|
LIEBERMAN SEEKS TRANSPARENCY ON INTERIOR’S
PLANS
FOR HIGHWAYS THROUGH PRISTINE PUBLIC LANDS
MILLIONS OF ACRES COULD BE SPOILED
July 2, 2003
WASHINGTON - Governmental Affairs Committee Ranking Member
Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., Wednesday prodded Interior Secretary
Gale Norton to share with the public the Department’s
behind-the-scenes activities regarding highway construction
through millions of acres of federal land, including wilderness,
national parkland, wildlife refuges, national monuments and
national forests.
In a letter dated July 2 , 2003, Lieberman said he feared
the Department was exposing these lands to potential development
and environmental degradation by manipulating the standards
by which claims could be made to the land.
“I am writing to express my serious concern that the
Department of the Interior is failing to fulfill its obligations
as a steward of the nation’s public lands in apparent
violation of the law,” Lieberman wrote. “Despite
the potentially profound consequences” of changes the
department is making, “little information has been provided
to the public about the Department’s activities.”
The Senator asked the Secretary a series of questions related
to the Department’s activities in this area.
At issue is Revised Statute 2477, part of a law enacted in
1866 when the federal government was encouraging pioneers
to settle the West. This provision granted a right of way
over public lands for highway construction. RS 2477 was repealed
in 1976 when Congress established a modern system for public
land management designed to generally retain the lands for
public use. State or local authorities, companies, and private
individuals seeking to create a road across public land must
now submit a formal application to the Secretary of the Interior
or Agriculture. The new law also requires consideration of
the environmental effects of granting the request.
The old law, however, remains in effect for rights of way
established before 1976. No one knows precisely how many rights
of way were established under this law, and so claims on old
wagon trails, cattle paths, and even stream beds are still
being asserted to this day.
And because of the Interior Department’s secrecy, no
one knows how many claims are currently pending, who has made
the claims, where the claims are located, whether or not they
are valid, nor how Interior is disposing of them.
“What is at stake today is whether, by manipulating
the standards for recognizing rights of way claims made under
the 1866 law, the Bush Administration effectively gives broad
permission for the development of federal land – even
when the claims themselves may be flimsy and the damage to
the environment caused by recognition of those claims may
be profound,” Lieberman wrote. “If the standards
are systematically weakened – as many in the Administration
appear to prefer - ... the Administration would essentially
open the public’s lands to all comers, regardless of
the validity of their claims to the land and regardless of
the net environmental impact, and by doing so, distort the
1866 grant and undermine the purposes of the new law enacted
in 1976.”
Lieberman said right of way claims asserted under the old
law should be judged in a manner consistent with the letter
and spirit of the law so that only legitimate claims will
be recognized. This, however, was “a process which the
Administration appears unwilling to undertake.”
One example of the Department’s manipulation is the
use of a separate regulation intended to resolve non-controversial
title claims in the consideration of RS 2477 claims. Under
this regulation, known as the “disclaimer of interest”
rule, the United States may declare it has no legal interest
in a piece of property. By converting this regulation into
a vehicle for processing RS 2477 claims, Interior is circumventing
a 1996 Congressional prohibition against a final rule governing
the validity of RS 2477 claims.
Use of this regulation also appears to prohibit citizen groups
from challenging RS 2477 claims, and for the first time, allows
counties and other state-created entities to file claims,
whether or not the state agrees with the claim.
“My concern is that the disclaimer process may be used
to unfairly concede federal title to lands when proper title
should be established by the Courts, or Congress,” Lieberman
said.
The Department further evaded public scrutiny by reaching
a “Memorandum of Understanding” with Utah on April
9, 2003, by which Interior agreed to use the “disclaimer
of interest” rule to acknowledge RS 2477 claims in Utah.
This agreement was reached without the benefit of public scrutiny
and, once again, skirts the prohibition against issuing rules
pertaining to the recognition of existing claims without Congressional
approval. At stake are priceless natural resources, including
the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument.
Other states and counties are seeking their own deals with
Interior, and there is no indication those negotiations will
be subject to public scrutiny either.
Lieberman further expressed concern about the Department’s
interpretation of terms contained in RS 2477, such as “highway”
and “construction.” Draft guidance suggests that
the Department interpret the law to greatly expand the universe
of claims that may be recognized as RS 2477 rights of way.
Click here for the full text of
Lieberman’s letter to Interior Secretary Gale Norton
-30-
|