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Click
here for each of the BLM lands in Utah.
In
1812 Congress established the General Land Office to administer
the public lands, with the primary purpose of passing
public lands into private ownership. By the mid-nineteenth
century, most of the accessible land east of the Mississippi
River had been settled and developed. However, the arid
and rugged lands to the west remained largely unaltered
by human influence until the first party of Mormon pioneers
entered the Salt Lake Valley in July 1847. The area they
settled was claimed by Mexico but soon became part of
the public domain of the United States as a result of
the Mexican War of 1848.
The
process of land transfer to private interests was unusual
in Utah Territory. The primary reason was conflicts between
the Mormon Church and the United States over such subjects
as polygamy and separation of church and state. As was
the case in other territories, an elected territorial
legislature provided the basic guidelines for general
land use until transfer under U.S. law took place. But
because of the unsettled church-state conflict, the citizens
of Utah Territory could not take advantage of U.S. land
disposal laws until late in the territorial period. The
early Utahns were not permitted to enjoy the benefits
of the Preemption Act of 1830 which allowed settlers to
buy up to 160 acres of land for $1.25 per acre, nor could
they take up land under the Homestead Act of 1862 which
granted 160 acres to those willing to settle the American
frontier. Not until 1869 was U.S. law applicable in Utah
Territory, and even then the primary impetus was the development
of non-Mormon interests, especially those arising from
mining and railroad development.
So
despite its early settlement, Utah was the last area in
the continental United States where the public domain
was opened to private ownership. Although many settlers
had squatter claims on land under authority of the territorial
legislature, not one acre of land in Utah was recognized
under U.S. law as privately owned until January 1869,
when the first Utah land office was opened in Salt Lake
City.
The
political tide which had encouraged random settlement
and development began to turn in 1934 when Congress passed
the Taylor Grazing Act. Through this act, authority was
given to classify land according to its best use and to
reject applications for other uses. The act also provided
for regulation of livestock grazing on the public lands,
and the Grazing Service was established to administer
the new law. Other conservation milestones occurred when
the General Land Office was merged with the Grazing Service
to create the Bureau of Land Management in 1946, and when
the Classification and Multiple Use Act was passed in
1964 calling for classification of federal lands for retention
or disposal and for the multiple-use management of the
lands that were retained.
The
greatest shift in national attitudes toward the public
lands was manifested in 1976 when Congress enacted the
Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA), which
established a coherent legislative mandate for managing
the public lands and made the BLM a true multiple-use
agency. The law recognized that public land is a national
asset, providing goods, services, and vast natural resources
for millions of Americans. FLPMA provides a clear policy
that most public lands are to be retained in federal ownership
and managed by the BLM under a concept of multiple use
for all Americans, with full participation of the public
in decision making and a careful balancing of the interests
of competing users.
Multiple
use provides for the development of needed resources while
protecting other resource values from inadvertent damage
or destruction. Through a planning, decision-making, and
management process that balances alternative uses and
involves the public at all steps, the BLM can provide
opportunities for many different uses of the public lands
and ensure that its many resources will remain available
in the future.
Approximately
270 million acres - about one-eighth of the nation's land
area - remain today as public lands managed by the BLM
for multiple use. In Utah, the BLM manages about 22 million
acres, or 42 percent of the state's land area.
The
BLM's national office is in Washington, D.C. In addition,
there are twelve state offices, 58 district offices, and
140 resource area offices. In Utah, the state office is
located in Salt Lake City, with five district offices
located in Vernal, Richfield, Moab, Cedar City, and Salt
Lake City. Sixteen resource area offices are scattered
throughout the state. The BLM has about 9,650 employees,
most of whom work in field offices in the West. Multiple-use
management requires many skills and talents. Foresters,
range conservationists, wildlife biologists, archaeologists,
cadastral surveyors, engineers, recreation specialists,
and many other professionals are needed to care for and
manage the public lands.
Terry
Graham
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