Enabling Acts are required by Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1 of the Constitution:
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new States shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress.Enabling Acts describe the process that people of the U.S. must follow in drafting and adopting a state constitution. The state must then submit its proposed constitution to Congress to accept or reject. When Congress admitted Vermont and Kentucky, it confirmed that new states enter “on an equal footing with the original States in all respects whatever.” Typically, Enabling Acts have included exemptions of federal property from the taxation of states, rules for regulating public lands, and rules of commerce among Native Americans. Although most Enabling Acts have similar language, some contain different restrictions on various states.[1]
Starting in 2012, legislatures in Utah, Arizona, Wyoming, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, and Idaho, and Montana have passed, introduced, or explored legislation demanding that the federal government turn over of federal public lands to the states. Almost all of these legislatures use their state’s Enabling Acts in all or in part as part of this legislation.[2]
Proponents of turning over federal lands to the Western states argue that the amount of federal lands in their states cause serious economic problems. Utah is continuously last in the country in per-pupil funding, and proponents say that any money raised from the sale or leasing of public lands returned to the state will be used primarily for education funding. With the large national deficit, there is also concern that cuts in this deficit will exacerbate the problem since a large proportion of state funds come from federal-state transfers. Restrictive travel rules on public lands cut down on economic activities in those areas.
The additional money is expected mostly to come from a very large increase in extractive industries, particularly in the Uintah Basin. This includes conventional energy such as oil and natural gas, as well as unconventional energy such as oil shale and tar sands. The American Land Council states that Utah has trillions of dollars in such resources under public lands, and that failure to develop these results in a loss of billions of dollars of royalties, income taxes, and associated economic activity. Advocates also want mineral lease royalties increased to match rates in the eastern United States.[3]
Utah’s HB148 requires that the federal government turn over to the state of Utah title to about 30 million acres of public lands by the end of 2014. National parks, military installations, American Indian lands, and wilderness areas would be exempt. National monuments within the state would also be exempt, except for the Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument. The bill also establishes a commission to plan for the use of any newly acquired lands and provides for a study on the costs and benefits of states ownership of these lands.[4]
It provides that if the state transfer title to the public lands it receives from the federal government, “the state shall retain 5% of the net proceeds the state receives, and pay 95% of the net proceeds the state receives to the United States”, and that this 5% will be put into the State School Fund.[5] This is a reference to section 9 of Utah’s Enabling Act:
That five per centum of the proceeds of the sales of public lands lying within said State, which shall be sold by the United States subsequent to the admission of said State into the Union, after deducting all the expenses incident to the same, shall be paid to the said State, to be used as a permanent fund, the interest of which only shall be expended for the support of the common schools within said State.[6]The enabling acts of many other states have similar language, although in some states the 5% of proceeds may be dedicated to different internal improvements than schools.
In October 2012, Rep. Ken Ivory, chief sponsor of Utah’s HB148, spoke with Wyoming’s Joint Minerals, Business, and Economic Development Interim Committee to advocate that that legislature pass similar legislation. Wyoming passed H.B. 0228 -the Transfer of Federal Lands Study—which created a task force to study “possible legal recourses available to compel the federal government to relinquish ownership and management of specified federal lands in Wyoming”. [7] This bill was modeled after Utah’s, but it not likely that any actual legal strategy decided upon will use Wyoming’s Enabling Act as an argument.[8] The Wyoming Legislative Service Office staff attorneys wrote to members of State of Wyoming Legislature Minerals Committee on Utah’s Land Transfer of Public Lands Act (H.B. 148). The memo discusses likely conflicts with the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of Wyoming if a bill similar to H.B. 148 were passed by the Wyoming Legislature.[9]
The New Mexico legislature introduced the Transfer of Public Lands Act in 2013, which calls on the federal government to turn over 23 million acres of public lands to the state by the end of 2015, and creates a task force to study how the state would take ownership of these lands. This bill was patterned after Utah’s HB 148, 6, and cites New Mexico’s Enabling Act in the legislation. It has since died in committee. [10]
