Musket Man
New member
It was specifically stated in that article that the states did not want to takeover national parks like Yellowstone.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It was specifically stated in that article that the states did not want to takeover national parks like Yellowstone.
It was specifically stated in that article that the states did not want to takeover national parks like Yellowstone.
I am wondering if any of you wanting state ownership have ever spent 5 minutes reading the Constitution.
Nemont
Because the locals will be effected by the decision the most.
Transfer of Fed land to states would be a financial disaster. Most states have balance budget amendments. Management of Fed lands is a net looser each year. No one has told me how the states are going to be able to manage the lands better than the Feds. There may be a some able to gain some efficiencies in management but it won't cover all of the expenses. With a budget shortfall, land will have be sold to cover the gap. Furthermore, Fed jobs will be eliminated.
Idaho spends $6.5B each year while collecting $2.8B in taxes. The rest is Fed money. Think about it.
As far as I know wildlife is managed by the states. The feds introduced wolves which have taken a huge toll on wildlife on alot of areas. I dont believe this would have happened if the states managed the land and the states and counties had the say in it.
And look at the sole purpose of the IDaho State Land Board. Maximizing revenue to the schools. Nowhere in the State Constitution is the State Land Board directed to manage for wildlife, access, or other non-consumptive uses.
And, what did the State Land Board do last week up in Valley County? Sell off land to the highest bidder.....
This is exactly why the decisions should be delegated to a more unbiased entity! Our locals would manage it for maximum local profit without regard for the other users of the property. You may call that best management, but it is only best for a few locals, not the general public who aren't profiting financially from the land.
And if you think they will manage with considerations for hunting and fishing. Dream. F'n. On.
As I said earlier, federal employee can expect to be intimidated by the local powerhouses (Bundy's mob being an example, and I have more...) and it takes a lawsuit for them to act. In SE Idaho it was infuriating to talk with the irrigators as they dewatered the rivers or the grazers stomping stream habits and have some asshat respond "If you don't like what we are doing, vote for someone else."
Completely taking away the less biased federal involvement would give the abusers complete FU power and they would only serve their own selfish interests. There needs to be some balance in the management.
Change the State Constitution.
Quite a few towns were flooded a few years ago because of the Federal Government.
Their management skills are not the best.
Yes you do.
Change the State Constitution.
It had nothing to do with an 100 year all time snowfall, spring melt either now did it?
What do you suppose the outcome would have been with each indivdual state ownership of their lands?
Do you think Montana would give a rats arse about NoDak? That's a funny analogy and doesn't support your position.
BTW, your reply to me said exactly what I claimed you said.
Yes you do.
What is a better politician? I'd really like to know.
"I recognize the right and duty of this generation to develop and use the nature resources of our land; but I do not recognize the right to waste them, or to rob, by wasteful use, the generations that come after us." ~ Theodore Roosevelt