Download Zipped Enrolled WordPerfect HJR039.ZIP
[Introduced][Amended][Status][Bill Documents][Fiscal Note][Bills Directory]

H.J.R. 39 Enrolled

             1     

STATE JURISDICTION OF FEDERALLY MANAGED LANDS

             2     
JOINT RESOLUTION

             3     
2011 GENERAL SESSION

             4     
STATE OF UTAH

             5     
Chief Sponsor: Roger E. Barrus

             6     
Senate Sponsor: Ralph Okerlund

             7      Cosponsors:
             8      Johnny Anderson
             9      Jim Bird
             10      Derek E. Brown
             11      David G. Butterfield
             12      LaVar Christensen
             13      David Clark
             14      Fred C. Cox
             15      Bradley M. Daw
             16      Brad L. Dee
             17      Jack R. Draxler
             18      Susan Duckworth
             19      James A. Dunnigan
             20      Rebecca P. Edwards
             21      Steve Eliason
             22      Julie Fisher
             23      Gage Froerer
             24      Brad J. Galvez
             25      Francis D. Gibson
             26      Richard A. GreenwoodKeith Grover
Stephen G. Handy
Wayne A. Harper
Neal B. Hendrickson
Christopher N. Herrod
Gregory H. Hughes
Eric K. Hutchings
Don L. Ipson
Ken Ivory
Todd E. Kiser
Bradley G. Last
John G. Mathis
Kay L. McIff
Ronda Rudd Menlove
Michael T. Morley
Merlynn T. Newbold
Jim Nielson
Michael E. Noel
Curtis Oda
Patrick PainterLee B. Perry
Jeremy A. Peterson
Val L. Peterson
Dixon M. Pitcher
Kraig Powell
Paul Ray
Douglas Sagers
Stephen E. Sandstrom
Dean Sanpei
Kenneth W. Sumsion
Evan J. Vickers
Christine F. Watkins
R. Curt Webb
Mark A. Wheatley
Ryan D. Wilcox
Larry B. Wiley
Brad R. Wilson
Carl Wimmer
Bill Wright              27     
             28      LONG TITLE


             29      General Description:
             30          This joint resolution of the Legislature urges Congress to relinquish all right and title of
             31      public lands in the state of Utah that are currently managed by the Bureau of Land
             32      Management and transfer title and jurisdiction to the state of Utah.
             33      Highlighted Provisions:
             34          This resolution:
             35          .    calls on the United States, through their agent, Congress, to relinquish to the state of
             36      Utah all right and title in those lands which were committed to the purposes of the
             37      state by terms of its enabling act compact with them and which now reside within
             38      the state as public or federal lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management
             39      which were reserved by Congress after the date of Utah statehood.
             40      Special Clauses:
             41          None
             42     
             43      Be it resolved by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
             44          WHEREAS, under the United States Constitution, the American states reorganized to
             45      form a more perfect union, yielding up certain portions of their sovereign powers to the elected
             46      officers of the government of their union, yet retaining the residuum of sovereignty for the
             47      purpose of independent internal self-governance;
             48          WHEREAS, the aims of the Constitutional Convention provided that state governments
             49      would clearly retain all the rights of sovereignty and independence which they before had and
             50      which were not exclusively delegated to the United States Congress;
             51          WHEREAS, among the rights of sovereignty held most jealously by the states was the
             52      right of sovereignty over the land within their respective borders;
             53          WHEREAS, in due time, the American states came to own vast tracts of land as federal
             54      territories;
             55          WHEREAS, by compact between the original states, territorial lands were divided into
             56      "suitable extents of territory" and upon attaining a certain population, were to be admitted into


             57      the union upon "an equal footing" as members possessing "the same rights of sovereignty,
             58      freedom and independence" as the original states;
             59          WHEREAS, the federal trust respecting public lands was established eight years before
             60      the Constitution by the Continental Congress and by the states which accepted the terms of the
             61      trust;
             62          WHEREAS, the federal trust respecting public lands was subsequently codified within
             63      the text of at least five clauses of the Constitution and is the foundation upon which the
             64      Constitution and the American union of states were erected for the benefit of every state
             65      without prejudice;
             66          WHEREAS, the federal trust respecting public lands obligates the United States,
             67      through their agent, Congress, to extinguish both their governmental jurisdiction and their title
             68      on the public lands that are held in trust by the United States for the states in which they are
             69      located;
             70          WHEREAS, for as long as the United States retains title in and jurisdiction over federal
             71      public lands in the state of Utah, the state is denied the same complete and independent
             72      sovereignty and jurisdiction that was expressly retained by the original states, and its citizens
             73      are denied the political right to establish or administer their own republican self-governance as
             74      is their right under the Equal Footing Clause;
             75          WHEREAS, Utah, by terms of its enabling act compact, disclaimed all right and title in
             76      the public lands within its borders;
             77          WHEREAS, "right and title" are elements of proprietorship, and "right and title" are
             78      neither sovereignty nor jurisdiction;
             79          WHEREAS, Utah is entitled, under the Equal Footing Doctrine, to the same rights of
             80      sovereignty, freedom, and independence as the original states;
             81          WHEREAS, Section 3 of Utah's Enabling Act, with respect to disposition of public
             82      lands, reads: "And said Convention shall provide by ordinance irrevocable with the consent of
             83      the United States and the people of said State . . . that until the title (to the unappropriated
             84      public lands) have been extinguished by the United States, the same shall be and remain