In early 2013, S.B 13-142 was introduced in the Colorado state legislature, which would have required the federal government to turn over all “agricultural lands” to the state. This would have included 14 million acres of national forests within the state, and likely also Bureau of Management Lands. However, it died in committee. [11] The legislation [12] was based completely on an argument using Colorado’s Enabling Act, including the “equal footing” language. It also cited Section 12 of Colorado’s Enabling Act, which had very similar language to Utah’s H.B. 148. It provides, in part, that:
Five per centum of the proceeds of the sales of agricultural public lands lying within said state, which shall be sold by the United States subsequent to the admission of said state into the union, after deducting all the expenses incident to the same, shall be paid to the said state for the purpose of making such internal improvements within said state as the legislature thereof may direct.In January of 2013, Ken Ivory advocated his bill before a joint meeting of Idaho’s House Resources and Conservation Committee and Senate Resources and Environment Committee. That year, the Idaho legislature passed two resolutions on public lands. One called for a study of the issue. The other called for the state to demand the title to federal lands in the state.[13] The latter resolution, H. C. R. 22, also cites its state’s Enabling Act as part of a legal argument for the federal lands transfer.[14]
The Arizona state legislature in 2012 passed SB1332, another bill demanding the federal government turn over lands to the state. [15] This was vetoed by Gov. Janice Brewer, who, in her veto letter, argued that it was unconstitutional under Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2 and Article VI, Clause 2 of U.S. Constitution, as well as not being reconcilable with Nevada’s Enabling Act. She also wrote that the cost of managing the state lands would be too high, that it would create a new state bureaucracy, and that it would create uncertainty for those currently holding leases on public lands.[16]
The Nevada assembly passed public lands legislation that was signed by the governor on June 4, 2013. AB227—“Nevada Land Management Implementation Committee” – creates a task force that will study transfer to public lands in the states. The bill specifically cites the section of Utah’s H. B.148 that created a commission to study public lands policy as a model for their task force. [17]
In 2013, Montana introduced a resolution to create an interim committee to study public lands, with an eye towards taking over management of Bureau of Land Management Lands.[18]
These public lands bills are being backed by the American Legislative Council. The American Legislative Exchange Council, although officially nonpartisan, it is a socially and economically conservative organization that creates model legislation, drafted by lobbyists and member lawmakers, to be passed in state legislatures.
ALEC is registered as a 501(c) (3) tax-exempt public charity. It is primarily financed by more than 200 private-sector members, and had a $7 million dollar budget in 2010. The donors are normally kept secret.
It pays for member legislators to attend annual conferences. These conferences have task forces, headed by one legislator and one private sector member, which create the model legislation. The model legislation is then approved by a governing board made up of legislators. An ALEC publication from 2011 claimed that ALEC lawmakers typically introduce about 1000 bills based on its model legislation each year, 17% of which pass. It also tracks legislation in all fifty states, and sends out e-mails to legislators about which bills it supports or opposes, along with talking points. [19]
Twenty-four current members of the Utah Legislature, all Republicans, are members.[20] Ken Ivory’s H. B. 148 has been adopted by the American Legislative Exchange as model legislation.[21]
As noted above, the Arizona Governor’s Office has stated that a bill similar to Utah’s was likely to be declared unconstitutional, as has Wyoming Legislative Service Office. The Utah Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel appended a “Legislative Review Note” to Utah’s Transfer of Public Lands Act, which also held that the bill is likely to be unconstitutional due to its interpretation of the Property Clause.
Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution, known as the “Property Clause”, gives Congress the authority “to dispose of make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belong to the United States; and nothing in this Constitution shall be construed as to Prejudice any Claims of the United States, or of any particular State." Several Supreme Court Decisions support a broad interpretation of the power the United States has over lands. United States v. Gratiot confirmed that the clause refers not only to the selling of lands but also to the retaining or leasing of them. The opinion held that “Congress has the same power over [territory] as over any other property belong to the United states; and this power is vested in Congress without limitation . . .”
