced with 1 mil acres of water - which is 100% public in WI. The power companies all pretty much allow recreation so basically public too.
So honestly, it gets me a bit agitated that we are fighting this with the same antics the other side is using. They are saying housing land is needed and we have useless public BLM land we can use for it (bullcrap story they are pouring out) and then this side is saying the land will get immediately sold to the highest bidder and 99% of it will be gone overnight (bullcrap too)