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For a westerner, this year's presidential campaign has been both exciting and disappointing. there was excitement when sen. barack obama and the entire clinton family were stumping in wyoming; who could ever have imagined that democratic presidential candidates would be battling for convention delegates in a state that no democrat has carried in 44 years? excitement when denver was chosen to host the democratic national convention in august. excitement because sen. john mccain, the presumptive republican nominee, is from arizona, and another credible democratic candidate, bill richardson, was from new mexico.
The pundits who analyze these matters predict that several Western states -- Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado and Oregon -- will be competitive battleground states that will get a lot of attention when the general-election campaign heats up after Labor Day.
So why the sense of disappointment? Because I haven't
heard much mention of Western issues,
even though
we're supposed to be important players this time
around.
To be sure, the presidency is a national office of international stature. It is right that national matters like defense, employment, security, deficits, taxes, immigration, energy, health care, reproductive rights and Iraq dominate the campaign. We're Americans as well as Westerners, and we care about those things, too.
So how do we define Western issues
as opposed to
national issues
? Or to put it another way, how is
the West different from the rest of the United States?
One of my favorite histories is The Great Plains by
Walter Prescott Webb. It's an oldie, published in 1931.
Webb argues that if you consider factors like aridity (less
than 20 inches of precipitation a year), then the Plains
environment extends roughly from central Kansas to the
crest of the Sierra Nevada. As he put it, The
distinguishing climatic characteristic of the Great Plains
environment from the ninety-eighth meridian to the Pacific
slope is a deficiency in the most essential climatic
element -- water. Within this area there are humid spots
due to local causes of elevation, but there is a deficiency
in the average amount of rainfall for the entire region.
This deficiency accounts for many of the peculiar ways of
life in the West.
Aridity explains another peculiar factor of the West -- our abundance of public land. After the federal government acquired the West, much of it in the Mexican War of 1846-48, it gave away vast chunks of land to railroads. It tried to give away land to anyone who would work it with the General Mining Act of 1872, and the Homestead Act of 1862 and its successors. But even at that, there weren't a lot of takers. There just wasn't enough water to make the land productive for private owners.
Thus we have an abundance of federal land. I ran some numbers with U.S. General Services Administration data from 2004, omitting Alaska, Hawaii and the District of Columbia. The difference is striking. In the West, the proportion of federal land ranges from 29.9 percent in Montana to 84.5 percent in Nevada. In the rest of the country, the range is from 0.4 percent in Rhode Island and Connecticut to 11.8 in North Carolina and 13.4 in New Hampshire.
To put it another way, of the 624,995 square miles of federal land in the Lower 48, 552,081 square miles, or 88 percent, are in the 11 Western states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.
This plays out in a lot of ways, from the Sagebrush Rebellion to EarthFirst! Our major industries, from tourism to resource extraction and agriculture, are all connected to our abundance of federal land. That's why I long to see a presidential forum that features John McCain and Barack Obama answering questions like these:
Senators, it would be presumptuous to ask you now
about whom you would appoint as secretary of the Interior.
But it would be fair to ask you which secretary, since the
department was created in 1849, was your favorite. Was it
Bruce Babbitt, James Watt, or someone else?
Currently, about half the budget of the U.S. Forest
Service is devoted to fighting wildfires. Is this a
reasonable allocation of public resources?
Continuing with the Forest Service, its budget for
fiscal year 2009 is $4.109 billion, a drop from $4.126
billion in fiscal 2008 and $4.191 billion in fiscal 2007.
Is this decline a trend that should continue?
In Colorado, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management has
approved an oil and gas drilling plan for the Roan Plateau.
The state's governor and many other elected officials,
ranging from local mayors to a U.S. senator, opposed the
plan. Was this a good decision by the BLM? And further, how
much consideration should the federal government extend to
state and local officials in the administration of public
lands?
What, if any, changes are needed in the General
Mining Act of 1872?
The federal government currently charges $1.35 per
month per animal unit for grazing on public lands --
considerably less than the going rate on private land. On
the other hand, some argue that helping ranchers stay in
business helps preserve open space. Where do you stand on
the federal grazing fee?
This summer, the U.S. House of Representatives has
scheduled hearings on the Federal Lands Recreational
Enhancement Act, also known as the Recreation Access Tax,
or RAT. How much should Americans be charged for parking
and using unimproved areas on land we already own?
Of course, there are many other questions that could be asked, ranging from off-road vehicle use to National Guard deployments that deprive states of the Guard's help in dealing with wildfires on public lands.
It would be wonderful if the candidates scheduled a specifically Western debate, televised from Casper or Bozeman or Provo or somewhere like that. But despite all the hoopla about this being the year for the West to make a difference in the presidential race, I'm not holding my breath waiting for it to happen.
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