We kind of went through that same thing in the 1980s and 1990s with public land swaps. I think the law was called the Federal Land Exchange Facilitation Act. There were problems with that too.just-jim wrote: Sun Mar 23, 2025 12:26 pm What would 500 or 1000 acres carved off the Bridger-Teton Nat’l Forest right on the doorstep of Jackson Hole be worth? Or, for a similar sized parcel of BLM or National Forest right outside of Vail, Aspen, Park City, Moab, etc etc.? Or even on the outskirts of Issaquah, North Bend or Monroe here in WA?
I'd say that if the land was sold at fair market value, the land sale process was 100 percent transparent, and there was a thorough and diligent environmental and public interest review it might be appropriate in some of those cases to sell public lands on a very modest scale. By "very modest" I'd have caps on parcel size and how many acres can be sold in a given area over a ten-year period. And any authorization to sell such lands should have a hard expiration date. None of that is likely to happen though so my viewpoint is irrelevant.