General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNow this is upsetting. Our public lands proposed for sale.
I don't know how they came up with this crap, but it must not happen. This is the Senate reconciliation bill.
See which of YOUR public lands congress wants to sell off to the rich
— tony pancake (@bingbongromcom.bsky.social) 2025-06-15T16:57:23.766Z
www.wilderness.org/articles/med...

PufPuf23
(9,442 posts)markodochartaigh
(3,043 posts)Texas has very little federal or state public land. If you had talked to Texas conservatives fifty years ago you would have heard that government should not own land except for military reservations and a few public buildings. When the Soviet Union fell and the US sent in the banksters to privatize the economy one of the first things on the to-do list was to sell off state assets, usually very, very cheaply and to the well connected.
TommyT139
(1,510 posts)How so?
1) The article is dated June 13th.
2) It isn't Texas-specific, but rather eleven different western states.
It is an idea that has been discussed / threatened before, sure. But these are details that can provide the basis for actions and requests...for which vague speculation is far less useful.
Qutzupalotl
(15,382 posts)The Senate needs to kill this now!





0rganism
(25,164 posts)I suppose there might be committee records which show the introduction of various amendments. It would be interesting to attach names to the public places now being sold off to resource extractors.
yonder
(10,089 posts)Hello xxxxxxx,
Despite widespread opposition from sportsmen, outdoor enthusiasts, and conservationists across the country, Senator Mike Lee of Utah has officially introduced language into the Senate reconciliation package that would allow the sale of up to 2.5 million acres of YOUR public lands.
Even more troubling? Some of these lands may include parcels right here in Idaho.
If passed, Senator Lees backroom deal will strip future generations of access to the lands we hunt, fish, and recreate on.
The Senate Reconciliation bill is aimed at selling public lands under the guise of affordable housing. Here are some takeaways from the bill text:
Mandatory land disposal: The Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture would be required to sell 0.5% to 0.75% of federal lands in each of the states listed - including Idaho. The list of parcels would be compiled 60 days after the bill is signed into law.
Nominations process: 30 days after passage, the Secretaries must post a public notice inviting nominations for lands to sell.
Sale priorities: Priority goes to parcels nominated by states, adjacent to development, that reduce checkerboarding or are deemed inefficient to manage.
Auction to the highest bidder: Parcels would be sold at auction for fair market value. The Secretaries would be responsible for setting the maximum amount of land any one party could buy.
Where the money goes:
90% to the U.S. Treasury
5% to local governments with jurisdiction over the parcel
5% to federal agencies maintenance backlog
These lands provide critical habitat for wildlife, support our $7.8 billion outdoor recreation economy, and connect generations of Idahoans to hunting, fishing, and the outdoors. Mandating disposal, without prior input, transparency, or scrutiny - is unacceptable. These lands are part of our heritage. They belong to all of us - not to Congress, and not to special interests.
WE CANT AFFORD TO STAY QUIET.
Tell your Senators Crapo and Risch: Public land sales dont belong in a budget deal - especially not one crafted behind closed doors, with no chance for Idahoans and fellow sportsmen to weigh in before the damage is done.
Take Action Now
Idaho Wildlife Federation
1020 W Main St, #450
Boise, ID 83702
United States
0rganism
(25,164 posts)Humanity doing stupid malicious shit again.
yellow dahlia
(2,523 posts)I contact Senators outside my state. I often contact the RepugliCONS...the ones I can get through to
0rganism
(25,164 posts)When the sales happen, there should be some lasting monument to those who made the sale possible, perhaps embedded with photographs of what was sold off to finance our royal family's grifting projects. Future generations need a way to remember what was lost.