In an 1872 court decision in Gibson v. Chouteau, the Supreme Court ruled that:
[W]ith respect to the public domain, the Constitution vests in Congress the power of disposition and of making all needful rules and regulations. That power is subject to no limitations. Congress has the absolute right to prescribe the times, the conditions, and the mode of transferring this property, or any part of it, and to designate the persons to whom the transfer shall be made. No State legislation can interfere with this right or embarrass its exercise; and to prevent the possibility of any attempted interference with it, a provision has been usually inserted in the compacts by which new States have been admitted to the Union, that such interference with the primary disposal of the soil of the United States shall never be made.[22]More recently, in 1971 Congress passed the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act to protect all unbranded and unclaimed horses and burros on land for ecological goals. This land was managed by the Bureau of Land Management. After the passage of the act, The New Mexico government removed and sold 19 burros because of complaints that they were interfering with livestock operations. This was on land leased to ranchers from the federal government. The Bureau of Land Management claimed that the government of New Mexico had gone beyond its jurisdiction in removing the burros.[23]
The resulting Supreme Court decision in Kleppe v New Mexico reaffirmed a broad interpretation of the Property Clause. It rejected a narrow interpretation of the property clause put forth by New Mexico. It held that the property clause allows Congress to determine “needful” rules for public lands, which “necessarily overrides conflicting state laws under the Supremacy Clause”. [24]
In the 1910s, Utah state officials approved construction of a power plant on a federal forest reservation without the consent of the federal government. In the 1917 Supreme Court case Utah Power & Light v. United States, the court ruled against Utah Power & Light, again reaffirming broad authority over federal lands, including Bureau of Management Lands, under the Property Clause.[25]
In Andrus vs. Utah, the Supreme Court held that states and land lessees can have access to mining claims on state school trust lands that surround wilderness study lands, and that regulation to preserve wilderness can continue as long as economic development is not stopped.[26]
Irvine v. Marshall also gave broad authority to the federal government over public lands in the Territories, “to be disposed of to such persons, at such times, and in such modes, and by such titles, as the Government may deem most advantageous to the public fisc, or in other respects most politic.”[27]
In 1976, Congress passed the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, further strengthening federal power under the Property Clause. This act was one of the main causes of the Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s, and it declared that its ownership of public lands was permanent under the Property Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
The Wyoming Legislative Service Office also cites Shannon v. United States, United States v. Gardner, and Light v. United States in support of the idea that the federal government has broad authority under the Property Clause.[28]
Supporters of using the Enabling Acts as a legal claim making the following main arguments: (1) That the rules of construction requires the federal government to dispose of public lands, (2) that the language in Enabling that the federal government shall sell public lands allows no discretion on whether or not to do so, (3) that the Enabling Act is a contractual agreement between the states and federal government that has never been fulfilled, (4) that the language “that the people inhabiting said proposed State do agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries thereof” in the Enabling Acts is merely quitclaim language, (5) that the Enabling Act must be read expressio unius, and (6) Supreme Court precedents on the Property Clause should be read narrowly, or are just dicta.
Ultimately, however, proponents of using Enabling Acts language as a legal argument must demonstrate that the public lands referred to never belonged to the United States.[29]
Although Section 3 of the Utah Enabling Act “forever disclaims all right and title” to public lands, it concludes, “until the title thereto shall have been extinguished by the United States”. Reading either sentence without considering the others may, therefore, go against the rules of construction.
A contract must be construed as a whole, and the intention of the parties is to be ascertained from the entire instrument. The contract’s meaning must be gathered from the entire context, and not from particular words, phrases, or clauses, or from detached or isolated portions of the contract. All the words in a contract are to be considered in determining its meaning, and the entire contract in all of its parts should be read and treated together. The entire agreement is to be considered to determine the meaning of each part.
Section 3 and Section 9, therefore, constitute a requirement to dispose of the federal lands, particularly since a state would have no motivation to relinquish title to lands if it got no economic benefit from doing so. It would get no percentage of the sales of public lands by the federal government, and lands retained by the federal government could not be taxed.
Section 3 also holds that lands “shall”, rather than “may” be sold. The mandatory language implies that the federal government has no discretion in whether or not to dispose of the public lands after statehood.
States using the Enabling Acts argue that it acts as a mandate on Congress to sell off public lands within the states, and this contract has never been fulfilled.[30]
On the 100th anniversary of the overthrow of Kingdom of Hawaii, the U.S. Congress passed a resolution apologizing for the act. Based on this, Native Hawaiians filed a lawsuit, claiming that the state of Hawaii must reach a political settlement with them regarding lands controlled by the state. In Hawaii v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs (2009) [31] the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that:
The consequences of admission are instantaneous, and it ignores the uniquely sovereign character of a State’s admission to suggest that subsequent events somehow can diminish what has already been bestowed . . . And that proposition applies a fortiori where virtually all of the State’s public lands—not just its submerged ones—are at stake.This Supreme Court decision is about a land dispute between a group within a state and the state government and not about land disputes between state governments and the federal government. However, proponents of Enabling Act arguments use the decision here to assert that acts of admission into the U.S. cannot retroactively be overturned. Since they believe Enabling Acts originally promised transfers of lands to the states that have never been fulfilled, this legal right still applies.
