A Republican-sponsored proposal before Congress to mandate the sale of federal public lands received a mixed reception Monday from the governors of Western states.
A budget proposal from Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee would mandate the sale of more than 3,125 square miles 8,093 square kilometers of federal lands to state or other entities. It was included recently in a draft provision of the GOP's sweeping tax cut package.
At a summit Monday of Western state governors, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said the approach is problematic in New Mexico because of the close relationship residents have with those public lands.
"I'm open" to the idea, said Lujan Grisham, a second-term Democratic governor and former congresswoman. "Except here."
"Our public lands, we have a very strong relationship with the openness, and they belong to all of us," said Lujan Grisham, who was announcing written recommendations Monday on affordable housing strategies from the Western Governors' Association. "And selling that to the private sector without a process, without putting New Mexicans first, is, for at least for me as a governor, going to be problematic."