How Coordination Plans Work
By Fred Kelly Grant
Local governments that have implemented “coordination” status
with federal management agencies are successfully fighting erosion
of private property rights in their communities. The “coordination” status
is authorized by almost every federal statute relating to management
of land, resource, and environment. All the local government
has to do is formally accept the congressional invitation to “coordinate,” and
federal agencies have no choice but to agree.
What is this “coordination” factor, which elevates the
involvement of local government in federal planning and management
actions? The foundation for the concept is found in the Federal
Land Policy Management Act, i.e. commonly known as FLPMA. Section
1712 of Title 43 of the United States Code requires that the Bureau
of Land Management must coordinate its “land use inventory, planning,
and management actions” with any local government which has engaged
in land use planning for the federal lands managed by the federal agencies.
Congress did not leave the definition of
the word “coordination” to
chance, or to the whim of the federal management agencies. Congress
defined the word by specifying the duties and responsibilities of the
BLM regarding local plans. The statute REQUIRES the following:
- BLM must keep apprised of local land use plans;
- BLM must assure consideration is given to local plans when federal
plans are being developed;
- BLM must attempt to resolve inconsistencies between federal and
state local plans;
- BLM must provide “meaningful…involvement” of
local government officials in the development and revision of plans,
guidelines and regulations;
- The Secretary must, finally, compare
local and federal plans and make sure they are consistent “to the maximum extent…consistent
with federal law.
BLM regulations set forth a very clear process
by which the local government, which has developed a plan is able
to “coordinate” with
the BLM, and this process includes an elevation of the participation
level of the local government to a point of notice and “meaningful” participation
above and ahead of “public participation.”
Note that the statute does not limit mandatory
coordination to “counties,” but
rather extends it to “local government.” That language
includes any unit of local government, often identified as any separate
tax raising unit of government, i.e., school districts, road districts,
fire districts, irrigation districts, and cities and towns. So,
in a county where county commissioners or supervisors refuse to develop
a local plan for coordination status, any school board or other tax-raising
unit of government can gain coordinate status for itself. The
ideal goal for local government would be to develop a plan by which
the county, towns within the county, school districts, irrigation districts,
fire districts, could all participate in the same coordination activities.
Other federal land management agencies are
also required to deal with local governments on a higher plane than
they do with the general public. This
applies to those which operate under and implement the National Forest
Management Act, Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, Clean Air
Act, the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, the National Preservation Act,
Soil Conservation district statutes, and the National Environmental
Policy Act.
Two of the most important elements of coordination
are prior notice and necessity of seeking consistence. First, prior notice of
planning and management actions gives local government the opportunity
to make its analysis, to make its recommendations, and then monitor
the consistency of federal action to local plan throughout the process. The
local government must receive notice even before anyone else in the
general public. Second, the federal agency is required
to make every practicable effort to make the federal and local position
consistent. If consistency and agreement cannot be conceived,
the issue of consistency goes to the Secretary of Interior.
To gain maximum impact from coordination
status, a local government must develop and adopt a local land use
and management plan, which defines the natural resource priorities
in terms of the economic, social, and political customs and culture
of the community. In those
areas in which livestock grazing is critical to the economy, priorities
must be set with the economic backbone centralized. All local
industries and uses that make up the economic strength of the community
should be prioritized with regard to their dependence upon and impact
upon the natural resources and environment. Each area’s
plan should be written specific to the area, taking into account the
adverse impact on the economy if federal agencies restrict and reduce
natural resource use. An existing plan from another area can
be used as an example of format and of methods of establishing priorities,
but each area must develop its own plan, specific to the area and its
citizen’s needs.
An effective path to development of a plan takes one of two forks:
- Where county supervisors or commissioners,
or the governing body of the particular taxing district, want to
implement a coordination status, they can achieve that status by
appointing a natural resource council which will put together the
local plan and its priorities. They
present it to the Commissioners/Supervisors for adoption, and then
serve as advisors on natural resource issues to the governing board.
- Where the Commissioners/Supervisors are
not of a mind to develop and adopt a plan, then those of you seeking
protection take up the process of developing the plan, independently. When
you have finished the plan, it is up to you and your supporters
to use all your persuasiveness to convince the governing board
to adopt the plan.
Once the plan is adopted, the council should be appointed by the Commissioners/Supervisors
to monitor actions of state and federal agencies for the purpose of
making sure they maintain consistency with local plans, and of making
sure that when new issues arise they take on the work of presenting
amendments to the local plan to cover the new issues.
Once the local plan is adopted, the governing
body must advise the Federal and State agencies that the local government
is involved in land use planning within the terms of the federal
statutes and regulations relating to federal-local coordination. The advisory letter
should invite the agencies to send personnel to meet with the governing
body to discuss the procedure through which coordination will be implemented. That
procedure should be decided upon and reduced to a written agreement
in order to avoid future disputes as to how and where coordination
took place. The procedure should set forth all the elements of
coordination set forth in FLPMA: advance notice, opportunity for early
comment and persuasion, and consistency review.
Even though FLPMA itself may not be involved
in the land management issues you face, the other federal statutes
have like requirements. For
example, the Secretary of Interior must give local government advance
notice of any listing decision that he intends to make, and he must
take into account any local plan relating to species before he makes
a listing decision. These duties put local government at the
table with U.S. Fish and Wildlife. The Clean Water Act also requires
that consideration be given to local plans as to water quality, so
this requirement puts participating local governments at the table
with EPA and the state environmental quality agencies.
In the world of coordination, Owyhee
County, Idaho and Modoc County, California (both of which have been
using coordinate status to protect their citizens for the past ten
years) can offer a long list of success stories about situations in
which local government has brought state and federal agencies to the
table for solutions which are not harmful to ranchers, farmers and
water users.
Click Here to Read County Planning Success Stories in Owyhee County
Development of the group of citizens who
are interested enough to work tirelessly on development of a plan
and persuasion of commissioners/supervisors is the first step to
achieve coordinate status. It is highly
recommended that the this group consist of representatives of the industries
of the area, Tribal representatives (if possible), business people,
school board or district representatives, fire department, water users,
and health districts be invited to participate. The broader the
group, the more inclusive will be your plan, and the more persuasive
will be the presentation to the governing board for adoption.
It is highly recommended that anyone interested in pursuing the coordinate
approach for local government should attend a seminar offered by Stewards
of the Range, taught by Fred Kelly Grant, on the process of developing,
gaining passage of, and then enforcing a coordinating local plan.
Click here for Training Sessions
on Coordination Plans.
Stewards of the Range, Post Office Box 490, Meridian, ID 83680-0490
phone: 208-855-0707 / fax: 208-855-0763 / e-mail
Stewards of the Range is a 501 (c)(3) non-profit organization
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For further information please refer to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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