Proponents of public land transfer to the states also cite language used in the 1845 Supreme Court Decision Pollard v. Hagan in support of their legislation:
Whenever [i.e. once] the United States shall have fully executed these trusts, the municipal sovereignty of the new states will be complete, throughout their respective borders, and they, and the original states, will be upon an equal footing, in all respects whatever. . .the United States never held any municipal sovereignty, jurisdiction or right of soil in and for the territory, of which Alabama or any of the new States were formed, except for temporary purposes, and to execute the trusts created by the acts of the Virginia and Georgia Legislatures, and the deeds cession executed by them to the United States, and the trust created by the treaty with the French Republic of the 30th of April, 1803, ceding Louisiana.Pollard vs. Hagan is one of the major legal cases dealing with the equal footing doctrine. Under dispute in this case was land underneath the Mobile River in Alabama. The leases of the land had been given conflicting deeds – one from the federal government and one from the state government. The Supreme Court held that the Federal government did not possess sovereignty over this land, which was ceded only temporarily before Alabama became a state, and ceased after it became a state. Although it recognized that Congress could regulate interstate waterways under the Commerce Clause, this did not extend to ownership of the underwater lands. It held that if the United States retained these lands, Alabama would not be on an equal footing with other states.[32]
However, because the dispute was over land underlying the river, Pollard is often viewed narrowly as a limit on federal land ownership of land underlying waterways, and some Supreme Court rulings since have seemed to confirm that view.[33]
In the 1987 Supreme Court case Utah Division of State Lands v. United States, the court ruled that the federal government was to “hold land for the ultimate benefit” of states and that only “exceptional instances” would defeat state’s title to land under navigable water. Again, this has been interpreted as applying only to such water.[34] In 1894, the opinion in Shively v. Bowlby held that all territorial lands were kept “in trust for the several states to be ultimately created out of the territory.” This is cited in support of the idea that public lands are only meant to be controlled temporarily by the federal government. However, this is another case that dealt specifically with navigable waters.
The American Land Council cites language from the Andrus v. Utah opinion that called Enabling Act “solemn compacts” and “bi-lateral agreement” that must be performed “in a timely fashion” that are to be performed "in a timely fashion". Again, this is meant to emphasize the contractual nature of the Enabling Acts, although in this Supreme Court case the lands turned over at statehood for the benefit of education happened without legal controversy.
Although Utah’s Enabling Act holds “that the people inhabiting said proposed State do agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries thereof”, and the Enabling Acts of other Western states include very similar language, proponents for transfer of federal land argue that this is only quitclaim language. A quitclaim deed is “an instrument of conveyance of real property that passes any title, claim, or interest that the grantor has in the premises but does not make any representations as to the validity of such title.” The title, therefore, was intended to be temporary. It was meant to create “clean title" that washed away any lingering idea of territorial sovereignty and alleviate fears from potential buyers that there was uncertainty about whether the federal or state government had a superior title. In turn, the State agreed not to interfere with the required disposal. Since the public lands were never disposed of, they are therefore still in an escrow-type holding.
Another common argument made by proponents of this interpretation of the Enabling Acts is that although Utah conceded “right and title” to public lands, further language in the Enabling Act holds that the state conceded right, title, and jurisdiction to Indian lands. An expressio unius argument is therefore made. Since the list of right, title, and jurisdiction is applied to Indian lands, and jurisdiction is not listed for public lands, jurisdiction is not ceded for the public lands.[35]
The Federal Society argues that United States v. Gratiot has been interpreted over-broadly when it comes to its interpretation of the Property Clause. It authorized the leasing of lead mines on public lands in U.S. territories, which could not be overturned by a state upon admission to the union. Gratiot is specific to that case and should not be interpreted as giving precedent in all state – federal disputes over land.