             85      subject to the disposition of the United States";
             86          WHEREAS, by these words the United States may only shelter public lands from the
             87      obligation of disposal by the consent of the state of Utah;
             88          WHEREAS, with the passage of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
             89      (FLPMA) of 1976, the United States shifted from a policy of disposal of public lands and
             90      extinguishment of the Federal title to one of retention of public lands and their management in
             91      perpetuity through the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM);
             92          WHEREAS, the BLM now claims jurisdiction of over 22,600,000 acres of public land
             93      in Utah, which is nearly twice as much land as the 11,512,000 acres of land in private
             94      ownership;
             95          WHEREAS, the BLM was directed to manage the public lands for multiple use and
             96      sustained yield and to afford Utah and other Western States a share of the revenues from the
             97      production of the natural resources on public lands, including revenues from timbering, oil and
             98      gas production, and mining;
             99          WHEREAS, the state and federal partnership of public lands management has been
             100      eroded by an oppressive and over-reaching federal management agenda that has adversely
             101      impacted the sovereignty and the economies of the state of Utah and local governments;
             102          WHEREAS, Sections 6, 7, 8, and 12 of Utah's Enabling Act provided for land grants to
             103      fund critical public functions such as primary and secondary education, public buildings, and
             104      water development;
             105          WHEREAS, federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court, have
             106      recognized this land grant as the establishment of a trust, even a "solemn contract" between the
             107      United States and the state of Utah, with the United States in the role as settlor of the trust and
             108      the state of Utah in the role of trustee;
             109          WHEREAS, as settlor of the trust, the United States has an obligation to pursue actions
             110      and policies that support the trustee in its efforts to fulfill the purposes of the trust;
             111          WHEREAS, federal land-management actions, even when applied exclusively to the
             112      federal lands, directly impact the ability of the state of Utah to manage its trust lands in


             113      accordance with the mandate of the Utah Enabling Act and to meet its obligation to the
             114      beneficiaries of the trust;
             115          WHEREAS, the United States Department of the Interior has arbitrarily and illegally
             116      affected private contracts by cancelling duly awarded oil and gas leases at the time of public
             117      auction, the validity of which were subsequently upheld by a federal court of competent
             118      jurisdiction;
             119          WHEREAS, in October of 2008, the BLM completed six of its fundamental documents
             120      for the allocation of resource use and conservation on BLM lands, called Resource
             121      Management Plans, after up to eight years of study, public participation, and the expenditure of
             122      millions of dollars;
             123          WHEREAS, the BLM evaluated the allocation of all multiple-use activities in these
             124      plans, including the primary multiple-uses of grazing, timber, minerals, recreation, and
             125      conservation, and made definitive allocation decisions at the conclusion of the process;
             126          WHEREAS, the BLM's failure to act affirmatively on these definitive allocation
             127      decisions has created uncertainty in the future of public land use in Utah and has caused capital
             128      to flee the state;
             129          WHEREAS, during the process of finalizing the six Resource Management Plans, the
             130      BLM refused to consider state and local government acknowledgments of R.S. 2477
             131      rights-of-way, or other evidence of the existence of R.S. 2477 rights-of-way, which led to the
             132      closure of many R.S. 2477 rights-of-way in the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument;
             133          WHEREAS, the Congress of the United States recently passed the Omnibus Public
             134      Land Management Act of 2009, which included the designation of lands as wilderness and
             135      national conservation areas in Washington County, Utah, and released all other lands to the
             136      general multiple-use mandate of the BLM;
             137          WHEREAS, the United States Department of the Interior has arbitrarily created a new
             138      category of lands, denominated "Wild Lands," and has superimposed these mandatory
             139      protective management provisions upon BLM operations and planning decisions in violation of
             140      the provisions of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, the provisions of the


