Public Rewards From Public Lands, 2000


Book Description

This report includes information about the value of the natural resources of the public lands, Federal collections from BLM-managed lands and minerals, direct BLM financial transfers to the states, BLM investments in the States, commercial use activities, estimated recreational use usage, BLM's riparian-wetland initiative, state-by-state activity summaries.







Public Rewards from Public Lands


Book Description

In Alaska, the BLM manages 86.9 million acres of surface land, 24.5 million acres of subsurface mineral estate underlying federal surface land, 1.1 million acres of Tribal lands where the BLM manages mineral operations as part of its trust responsibility, and 19,192 acres of subsurface mineral estate underlying privately owned land. This report includes statistics on the BLM-managed lands in Alaska. Data includes financial totals of recreation and use fees, mineral royalties, emergency resources and other program statistics.







Public Rewards from Public Lands


Book Description

In Nevada, the BLM manages 47.8 million acres of surface land, 56.1 million acres of subsurface mineral estate underlying federal surface land, 1.2 million of Tribal lands where the BLM manages mineral operations as part of its trust responsibility, and 244,916 acres of subsurface mineral estate underlying privately owned land. This report includes statistics on the BLM-managed lands in Nevada. Data includes financial totals of recreation and use fees, mineral royalties, emergency resources and other program statistics.




Public Rewards from Public Lands


Book Description

This report includes statistics on the BLM-managed lands in Arizona. Data includes financial totals of recreation and use fees, mineral royalties, emergency resources and other BLM investments.







Public Rewards from Public Lands


Book Description

This report includes statistics on the BLM-managed lands in Alaska. Data includes financial totals of recreation and use fees, mineral royalties, emergency resources and other program statistics.




No Place Distant


Book Description

While many of the roads on public lands provide a great service with relatively little harm, others create significant problems -- from habitat fragmentation to noise pollution to increased animal mortality -- with little or no benefit. In No Place Distant, author David Havlick presents for the first time a comprehensive and in-depth examination of the more than 550,000 miles of roads that crisscross our national parks, national forests, Bureau of Land Management lands, and wildlife refuges, considering how they came to be; their ecological, financial, and societal costs; and what can be done to ensure that those roads are as environmentally benign and cost-effective as possible, while remaining functional and accessible. The book: places the profusion of roads on our public lands in historical context offers an overview of the ecological effects of roads explores the policies, politics, and economics that have fostered road-building on public lands considers the contentious topic of motorized recreation examines efforts to remove roads and restore degraded lands to health Bringing together an impressive range and depth of information along with a thoughtful analysis of the issues, No Place Distant offers a definitive look at the debate over roads on public lands. With its well-crafted prose and extensive documentation, it is an unparalleled resource for anyone concerned with the health or management of public lands in the United States.




Public Rewards from Public Lands


Book Description

This report includes statistics on the BLM-managed lands in Nevada. Data includes financial totals of recreation and use fees, mineral royalties, emergency resources and other BLM investments.