It is claimed that it would increase tax revenue for things like schools. All it does is allow private companies, many if not most, from out of state, to exploit these wonderful places, use it up, make a quick buck, and leave a mess. I was denied access to state and Federal lands because of a destructive mining operation in the Superstition Mtns. Everyone has to look at an ugly unnatural pile of mine tailings and poisoned water here in Tucson, where natural wonder formerly existed. An out of state mining company is trying to destroy the southern Santa Rita Mountains and the town of Patagonia that lives on tourist dollars and health retreats. These are places that I have done trip reports on in the past at TSNS and am reposting at TFRN. Every trip report doesn't mention the most common destruction of corporate overgrazing on public lands. In all cases a few make a lot of money, the few workers get a short term job and the public gets robbed. Sacred native American sites get destroyed, which are sacred for a reason, and that is about us all. I'm talking Arizona first hand. I'm being cut off from access to the Guillero Mountains by a rancher, who thinks that he has the right to effectively make the whole mountain range his private empire, by gating a road with a lock. In my own backyard the county's Tortolita Park had planned access and thousands of acres removed for a few millionaires to have it exclusively instead, using money to influence state government, and attorneys to defend their actions against a few homeowners, and is not equal justice in any form. Millions of dollars against local poeple. That lawsuit cost $35,000 and would have doubled at least. Money buys influence to strong arm, stealing the people's natural heritage. On a state level, it is plain dishonest and all pretense of democratic process is gone. The only protections are the coordination of the Fed engineers about integrated waterways, environmental protections, and a system that makes it more expensive and difficult to bribe the Fed, which is disappearing with each passing year. I'll bet that not one of the more than 80 trip reports that I have posted have not been influenced by corporate state's greed. When we established the Town of Tortolita with 96% of the voters signing a petition to incorporate, the state attorney general sued to destroy our town on the behest of an out of state land developer, Evergreen. Our state is not that different than others. The system doesn't work, elections are bought, lobbying money is rampant, media has been consolidated to a point of censure akin to the Soviet Union's Pravda. Most people are too busy trying to make a living and don't even know who their state representatives are. The Fed is a monster, but nothing compared to state government. We would have no place to roam freely, especially nude, if states controlled the public lands. Whenever there is a state economci crunch, the first thing closed in cutbacks are parks, those lands and the rest stops on the interstate. All corporate tax giveaways remain intact. That alone should show the priorities and the ownership of the government.
The Fed isn't lily white. There is overreach. The same influences run it, but it is more on the stage of scrutiny.
As my example of or Town of Tortolita should explain, I am big on local democratic control, like the movement that Bob supports. I just know that it doesn't work on a state level, when big money influence walks into the picture. There is corrupted information and astro truf organization that are becoming more and more common, tearing down my ability to be free range as nature intended, that is naked, in an intact natural environment.
How does Calif. feel about it? Depends on the issue, who you talk to, etc. California tend to do this, but also, extends overreach at the same time. The governor of Utah is a shill and part of a greater corporate movement to influence these issues. His thing is all for the oil companies. There are state constitutional issues, preexisting. It depends on the state. The Federal Gov. over rides generally, but it gets very complicated by attorneys and 200 years of law and interpretations and on and on.
The Fed does control huge amounts of the more remote west. The people are supposed to own it and control it, state or federal lands, not just a few wealthy influences.