Can the States Seize Control of Federal Lands?
August 21, 2015 — Ryan McMaken
The term “Sagebrush Rebellion” is again showing
up in newspapers across the American West as states seek more control
over federal lands within their own boundaries. As with the original Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s and 1980s, several western states, where the federal government owns well over one-third of land
within the states, have begun to look to more local control of lands as
an answer to federal indifference, mismanagement, and outright
hostility. In at least one case — Utah — the state has initiated a lawsuit in an effort to wrest more control of lands out of federal hands.
The Los Angeles Times, in the socio-economic basket case known as California, dismissed the idea outright in an unsigned editorial, declaring the idea to be an affront against unfairly maligned federal supremacy. The Denver Post, meanwhile, offered last month a more evenhanded
assessment, suggesting that the cost to the state of maintaining public
lands — in the form of fire-fighting, forestry, and more — is too high
to be worth it.
Why Now?
Federal control of lands within states has long been a source of contention between states and the federal government.
Prior to the adoption of the 1787 Constitution,
there were few provisions in law that allowed for direct federal control
of lands within states. The new constitution, however, was a coup for
centralizers who wished to assert more direct federal control over lands
in the west. The Louisiana Purchase further strengthened control over
Western lands by placing huge swaths of land under federal control.
Throughout most of the nineteenth-century,
though, it was accepted that virtually all of this land should
eventually be handed over to states and to settlers. In the second half
of the century, this was mostly done through various homestead acts and
by large land grants to the railroads.
The far west and Rocky Mountain west offered new
problems, however, because those lands did not lend themselves to
homesteading in the way imagined by the Congress. Much of the west is
too dry to allow for workable homesteads on the small plots allowed
under federal law at the time. Thus, the only way such lands could be
profitable was if much larger amounts of land were allowed to single
owners.
Politically, however, this did not work either,
since the Progressive movement opposed ownership of many acres of
mountain land by corporate mining operations, or by other owners who did
not fit the romanticized image of the self-sufficient homesteader. Over
time, the federal government took over these lands permanently,
refusing ownership to states which were portrayed by Progressives as
being in the pockets of corporate interests.
In more recent times, this has led to conflicts
in which local economic interest conflicts with federal plans for lands,
and in which federal control of lands has actively hurt local
economies. For example, to please environmentalists, the Federal
government continues to close off roads in federal lands that have long
been used by local residents for a variety of purposes. Moreover, the
federal government collects taxes and fees on lands that state
governments would rather tax themselves.
But the most memorable recent examples probably
occurred in 2013 when the federal government shut down national parks
and other federal lands frequented by tourists. The federal government
dispatched federal agents armed with assault rifles who forcibly ejected
visitors from the allegedly “public lands.” Meanwhile, nearby towns
that rely on tourists for the local economy were powerless to open the
parks themselves. State officials, who are far more sensitive to local
economic needs than members of Congress or the White House, were also
powerless to do anything.
Eventually, after much political pressure was
applied, the federal government kindly allowed states to pay millions to
the federal government to open the parks again.
But, at that point, the political damage had
been done. Many states realized that if they were going to have to pay
millions to the federal government to access their own lands, there may
be a problem with the arrangement.
And finally, when dealing with the federal
government, it’s important to remember that only immense political and
corporate interests have any chance of influencing federal policy.
Because of the cost of doing business with the feds in Washington (it’d
be much higher than the cost of influencing state or local governments),
Federal lands are primarily a battleground between large, well-funded
environmental groups and huge corporate organizations. Small companies,
landowners, or conservation groups have little-to-no hope of influencing
how lands are controlled or owned.
Can States Afford to Take Over Federal Lands?
Even those who are sympathetic to the
decentralization of federal lands have long questioned whether or not
states would want to assume the cost of managing them. Even if states
took over federal lands, in most western states, there is little danger
of those lands being privatized. Coloradans, for example, like their
“public” forests just fine, and would be in no rush to hand them over to
the Ted Turners
of the world. This means that the states (i.e., the taxpayers) would
have to pay for intervention in forest fires, road maintenance, erosion
control, and other expenses associated with managing public lands.
Those who think the transfer would be too costly cite a study of Utah’s public lands
which claims that a transfer of federal lands to the Utah government
would cost the state’s economy $280 million annually, plus $150 million
in federal salaries.
Now, it should be remembered that studies like
these are pretty sketchy. They take all of the federal monies spent on
jobs related to federal lands and then declare that all that money would
disappear if the federal government were removed from the equation.
They do not consider that, if states were allowed to control these
lands, they might manage them better, increase fee income, allow greater
levels of economic growth, and avoid local economic disasters like the
federally-mandated closing of parks.
The Problem of Direct Taxation
But the biggest hole in this analysis is the
fact that all of these states ignore the tax revenues that states like
Utah and Colorado pay to the federal government. Federal taxes collected
in Utah in fiscal year 2012, for example, totaled $15.6 billion. At the
same time, according to several sources, Utah is a net taxpayer state, which means its citizens pay more in federal taxes than the state received back in federal spending. In Utah’s case, the federal government spends 66 cents
for every dollar in federal taxes collected from the state. Thus, we
could conclude that the IRS collects $5.6 billion more in taxes than the
state receives back. And this happens year over year.
That allegedly “lost” $280 million doesn’t look
quite so big compared to the $5.6 billion extracted from the state by
the feds every year. Were that money allowed to remain in Utah, there is
no question as to the ability of the state to manage some public lands.
Similarly, in Colorado, which is also a net
taxpayer state, the IRS collected $41.2 billion in tax revenues. But,
the federal spending in the state totals only 64 cents for every federal
tax dollar spent. This means that, every year, Coloradans pay about $15
billion more in taxes than is spent by the feds within Colorado.
One Colorado official has claimed that, without federal spending, one major forest fire would “obliterate” the state budget.
That’s a pretty vague term, but given that Colorado only collects $12
billion in state taxes compared to the federal take of $41 billion, the
biggest potential drain on Colorado productivity isn’t exactly
wildfires.
From a legal perspective, of course, it’s
useless to discuss any of this. Ever since the rejection of the Articles
of Confederation, and the adoption of the new Constitution, it is quite
clear in federal law that the federal government can directly tax
citizens without any regard whatsoever for state and local governments,
or apportionment
among the states. Apportionment, which was a halfway measure that
attempted to even out tax burdens among states, was essentially
eviscerated shortly after the Constitution was adopted when early
Supreme Court decisions declared that apportionment didn’t apply if it
was an inconvenience to federal tax collectors. The Sixteenth Amendment,
while not creating the phenomenon of direct taxation, merely
strengthened the federal government’s hand considerably.
So, today, the states themselves are financial
bystanders when it comes to federal spending and the ability of states
to control taxes, spending, and resources within their own borders. The
perpetual drain on state wealth in net taxpayer states is routinely
ignored. The federal government can now extract $15 billion more — net —
than it spends in a state, and then claim it is making a fabulously
generous gift to the state when it does spend a fraction of what it has
already taken. Utah and Colorado may get lucky and be able to somehow
take control of federal lands. But, lessened federal spending in the
state won’t translate into a lower tax bill for anyone.

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