Similarly, Kleppe is a case deciding that state cannot interfere with the management of federal lands that the federal government already owns. It also should be interpreted narrowly, and not interfere with requirements of the federal government to dispose of other lands.
Gibson v. Choutou holds that a state may not interfere with U.S. ownership or with its disposal, “such as by adversely affecting the buyers’ market for government property by creating discriminatory or disadvantaging rules on purchasers of federal government disposed property”. With the Enabling Acts acting as a contractual agreement between the states and the federal government to sell public lands, there would be no interfering with the disposal of lands by the states.[36]
The Equal Footing Doctrine is also used in support of a land transfer, at least as a rhetorical point. The Equal Footing Doctrine was the main legal argument used during the Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s, and it failed then as a legal strategy.
The dominant precedent on equal footing came in the case of Stearns v. Minnesota, in which the court ruling that the equal footing doctrine did not guarantee social or economic equality to new states, but was only an assurance of political equality.
Moreover, during the Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s, Nevada considered its equal footing arguments so tenuous that it was hesitant to instigate litigation. It hoped instead to mobilize popular sentiment and get legislation passed in the U.S. Congress, where the Constitution gives it broad authority over public lands.
Later, on July 4, 1994, Nye County Commissioner Richard Carver took a bulldozer to a road in Nevada’s Toiyabe National Forest and arrested a Forest Service employee who attempted to stop it. Carver acted on legislation passed during the Sagebrush Rebellion in 1979, which asserted that the “State of Nevada owns all public lands within the borders of the State of Nevada”. The Department of Justice filed suit against the county. The county relied heavily on the Equal Footing Doctrine in its defense. In 1996, the Department of Justice won the case.[37]
Considering the legal precedents discussed in this paper and the near-consensus of government attorneys on the unconstitutionality of legal arguments based on Enabling Acts, it seems unlikely that any legal arguments relying on Enabling Acts will succeed.
[1] The Heritage Guide to the Constitution. “New States Clause”. N.D. Web. 30 August 2013.
[2] Center for American Progress. “State Efforts to ‘Reclaim’ Our Public Lands”. 11 March 2013. Web. 18 August 2013.
[3] American Lands Council. “HB 148 Utah Transfer of Public Lands Act. We Can’t Wait. Talking Points.” N.d. Web. 25 August 2013. Retrieved from http://americanlandscouncil.org/downloads/transfer_of_public_lands.pdf.
[4] Gehrke, Robert. “Herbert Signs Bill Demanding Feds Relinquish Lands in Utah”. The Salt Lake Tribune. 25 Mar 2012.
[5] Utah State Legislature. Transfer of Public Lands Act and Related Study. 2013 General Session. H.B. 148.
[6] Utah State Archives. “Federal Enabling Act.” 16 July 1894. Web. 18 August 2013. Retrieved from http://images.archives.utah.gov/cdm/ref/collection/3212/id/8292.
[7] Wyoming State Legislature. Transfer of Public Lands Act. 2013 First Session. H.B. 292.
[8] Nickerson, Gregory. “Rep. David Miller offers bill to study transfer of federal lands to Wyoming”. WyoFile. 13 February 2013.
[9] Wyoming Legislative Service Office Staff Attorneys. “ Memorandum from Josh Anderson and Matt Obrecht, to Members of State of Wyoming Legislature Minerals Committee, Utah Land Transfer of Public Lands Act, Utah 2012 HB 148”. 9 October 2012.
[10] Kessler, Mori. “New Mexico Legislator Proposes House Bill Modeled after Utah’s Public Lands Transfer Act”. St. George News. 30 January 2013.
[11] Center for American Progress. “State Efforts to ‘Reclaim’ Our Public Lands”. 11 March 2013. Web. 18 August 2013.
[12] Colorado General Assembly. A Bill for an Act Concerning the Requirement That the Federal Government Extinguish Title to All Agricultural Public Lands Transfer Title to the State. 2013 First Regular Session. S.B. 13-142.
[13] Hill, Austin. “Idaho Republicans Take Aim at Federally Controlled Lands.” Idaho Reporter. 13 June 2013.
[14] Idaho State Legislature. A Concurrent Resolution Stating Legislative Findings Demanding That the Federal Government Extinguish Title to Idaho’s Public Lands and Transfer Title to Those Lands to the State of Idaho. 2013 First Regular Session. H.C.R. 22.
