Even if they canât agree on much else, Wyomingites across the board value access to public land, the stateâs four living former governors said.Â
They told Cowboy State Daily it comes as no surprise to them that strong opposition to proposed public land sales crossed political party and ideological lines.Â
Matt Mead, who served as governor from 2011-2019, offered a tongue-in-cheek remark regarding the broad-based pushback against the land sales.Â
âHereâs the good news: Finally, a lot of people agree on something. In politics today, thatâs a rare bird,â Mead said.Â
Regardless of where theyâre coming from, Wyomingites love having places to go. Places where they donât have to ask a landownerâs permission, said Mike Sullivan, who served as governor from 1987 to 1995.
âWhen you start talking about selling lands that people value and are used to having available,â it wonât go over well, he said.Â
Former governors Jim Geringer (1995-2003) and Dave Freudenthal (2003-2011) echoed that sentiment, stating that accessible wildlands are a defining element of Wyomingâs culture.Â
U.S. Senator Mike Lee, R-Utah, miscalculated the magnitude of pushback against his inclusion of proposed federal land sales in the Senateâs version of the One Big Beautiful Bill budget reconciliation act, the former governors said.Â
Faced with an avalanche of opposition, Lee apparently got the message. He announced late Monday that he would âsignificantly reduceâ the amount of land that could go up for sale under his proposal. Â
Bill âDoesnât ComputeâÂ
When it comes to politics and policy as it relates to public land, uncertainly never goes over well, Sullivan said.Â
And the proposed land sales were âput into a huge bill without much advanced notice,â he said.Â
He added that during his tenure as governor, there was a sentiment against adding any more federal lands to Wyoming.
But selling off existing public lands wasnât seriously discussed, at least ânot in the fashion weâre talking about here,â he said.Â
Geringer said that the goals of Leeâs land sale proposal arenât clear or well-conceived.Â
The land sales would supposedly help offset the federal budget deficit through the money generated. And, proponents say, the land could be used for affordable housing developments.Â
Geringer said heâs skeptical that the land sales as written into the bill could accomplish those things.Â
Many of the lands controlled by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) are too arid to be suitable for housing, he said.Â
And U.S. Forest Service lands, while picturesque, might be suitable only for high-end homes.Â
âIt doesnât compute. You wouldnât even satisfy 1% â to pick a number â of the people who are in need of housing,â he said.Â
And if one goal is to generate revenue to offset the deficit by selling âto the highest bidderâ â itâs questionable how high the bids might go if the land isnât all that desirable for developers, Sullivan added.Â
âAll They Offered Us Was Scrub Landâ
Sales and trades of federal lands already take place by other means, Freudenthal said.Â
He understands that the current process can be frustrating.
 During his tenure as governor, there were some proposed trades between state parcels and National Park Service lands.Â
In those exchanges, âall the offered us was scrub land,â making the trades seem unfair, Freudenthal said.Â
But, as others have said, the answer is to revise the current land trade and sale system, not replace it with whatâs proposed in Leeâs U.S. Senate bill, he said.Â
âI agree that the current system is dysfunctional. But that proposal is really bad,â he said.Â
He added that heâs disappointed that Wyomingâs Congressional Delegation hasnât opposed the public land sales bill, since so many Wyomingites donât like it.Â
It could be because theyâre afraid to derail the entirety of the One Big Beautiful Bill, which is favored by President Donald Trump, Freudenthal said. Â
Public Land Is Wyomingâs âGolden Gooseâ
Freudenthal said public opposition to Leeâs bill has been unified, because practically everybody in Wyoming uses public lands.
âWe all use them. Whether youâre hunting, fishing, hiking or taking pictures,â he said.Â
Mead agreed.Â
âI think a common thread that runs though Wyoming people is a desire for and an appreciation of the land and the landscapes,â he said.Â
In addition to their social value, public lands also have monetary value, through the tourism industry, and by attracting people to come live or start businesses in Wyoming, Mead said.Â
As remote work becomes and option in more professions âquality of lifeâ factors hugely into peopleâs decisions regarding where to live, he said.Â
âItâs certainly one of our golden geese to have these public lands for the enjoyment of all,â Mead said.
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Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.