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The Bureau of Land Management today announced final regulations that
revise the rental fees it charges companies or individuals for
rights-of-way so that these fees more adequately reflect changes in
land values over the past two decades.
The BLM, which is publishing its regulatory revision in tomorrow’s
Federal Register, undertook this rulemaking effort in accordance
with Section 367 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which directs the
Department of the Interior to revise the existing rental fee
schedule for linear rights-of-way to reflect current land values.
The BLM published proposed regulations and solicited public input on
this subject in December 2007; the agency received 12 response
letters and used these comments extensively in developing the
final rule. The revised rent schedule covers most linear
rights-of-way granted under the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 and the
Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976. Both laws
require the holder of a right-of-way to pay fair-market value to
occupy, use, or traverse public lands for such facilities as power
lines, fiber-optic lines, pipelines, roads, and ditches. T
he
revised rental fee schedule, which would be phased in by reducing
the 2009 per acre rent by 25 percent, would also be adopted by the
U.S. Forest Service for uses on National Forest lands, consistent
with existing practices and as required by the Energy Policy Act.
Since 1987, when rental fees for linear rights-of-way were last
updated, there have been substantial changes in public land values.
The result is that the Federal government may be receiving
inadequate compensation for the use of these lands. The final
regulations would update the fee schedule based on current land
values from information published by the National Agricultural
Statistics Service and would adjust these values, whether up or
down, every five years. “The American taxpayer deserves fair
compensation for the use of public lands for commercial purposes,”
said BLM Director Jim Caswell. “This new rule would ensure that the
Federal government receives an adequate return for right-of-way
rentals, both now and into the future.”
The final set of
regulations also contains provisions not directly related to the
rent schedule. These cover such topics as flexible rental payment
periods and reimbursements of processing and monitoring fees for
leases and permits. There are currently more than 96,000
right-of-way grants on BLM lands, of which about half (48,600) are
subject to rent, generating more than $20 million in revenue in
Fiscal Year 2007. Revenue from right-of-way rentals goes to the
Treasury, as required by the Federal Land Policy and Management Act,
along with a share to the states, as required by the Mineral Leasing
Act.
The five states generating the most right-of-way rental
receipts (both linear and other rights of way) are Nevada ($4.4
million in Fiscal Year 2007), Wyoming ($4.1 million), California
($3.2 million), New Mexico ($2.7 million), and Arizona ($1.4
million). The BLM manages more land – 258 million surface acres –
than any other Federal agency. Most of this public land is located
in 12 Western states, including Alaska. The Bureau, with a budget
of about $1 billion, also administers 700 million acres of
sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation.
The BLM’s
multiple-use mission is to sustain the health and productivity of
the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future
generations. The Bureau accomplishes this by managing such
activities as outdoor recreation, livestock grazing, mineral
development, and energy production, and by conserving natural,
historical, and cultural resources on the public lands.
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