Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wyoming tables Grand Teton auction

Negotiatio­ns with U.S. on purchase continue

- By Mead Gruver

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Wyoming’s governor and other top leaders decided Thursday to hold off on auctioning a big chunk of state-owned land within Grand Teton National Park, choosing instead to continue negotiatio­ns with the U.S. government on a purchase or land swap for the pristine and valuable property.

Depending on how those talks go, the state Board of Land Commission­ers made up of Gov. Mark Gordon and the state’s other four statewide elected officials, all of whom are Republican­s, might revisit the unpopular proposal next fall.

“Thank you very much,” Grand Teton Superinten­dent Palmer

“Chip” Jenkins Jr., told the board members after their 5-0 vote against auction for now.

Park employees understand that revenue from such state lands funds education — they too have kids in Wyoming’s public schools — but are concerned about developmen­t in “inappropri­ate places,” Jenkins added.

An auction, recommende­d by State Lands Director Jenifer Scoggin to comply with a legal mandate to raise as much money for schools as possible, would have happened as soon as January. The land appraised for $62.4 million.

Scoggin had suggested a minimum $80 million bid, investment of which would yield millions of dollars a year compared with the $2,800 a year now realized from grazing leases and recreation permits.

State lands staff speculated in a report for the board that a luxury home developer who subdivided the property into lots no smaller than 35 acres would pay the most at auction.

Even compared with Wyoming officials’ previous threats to auction state-owned parcels within the park to prod the U.S. government to step in and pay millions to conserve the properties, the reaction was noteworthy for the lack of support for the proposal. In public hearings and letters since October, thousands of people opposed an auction.

“This area should not be destroyed by the constructi­on of luxury houses and other developmen­t,” read a form statement for submission to the state on the National Wildlife Federation Action Fund website. “Too much developmen­t has already encroached on critical winter habitat near the park.”

Located on the park’s eastern edge, the square-mile Kelly Parcel is undevelope­d except for a road through it and offers an unobstruct­ed, head-on view of the famously spectacula­r Teton Range. The land is prime habitat for moose, elk, deer and other wildlife typical of the Greater Yellowston­e Ecosystem.

Wyoming has owned the land since statehood and it has existed within — but technicall­y not part of — Grand Teton since a park expansion in 1950.

 ?? Bradly J. Boner The Associated Press ?? Part of a section of state land in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park. Wyoming officials voted Thursday not to auction off the land for developmen­t amid longstandi­ng efforts to prod federal officials to buy the land to conserve it as part of the park.
Bradly J. Boner The Associated Press Part of a section of state land in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park. Wyoming officials voted Thursday not to auction off the land for developmen­t amid longstandi­ng efforts to prod federal officials to buy the land to conserve it as part of the park.

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