Stealing Home

Bill Would Sell Land Promised

to D.C. By Juliet Eilperin and Debbi Wilgoren, Washington Post Staff Writers

Tucked inside a huge budget

bill headed for an upcoming House vote is a provision that could spur the federal government to sell off millions of

acres of public land to mining interests, marking a major shift in the nation’s mining policy. …

Congress has barred

the government from selling land outright to mining companies since 1994, on the grounds that they should lease public land the same way

oil and gas firms do to extract the minerals below. But House Resources Committee Chairman Richard W. Pombo (R-Calif.)

said the measure would cut the deficit and promote private ownership. “In some states primarily owned by the federal government,

it’s important that more of that land become private property,” Pombo said. “These environmental groups want

the federal government to own everything.” [brayed the jackass – mjh]

Pombo’s proposal is stuck in 1872 by John Leshy

Not

satisfied with … liberalization of the discredited 1872 [mining] law, Pombo would also let private interests buy federal lands for

purposes that have nothing to do with mining, such as building ski resorts, gaming casinos and strip malls on areas owned by the American

public.

A unanimous Supreme Court ruled in 1979 that “the federal mining law surely was not intended to be a general real estate

law.” Pombo’s bill would change all that ….

[I]nvaluable sites, like wilderness study areas and national forest

roadless areas, are plainly left vulnerable to eventual privatization under this provision. Hikers, hunters and livestock

grazers could find locked gates blocking their passage through previously public lands — with the U.S. government nearly powerless to do

anything about it.

Pombo is trying to sneak his bill through Congress, hiding it in a budget

debate that has been dominated by higher profile controversies. He pushed the bill through committee under the

pretense of raising federal revenue, without mentioning that the public, the owner of these lands, will be the big loser.

Hard-rock mining is the only extractive industry that pays no royalties on the resources it removes from public lands.

Establishing a modest 8 percent royalty, which is at the lower end of what coal, oil and gas companies already pay for federal

resources, would yield twice as much revenue as Pombo expects from his land grab.

Politics – Pombo hopes to help mining – sacbee.com

Environmental Working Group … this week issued a new online report, available at www.ewg.org,

that purports to detail the public land opportunities opened by Pombo’s bill. The report concludes that about 17,000 acres in El Dorado

County, 13,000 acres in Mariposa County and 11,000 acres in Tuolumne County – all currently claimed for mining – could be sold in the

short term.

“Pombo does not like federal lands, so this is consistent with his general philosophy,” said John Leshy, the Interior

Department’s former top lawyer.

Now a professor at the University of California’s Hastings College of Law, Leshy likened the

proposal to “a real estate deal that has nothing to do with mining.” He further termed it “a huge change in national policy,” moving the

government toward disposal and away from retention of public lands.

The idea under debate revisits a public lands controversy that

flared during the early 1990s but then went largely underground until recently. Under an 1872 mining law, companies and individuals can

“patent” – or purchase – public land for $2.50 or $5 an acre.

Stung by deals in which the federal government sold off

valuable land for a song, officials imposed a moratorium on mining patents in 1994.

[His lunacy (mjh)] … helped

keep a spotlight on the 44-year-old Pombo, who in recent months has drawn both high praise [?!] and sharp criticism for his broader

environmental agenda.
—–

Pombo also placed the Bush Administration’s bid to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil

drilling within the budget bill.