Senate Republicans are rushing to complete work on President Donald Trump’s major spending package. Of the many moving pieces, a proposal included in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee’s portion of the budget reconciliation bill stands out. If passed as written, it would make at least 250 million acres of public land available for sale, mandating at least 2 million of that be sold over the next five years.
The fire sale of public lands is something of a pet project from the committee’s chair, Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee. Lee and other supporters argue that the provision would help alleviate the nation’s housing crisis. But, in practice, the sale of these lands would more likely be yet another boon to the wealthy in a bill already designed to facilitate a massive upward transfer of wealth.
The sale of these lands would more likely be yet another boon to the wealthy in a bill already designed to facilitate a massive upward transfer of wealth.
Lee has long argued that the federal government owns too much of the land in the western United States. As he wrote in a Deseret News op-ed last year, he believes the West’s “vast federal estate is reserved for the enjoyment of the very few: an elite who want to transform the American West into picturesque tourist villages and uninhabited, but nonetheless beautiful, vistas.” Accordingly, in the previous Congress, he introduced a standalone version of the provision, called the HOUSES Act, promising that his legislation would serve as a “new Homestead Act” to spur greater development of the West.
Lee’s section of the reconciliation bill would force Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins to swiftly designate broad tracts of federal lands in 11 Western states “for disposal.” State and local governments or other “interested parties” could also nominate tracts to be put up for auction, with a requirement that the land be used “for the development of housing or to address associated infrastructure to support local housing needs.” In doing so, interested buyers would have to explain how their planned development would address those needs, including boosting the housing supply and/or affordability.
A fact sheet from Lee’s committee cites a Congressional Budget Office estimate that the proposal would generate between $5 billion to $10 billion over the next 10 years and claims that the sale of that land would “increase the supply of housing and decrease housing costs for millions of American families.” But the Wilderness Society warns that the updated bill “lacks safeguards to ensure land is used for that purpose, and it sets up a system where lands could be sold or resold for non-housing uses after just 10 years.”









