documents:cosproject:surge:article_23-federalcontrollands
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documents:cosproject:surge:article_23-federalcontrollands [2018/03/23 21:56] – [Public Lands: A “Generational Vision”] Oliver Wolcott | documents:cosproject:surge:article_23-federalcontrollands [2018/03/25 13:43] – Oliver Wolcott | ||
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- | The federal government loses **27** cents for every dollar it spends on land management, a loss to taxpayers of approximately < | + | |
===== Public Lands: A “Generational Vision” ===== | ===== Public Lands: A “Generational Vision” ===== | ||
**Ken Ivory is a Utah State Representative and Director of the Free The Lands Project with Federalism in Action.** | **Ken Ivory is a Utah State Representative and Director of the Free The Lands Project with Federalism in Action.** | ||
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It’s not working for the little bear cub in eastern Washington state who crawled desperately on her little paws, burned up to her elbows, to find anywhere that was not an inferno. State wildlife agents found her and she was nursed to health, only to be released into another overgrown forest. Every year, millions of her forest mates are not so lucky. | It’s not working for the little bear cub in eastern Washington state who crawled desperately on her little paws, burned up to her elbows, to find anywhere that was not an inferno. State wildlife agents found her and she was nursed to health, only to be released into another overgrown forest. Every year, millions of her forest mates are not so lucky. | ||
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- | With improved management ... vast ecosystems will have the opportunity to recover, blue ribbon fisheries will be restored, the threat of massive wildfires will be reduced, and big game will be able to flourish again. | + | |
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It’s not working for the lands and people of Montana. Firefighters in the state put out wildfires, on average, at less than 10 acres. Their helicopters are equipped to carry more water and drop it faster. When wild-fires broke out on federal lands, five Montana crews were in the air. However, the U.S. Forest Service grounded them because the Montana helicopters were “not on their approved list.” The Montana crews sat there on the ground watching thou-sands upon thousands of acres burn, their air polluted for weeks, and their water sup-plies decimated. | It’s not working for the lands and people of Montana. Firefighters in the state put out wildfires, on average, at less than 10 acres. Their helicopters are equipped to carry more water and drop it faster. When wild-fires broke out on federal lands, five Montana crews were in the air. However, the U.S. Forest Service grounded them because the Montana helicopters were “not on their approved list.” The Montana crews sat there on the ground watching thou-sands upon thousands of acres burn, their air polluted for weeks, and their water sup-plies decimated. | ||
documents/cosproject/surge/article_23-federalcontrollands.txt · Last modified: 2021/02/23 16:14 by 127.0.0.1