Essay On Public Lands

1697 Words4 Pages

U.S. Public Lands are a vital part of our nation and what is stands for, but you rarely hear anything about of these lands or the creation of their units anywhere other than a bleak mention in a high school American history class where they briefly mention their conception or if you seek it out in college. The federal government owns just about 30% of all public lands in the United States, (Bureau of Land Management Lecture), which equates to almost 650 million acres, of land of all different types and terrains. The U.S. Public Lands system is divided into five major units, all owned by the federal government, all with different goals and all ran by different legislation but all still dealing with the same things: nature and the environment. …show more content…

I believe the best alternative is for the United States to give back the federal land to the individual states, and then the individual states consolidate the different type of agencies to make one overarching, state run umbrella agency for all parts of the environment. The federal government has spread itself too thin and isn’t properly taking care of the land nor are they making incredible profits. I believe that giving the land back to the states will be beneficial to help keep the costs down, centralize the efforts, and make “saving,” and “preserving,” the environment more efficient in the long …show more content…

From their homesteading practices, which eventually fell apart leading to BLM lands and grazing permits, to National Park Services, which at one time made profit, are now barely breaking even, even with tourism. The only really profitable aspects are the oil, gas and mining companies, which reside on federal land but those are poorly managed and do more bad than good for the environment and all people living around them. At first it will be hard but it’s not impossible under the right leadership who truly only wants the betterment of the environment, I think with strict guidelines and rules this could be the most profitable solution for humankind and the environment. I believe that giving the land back to the states will be beneficial to help keep the costs down, centralize the efforts, and make “saving,” and “preserving,” the environment more efficient in the long

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