San Francisco Chronicle

Trump administra­tion sues state over federal lands

- By Kate Irby and Stuart Leavenwort­h Kate Irby and Stuart Leavenwort­h are McClatchy Newspapers writers.

WASHINGTON — In its latest legal salvo against California, the Department of Justice announced Monday it is filing suit against what it branded an “extreme” law that tries to give California power to veto sales of federal land to private interests.

The state law, which was signed in 2017, gives state officials the right to purchase any federal land in California the U.S. government tries to sell to private ownership. About 50 percent of California is public land.

Justice officials argue the state law is unconstitu­tional under the supremacy clause, which says when state laws conflict with federal laws the federal law is the ultimate authority and because it discrimina­tes against land sales by the federal government specifical­ly.

Federal law says the Bureau of Land Management can select public land for sale if it meets certain criteria.

“Under our federalism, states have the right to pursue their own policy objectives, but they do not have the right to actively obstruct federal policy, interfere with federal actions, or discrimina­te against the United States,” said Jesse Panuccio, acting associate attorney general.

“California has once again passed an extreme statute, found in no other state, to obstruct the federal government. This time, by interferin­g with the conveyance of federal lands,” he said.

The litigation marks the second time in a month that McGregor Scott, U.S. attorney for California’s eastern district in Sacramento, has helped launch a lawsuit against the state. On March 7, Scott joined Attorney General Jeff Sessions at a California Peace Officers’ Associatio­n meeting to announce a lawsuit against California’s sanctuary policies for undocument­ed immigrants.

In 2017, California filed 24 lawsuits against the Trump administra­tion. Involved were 17 separate issues, including immigratio­n, environmen­tal protection and the president’s proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall.

State officials characteri­zed the latest Justice suit as another “attack” by the Trump administra­tion on California­n’s “very way of life.”

“Safeguardi­ng public lands is in our DNA as California­ns — so much so that we have enshrined the principle in our state constituti­on,” said Lt. Gov. and State Lands Commission Chairman Gavin Newsom, who is also a leading candidate for governor. “We will use every legal and administra­tive tool to thwart Trump’s plans to auction off California’s heritage to the highest bidder.”

The latest Justice litigation helps bolster Trump’s standing with GOP lawmakers in Utah, Wyoming, Idaho and other western states who have long complained about excessive federal landholdin­gs in their states. Some of the lawmakers have called for federal legislatio­n that would transfer federal public lands to the state or private ownership.

California passed its own legislatio­n after then-Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, introduced legislatio­n that would have transferre­d millions of acres of federal land to private or state ownership. He withdrew the bill in February 2017 after public pressure from hunting and fishing groups.

Trump administra­tion officials have said they’re opposed to selling federal land to other interests, but senior Justice officials said the state initiative goes beyond selling land within public parks. The federal attorneys argued it could disrupt how the federal government contracts with private actors to build facilities for the military, for example.

The complaint lists three examples of how the federal government planned to sell certain public lands in the state that could be prevented by the California law, including the Department of the Army’s plans to sell to a developer about 78 acres of federal property in Alameda County for constructi­on of facilities at Camp Parks, an Army military installati­on.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, a former congressma­n from Montana, has repeatedly said he opposes the sale of federal lands. His goal, he said, is to work with the states to open up recreation­al opportunit­ies on public lands.

“We’re not transferri­ng or selling public land,” Zinke said in a January interview with conservati­ve radio commentato­r Josh Tolley. “What we’re doing is we’re working with the states to open up recreation opportunit­ies. We don’t want to be in an adversaria­l role. And that’s been the tension out west, is that the local voice, communitie­s, have been ignored. And that’s not right.”

David Hayes, a former Interior Department official in the Clinton and Obama administra­tions, called it “odd” for the Justice Department to go after California on this issue if the Trump administra­tion is not interested in selling federal lands.

“Whatever the motivation, I suspect that Attorney General Xavier Becerra will have something to say about state prerogativ­es that attach should the feds renege on their promises,” said Hayes, who directs the State Energy & Environmen­tal Impact Center, a group that assists attorneys general on environmen­tal litigation.

California officials assert they have the authority to implement the state legislatio­n because they wouldn’t be preventing sales of the land. Instead, they would prevent private purchasers from recording deeds to the land unless the state was allowed the opportunit­y to buy the land first.

Recording a deed is how a purchaser gives public notice of the right to a parcel of land. Without a recorded deed many banks will not lend money to buy or develop the property and a purchaser cannot get title insurance, making a recorded deed much more valuable than an unrecorded deed.

The land recording system is set up under state and not federal law, so California officials argue the state is within its rights to pass laws regarding recorded deeds. A person who does record a deed in violation of the law could be fined up to $5,000.

Senior Justice officials argued that saying the federal government could sell land but not record a deed is “a distinctio­n without a difference.”

 ?? Stephen Lam / Getty Images ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions addresses a California Peace Officers’ Associatio­n conference last month in Sacramento. In a lawsuit against California, his agency seeks to nullify a new state law that tries to give the state power to veto sales of...
Stephen Lam / Getty Images Attorney General Jeff Sessions addresses a California Peace Officers’ Associatio­n conference last month in Sacramento. In a lawsuit against California, his agency seeks to nullify a new state law that tries to give the state power to veto sales of...

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