82°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

Presidential candidate Paul favors federal land transfers

MESQUITE — Republican presidential candidate Rand Paul told an audience in Mesquite that he supports relinquishing federal management of public lands.

Paul, a U.S. senator from Kentucky, stumped Monday in a Southern Nevada town not far from the 2014 armed standoff between armed federal agents and Bunkerville rancher Cliven Bundy and his supporters over a cattle roundup.

Bundy’s son, Ryan Bundy, asked Paul about what role the federal government should play.

“I’d either sell or turn over all the land management to the states,” Paul said, drawing a hearty round of applause from an audience of about 80 in Eureka Casino that included the elder Bundy.

The tense April 2014 armed standoff, which included militia members supporting Bundy, unfolded after the rancher didn’t pay grazing fees for using public lands for more than 20 years and wound up owing the federal government more than $1 million in fees.

The Bureau of Land Management rounded up most of Bundy’s herd of 500 cows, only to allow their release to avoid bloodshed in the armed standoff.

The range cows, released from a corral off Interstate 15 between Bunkerville and Mesquite, about 80 miles north of Las Vegas, continue to graze on public federal lands.

“State ownership would be better, but even better would be private ownership,” said Paul, the son of former Congressman Ron Paul of Texas, who ran for president as a Libertarian and sought the GOP nomination.

In the 1830s and 1840s the federal government sold land readily, Paul said, adding that now “you run into problems with the federal government being this bully.”

Paul pivoted to broader themes beyond the standoff, criticizing as burdensome how the federal Endangered Species Act is enforced. In one small Kentucky town, he said, a sewer plant that wanted to expand to prevent the dumping of sewage into a river first had to do a study of the impact on pocketbook mussels.

“The government’s gone way too far,” Paul told the friendly audience of the libertarian-leaning enclave.

In an interview, Paul said he doesn’t have a concrete plan for changing federal public lands management. He said he believes land sales, or a transfer to state ownership, or a combination would be a good idea.

That would keep residents in far-flung states from being forced to deal with distant bureaucracies, Paul said.

“It’s a long way to Washington,” Paul said. “That’s why people came out here — to get the heck out of government.”

About 81 percent of Nevada is under the control of different federal agencies, with the BLM overseeing the largest share.

“It would be easier if it were done more locally,” Paul said, adding that more local involvement would help avoid situations like the standoff.

In an interview, Cliven Bundy said Paul’s focus on the U.S. Constitution, limited federal government and pulling public lands out of federal control lines up with his values.

“We’re a little bit like Obama — we’re ready for a change,” Bundy said, smiling at his obvious dig at President Barack Obama’s call for change during his campaign for a first term in 2008.

Mesquite was part of a four-stop tour Paul did Monday in Nevada that included Reno, Elko and Las Vegas.

THE LATEST
Friends of Nevada Wilderness maintaining local trails

Nevada is a state filled with beautiful wilderness areas, many of which can be found right here in Nye County, but the value and benefits of those areas cannot be realized unless they can be accessed by the everyday person.

Pinkbox opening in Pahrump Nugget

An illuminated oversized doughnut already overlooks Highway 160, in a central area of Pahrump where passersby will see it on their way to Death Valley. Many local leaders in the valley are excited about the grand opening of popular chain Pinkbox Doughnuts beginning at 11 a.m. on Saturday inside the Pahrump Nugget Hotel & Casino.

Pahrump man injured in gunfire with deputy

Nye County Sheriff Joe McGill told the Pahrump Valley Times the incident occurred at a residence along Bunarch Road at approximately 7:30 a.m. on May 14.

Burn ban in place — what you need to know

A new BLM Nevada Fire Prevention Order is in effect through Oct. 31. The order, issued by the Bureau of Land Management, prohibits specific fire-related activities on all BLM-managed land in Nevada.

Nye County solar regulations nearing completion, moratorium extended

Nye County has spent the last year and a half working to create local regulations for the burgeoning solar industry and following plenty of research and the careful gleaning of input from various stakeholders, that process is finally nearing completion.

Motorcycle rider flown to UMC Trauma

Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Services Chief Scott Lewis told the Pahrump Valley Times that crews were dispatched to a report of a serious two-vehicle collision at the intersection of Sandpebble Street and Kellogg Road on the south end of the valley at approximately 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday, May 8.

US 95 head-on crash kills one in Nye County

The Nevada Highway Patrol is investigating a fatal crash along US 95 at approximately 2 a.m. on Monday morning, May 13, according to Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Services Chief Scott Lewis.