[15] Arizona State Legislature. An Act Amending Title 37, Chapter 5, Article 1, Arizona Revised Statutes, By Adding Section 37-9012.01; Relating to Public Lands. 2012 Second Regular Session. S. B. 1332.
[16] Gov. Janice Brewer. “1332 Veto Letter with Bill”. 14 May 2012.
[17] American Legislator. “Nevada Becomes the 5th Western State to Explore the Transfer of Public Lands”. 6 June 2013. Web. 22 August 2013.
[18] Ibid.
[19] McIntire, Mike. “Conservative Nonprofit Acts as a Stealth Business Lobbyist”. The New York Times. 21 April 2012.
[20] SourceWatch. “Utah ALEC Politicians”. 25 June 2013. Web. 20 August 2013. Retrieved from http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Utah_ALEC_Politicians.
[21] American Legislative Exchange Council. “Disposal and Taxation of Public Lands Act.” 15 Jan 2012. Web. 25 August 2013. Retrieved from http://www.alec.org/model-legislation/disposal-and-taxation-of-public-lands-act.
[22] Utah State Legislature. Transfer of Public Lands Act and Related Study. 2013 General Session. H.B. 148.
[23] Driscoll, Spencer. “Utah’s Enabling Act and Congress’s Enclave Clause Authority: Federalism Implications of a Renewed State Sovereignty Movement.” Brigham Young University Law Review. (2012): 999-1038.
[24] CaseBriefs. “Kleppe v. New Mexico”. N.d. Web. 23 August 2013. Retrieved from http://www.casebriefs.com/blog/law/constitutional-law/constitutional-law-keyed-to-cohen/the-scope-of-national-power/kleppe-v-new-mexico.
[25] Driscoll, Spencer. “Utah’s Enabling Act and Congress’s Enclave Clause Authority: Federalism Implications of a Renewed State Sovereignty Movement.” Brigham Young University Law Review. (2012): 999-1038.
[26] Environmental Law Reporter. “Andrus v. Utah". N.d. Web. Retrieved from http://elr.info/litigation/%5Bfield_article_volume-raw%5D/20570/utah-v-andrus.
[27] Kochan, Donald J. “A Legal Overview of Utah’s H.B. 148 — The Transfer of Public Lands Act”. The Federalist Society. Jan 2013.
[28] Wyoming Legislative Service Office Staff Attorneys. “ Memorandum from Josh Anderson and Matt Obrecht, to Members of State of Wyoming Legislature Minerals Committee, Utah Land Transfer of Public Lands Act, Utah 2012 HB 148”. 9 October 2012.
[29] Driscoll, Spencer. “Utah’s Enabling Act and Congress’s Enclave Clause Authority: Federalism Implications of a Renewed State Sovereignty Movement.” Brigham Young University Law Review. (2012): 999-1038.
[30] Kochan, Donald J. “A Legal Overview of Utah’s H.B. 148 — The Transfer of Public Lands Act”. The Federalist Society. Jan 2013.
[31] Hawaii v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs. U.S. 556. Supreme Court of the United States. 2009. Justia.com US Supreme Court Center. Web. 22 August 2013.
[32] Kochan, Donald J. “A Legal Overview of Utah’s H.B. 148 — The Transfer of Public Lands Act”. The Federalist Society. Jan 2013.
[33] Driscoll, Spencer. “Utah’s Enabling Act and Congress’s Enclave Clause Authority: Federalism Implications of a Renewed State Sovereignty Movement.” Brigham Young University Law Review. (2012): 999-1038.
[34] Walston, Roderick E. “The Reserved Rights Doctrine: Case Study Involving Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park”. Journal of Contemporary Water Research and Education 133 (2006): 29.
[35] American Lands Council. “HB 148 Utah Transfer of Public Lands Act. We Can’t Wait . . . Talking Points.” N.d. Web 25 August 2013. Retrieved from http://americanlandscouncil.org/downloads/transfer_of_public_lands.pdf.
[36] Kochan, Donald J. “A Legal Overview of Utah’s H.B. 148 — The Transfer of Public Lands Act”. The Federalist Society. Jan 2013.
[37] Cawley, McGreggor R. Federal Land, Western Anger: The Sagebrush Rebellion and Environmental Politics. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 1993.