             141      Administrative Procedures Act, and Presidential Executive Order 13563 concerning openness
             142      in policymaking;
             143          WHEREAS, the new Wild Lands provisions threaten to reopen the issue of wilderness
             144      in Washington County, in violation of the resolution of the issue through Congressional action;
             145          WHEREAS, the creation of a new Wild Lands category, and the immediate effect of its
             146      mandatory restrictive provisions, has arbitrarily undermined the effectiveness of the six
             147      recently completed Resource Management Plans of the BLM in eastern and southern Utah, is
             148      contrary to the multiple-use mandate outlined by FLPMA and other federal law, and threatens
             149      to derail efforts underway locally to seek certainty in land use allocation decisions through
             150      Congressional actions, such as that recently completed in Washington County;
             151          WHEREAS, other proposals to make use of the important natural resources of the state,
             152      such as phosphate and beneficial range improvement proposals, are now under threat from
             153      these ill-conceived Wild Lands provisions;
             154          WHEREAS, the United States Department of the Interior has failed to enunciate a valid
             155      source of statutory or constitutional authority for the imposition of the restrictive Wild Lands
             156      provisions;
             157          WHEREAS, the cumulative effect of the Wild Lands provisions, the illegal decision to
             158      withdraw validly granted oil and gas leases, the duplicative Master Leasing Plan process, and
             159      the United States Department of Interior's disdain for the use of public review processes, has
             160      lead to the demise of a robust and viable oil and gas leasing program in Utah, which negates an
             161      important revenue source to the state, and eventually jobs for the citizens of Utah;
             162          WHEREAS, the BLM has demonstrated a chronic inability to handle the proliferation
             163      of wild horses and burros on the public lands, to the detriment of the rangeland resource;
             164          WHEREAS, the United States Department of Agriculture has repeatedly tried to
             165      impose severe restrictive management provisions on lands defined as inventoried roadless
             166      areas, in violation of Congressional authorities, as reviewed by a federal court of competent
             167      jurisdiction;
             168          WHEREAS, the United States Army Corps of Engineers is proposing to extend its


             169      jurisdiction to regulate the waters of the United States to areas traditionally dry, except during
             170      severe weather events, in violation of the common definition of jurisdictional waters;
             171          WHEREAS, in 1996, the President of the United States abused the intent of the
             172      Antiquities Act by the creation of the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument without
             173      any consultation with state and local authorities or citizens;
             174          WHEREAS, the BLM's Resource Management Plan for the Kanab Field Office
             175      eliminated the filming of movies and filming for commercial purposes within the Grand
             176      Staircase-Escalante National Monument, thereby eliminating a source of economic opportunity
             177      for Kane County through the loss of use of its iconic "Little Hollywood" film site and other
             178      locations;
             179          WHEREAS, bureaucrats within the United States Department of the Interior are
             180      assembling information to prepare for further designations without consultation;
             181          WHEREAS, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service is making decisions
             182      concerning various species on BLM lands under the provisions of the Endangered Species Act
             183      without serious consideration of state wildlife management activities and protections designed
             184      to prevent the need for a listing, or recognizing the ability to delist a species, thereby affecting
             185      the economic vitality of the state and local regions;
             186          WHEREAS, the BLM has not authorized all necessary rangeland improvement projects
             187      involving the removal of pinyon-juniper and other climax vegetation, thereby reducing the
             188      biological diversity of the range, reducing riparian viability and water quality, and reducing the
             189      availability of forage for both livestock and wildlife;
             190          WHEREAS, differences of opinion about the appropriate use of the public lands has
             191      created a massive logjam in the advancement of any proposal for use of the public lands,
             192      whether for energy production, recreation, conservation, timber production, or similar uses;
             193          WHEREAS, the states have been instrumental in convening groups of stakeholders to
             194      consider protection for and responsible use of federal lands;
             195          WHEREAS, efforts in Washington County, Utah, the Owyhee region of Idaho, and the
             196      Front Range region in Montana have involved many various stakeholders, including ranchers,


             197      energy officials, environmental groups, and state and local government officials in an effort to
             198      achieve agreement on proposals for wilderness and other congressionally established
             199      conservation units, lands available for local privatization of lands, and areas available for
             200      traditional multiple-use;
             201          WHEREAS, these efforts led to congressional approval of a jointly prepared proposal
             202      in Washington County, Utah, and to other proposals currently pending before Congress;
             203          WHEREAS, the state is willing to sponsor, evaluate, and advance these locally driven
             204      efforts in a more efficient manner than the federal government, to the benefit of all users,
             205      including recreation, conservation, and the responsible development of energy, grazing, timber,
             206      and other economic industries;
             207          WHEREAS, citizens of the state of Utah have a love of the land and have demonstrated
             208      responsible stewardship of lands within state jurisdiction;
             209          WHEREAS, the state of Utah has a proven regulatory structure to manage public lands
             210      for multiple use and sustained yield;
             211          WHEREAS, federal land management policies are eroding the fundamental pillars of
             212      sovereignty, freedom, and independence upon which all states and the state of Utah are
             213      founded under the Equal Footing clause;
             214          WHEREAS, by means provided under the Constitution, damaged states may assert their
             215      rightful claim to the public lands within their borders and restore the constitutional design for
             216      the benefit of present and future generations; and
             217          WHEREAS, Utah fully reserves and asserts all sovereign and constitutional claims to
             218      its public lands:
             219          NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Legislature of the state of Utah calls
             220      on the United States, through their agent, Congress, to relinquish to the state of Utah all right,
             221      title, and jurisdiction in those lands that were committed to the purposes of this state by terms
             222      of its enabling act compact with them and that now reside within the state as public lands
             223      managed by the Bureau of Land Management that were reserved by Congress after the date of
             224      Utah statehood.


             225          BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that a copy of this resolution be sent to the Secretary of
             226      the United States Department of Interior, to the United States Director of the Federal Bureau of
             227      Land Management, to the Majority Leader of the United States Senate, to the Speaker of the
             228      United States House of Representatives, and to the members of Utah's Congressional
             229      Delegation.


[Bill Documents][Bills Directory]