Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump land plan is not biggest

- Louis Jacobson The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has record-setting plans to invest in federal government landholdin­gs.

“The president is a builder and the son of a plumber, as I am,” Zinke told the Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee.

“I look forward to working with the president on restoring America’s greatness through a historic investment of our public lands infrastruc­ture. This is the largest investment in our public lands infrastruc­ture in our nation’s history. Let me repeat that.

“This is the largest investment in our public lands infrastruc­ture in the history of this country.”

Zinke specified that he was referring to the president’s budget proposal, which would create a fund to provide “up to $18 billion over 10 years for maintenanc­e and improvemen­ts in our national parks, our national wildlife refuges, and Bureau of Indian Education funds.”

When we took a closer look, we found Zinke’s assertion to be dubious. There is little chance that the Civilian Conservati­on Corps, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal-era program, will lose its place atop the list of federal programs that have supported public-lands infrastruc­ture.

Trump administra­tion proposal

The president’s budget for fiscal year 2019 proposes “a new Public Lands Infrastruc­ture Fund” for repairs and improvemen­ts at places such as national parks and wildlife refuges.

The administra­tion estimates that increased energy developmen­t on federal lands and in federal waters “has the potential to generate up to $18 billion over 10 years for parks and other public lands infrastruc­ture.”

However, there is no certainty that the idea will win the necessary congressio­nal approval. It’s common for presidenti­al budget proposals to wither on the vine, even when the president has a Congress controlled by his own party.

Also, Zinke said “up to $18

billion,” meaning that the final amount could be well below that.

Generating any money at all to fill the fund’s coffers would require additional energy developmen­t from federal lands and waters.

New developmen­t seems possible in the Trump era. But the number of new projects will depend heavily on internatio­nal market conditions for oil and gas, which are currently modest by historical standards.

Finally, this doesn’t take into account any cuts to public lands infrastruc­ture that emerge from elsewhere in the administra­tion’s budget.

Overall, the proposal would cut the Interior Department by 15%.

For the sake of this fact check, let’s assume that the federal government is able to come up with enough new drilling projects to spend the full $18 billion on public lands infrastruc­ture and that it avoids any offsetting maintenanc­e cuts from other parts of the budget.

Even in that scenario, Zinke’s proposal pales compared to the investment­s made under the Civilian Conservati­on Corps.

How does the CCC cost compare with Trump plan?

Roosevelt establishe­d the Civilian Conservati­on Corps in the midst of the Great Depression and just over a month after he was inaugurate­d in 1933.

The program paid unmarried men (and only men) between 18 and 25 to do unskilled labor to conserve and develop natural resources on public lands.

Workers received room, board and $30 a month, most of which had to be sent back home to the worker’s family.

Some received educationa­l services in the camps, with tens of thousands learning to read for the first time.

Among the corps’ achievemen­ts were the planting of more than 2 billion trees, the constructi­on of more than 125,000 miles of roads and trails, the creation of more than 6 million erosion control structures, the stringing of 89,000 miles of telephone lines and 6 million work days fighting forest fires.

All told, 3.5 million men took part during the program’s nine years of existence, spread over more than 1,000 constantly shifting camps at any given time.

“There is no doubt in my mind that the CCC was the most groundbrea­king program to ever influence our park system at the local, state and national levels,” said Neil M. Maher, author of the book “Nature’s New Deal: The Civilian Conservati­on Corps and the Roots of the American Environmen­tal Movement.” The corps “basically built the infrastruc­ture of our National Park system.”

The most frequent estimate of the program’s cost is a cumulative $3 billion in outlays during its nine-year life. From our research, this figure appears to be credible.

The CCC’s director wrote in 1939 that it had cost $2 billion; that was two-thirds of the way through the program’s life. And according to a Park Service study, the annual cost per CCC enrollee was $1,004 per year.

If you assume that the average tenure of the CCC’s 3.5 million workers was about a year, that would produce a cumulative cost around $3 billion.

Such calculatio­ns “sound right — millions of young men, camps to house them, food and uniforms, and they were paid,” said Steven Stoll, an environmen­tal historian at Fordham University.

Once you factor in inflation, $3 billion spent in the 1930s would be the equivalent of about $53 billion today — about three times bigger than even the fully funded Trump proposal.

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The CCC’s investment appears even more massive when viewed as a percentage of federal spending.

During the 1930s, when federal outlays were more modest, the CCC’s $3 billion investment accounted for just over 4% of all federal outlays that were made over the program’s nine-year period.

By contrast, the fully funded Trump proposal would account for somewhere around four tenthousan­dths of 1% of federal outlays during its 10-year life.

Trump administra­tion response

Interior Department spokeswoma­n Heather Swift pointed out that the CCC “also incorporat­ed state and local land.”

It’s true that the CCC created more than 700 state parks and upgraded many others, in addition to its efforts on federally owned land.

Ultimately, though, the point is moot: Zinke didn’t say the proposal is the largest investment in federal lands infrastruc­ture. He said “public lands infrastruc­ture,” and state and local parks count as “public lands.”

Our ruling

Zinke said that a Trump administra­tion proposal for the Interior Department “is the largest investment in our public lands infrastruc­ture in our nation’s history.”

It’s far from assured that the maximum figure of $18 billion in the proposal will ever be reached if enacted.

Beyond that, though, Roosevelt’s $3 billion investment in the Civilian Conservati­on Corps would amount to $53 billion today, and it accounted for vastly more than the Trump proposal as a percentage of federal spending at the time.

We rate the statement False.

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