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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands, 
Committee on Natural Resources, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 2 p.m. EST:
Tuesday, November 17, 2009: 

Federal Land Management: 

Challenges to Implementing the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation 
Act: 

Statement of Robin M. Nazzaro, Director: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 

GAO-10-259T:  

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-259T, testimony before the Subcommittee on 
National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands, Committee on Natural 
Resources, House of Representatives.  

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM), 
Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service, and the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service manage about 628 million 
acres of public land, mostly in 11 western states and Alaska. Under the 
Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act (FLTFA) of 2000, revenue 
raised from selling BLM lands is available to the agencies, primarily 
to acquire nonfederal land within the boundaries of land they already 
own—known as inholdings. These inholdings can create significant land 
management problems. To acquire land, the agencies can nominate parcels 
under state-level interagency agreements or the Secretaries can use 
their discretion to initiate acquisitions. FLTFA expires in July 2010. 

This testimony discusses GAO’s 2008 report: Federal Land Management: 
Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act Restrictions and Management 
Weaknesses Limit Future Sales and Acquisitions (GAO-08-196). 
Specifically, the testimony discusses (1) FLTFA revenue generated, (2) 
challenges to future sales, (3) FLTFA expenditures, (4) challenges to 
future acquisitions, and (5) agencies’ implementation of GAO’s 
recommendations. Among other things, GAO examined the act, agency 
guidance, and FLTFA sale and acquisition data, interviewed agency 
officials, and obtained some updated information.  

What GAO Found: 

* BLM raised most FLTFA revenue from land sales in Nevada. As of August 
2009, BLM reported raising a total of $113.4 million from sale of about 
29,400 acres. Since FLTFA was enacted in 2000 through August 2009, 
about 78 percent of the revenue raised, or about $88 million, has come 
from land transactions in Nevada.  

* BLM faces challenges to future sales under FLTFA. In particular, BLM 
state and field officials most frequently cited the limited 
availability of knowledgeable realty staff to conduct sales. We 
identified two additional issues hampering land sales activity under 
FLTFA. First, while BLM had identified land for sale in its land use 
plans, it had not made these sales a priority during the first 7 years 
of the FLTFA program. Furthermore, BLM had not set goals for sales or 
developed a sales implementation strategy. Second, some of the 
additional land BLM had identified for sale since the act would not 
generate revenue for acquisitions because the act only allows the 
deposit of revenue from the sale of lands identified for disposal on or 
before the date of the act. 

* Agencies had purchased few parcels with FLTFA revenue. In 2008, we 
reported that between August 2007—7 years after FLTFA was enacted—and 
January 2008, the four land management agencies had spent $13.3 million 
of the $95.7 million in revenue raised under FLTFA: $10.1 million using 
the Secretaries’ discretion to acquire nine parcels of land and $3.2 
million for administrative expenses to prepare land for FLTFA sales. 
More recently, as of November 2009, BLM reported spending a total of 
$43.8 million to acquire 28 parcels, including $24.6 million for 12 
parcels through the state-level interagency process. 

* Agencies face challenges to completing additional acquisitions. BLM 
state and field officials GAO interviewed most commonly cited the time, 
cost, and complexity of the land acquisition process as a challenge to 
completing land acquisitions. Furthermore, the act’s requirement to 
spend the majority of funds in the state in which revenue was generated 
has had the effect of making little revenue available for acquisitions 
outside of Nevada. The agencies also had not established procedures to 
track the implementation of the act’s requirement that at least 80 
percent of FLTFA revenue raised in each state be used to acquire 
inholdings in that state or to track the extent to which BLM is 
complying with agreed-upon fund allocations among the four 
participating agencies. 

* BLM has taken steps to implement GAO’s recommendations. Specifically, 
BLM established FLTFA sale goals for fiscal years 2009 and 2010 and 
established a sales incentive program providing seed funds to state and 
field offices to identify and pre-screen properties for possible sale 
under FLTFA. As of November 2009, six states have agreed to participate 
in the program.  

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-259T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Robin M. Nazzaro at (202) 512-
3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov.  

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss our February 2008 report on 
the implementation of the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act 
(FLTFA) of 2000 as you consider the act's reauthorization.[Footnote 1] 
As you know, Congress enacted FLTFA, in part, to enhance the efficiency 
and effectiveness of federal land management by allowing four land 
management agencies--the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of 
Land Management (BLM), Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park 
Service, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service--to 
use revenue generated through BLM's sale or exchange of its lands to 
primarily acquire inholdings in order to improve resource management. 
[Footnote 2] (Inholdings are nonfederal lands within the boundaries of 
federal lands and can create significant management problems in 
maintaining boundaries, protecting resources and providing security, 
among other things.) In 2005, the agencies estimated there were at 
least 70 million acres of inholdings within the lands they manage. 

My testimony today will address (1) the extent to which BLM generated 
revenue for the FLTFA program, (2) challenges BLM faces in conducting 
future sales, (3) the extent to which agencies spent funds under FLTFA, 
(4) challenges the agencies face in conducting future acquisitions, and 
(5) the current status of the agencies' implementation of our 
recommendations. 

To address these issues, we examined the act, agency guidance, and 
FLTFA sale and acquisition data, interviewed agency officials, and 
obtained some updated information, among other things. This testimony 
is based on our report for which audit work was performed between 
November 2006 and February 2008, as well as follow-up work conducted in 
September 2008 and November 2009, in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and 
perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide 
a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit 
objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
App. I of our 2008 report provides detailed information on our scope 
and methodology. 

Background: 

The four major federal land management agencies administer 
approximately 628 million acres, or about 28 percent of the land area 
in the United States. These public lands are mostly in Alaska and the 
11 western states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, 
Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Alaska is 
not currently participating in the FLTFA program because of its 
priority to settle Alaska Native land claims. 

BLM is authorized to sell or exchange land identified in its land use 
plans; the other three land management agencies have limited or no 
sales authority. Once BLM has sold land, FLTFA directs BLM to deposit 
the revenue generated from these sales into a special U.S. Treasury 
account created by FLTFA. However, the act limits the revenue deposited 
into this account to that generated from sales or exchanges of public 
lands identified for disposal in a land use plan in effect as of July 
25, 2000--the date of FLTFA's enactment.[Footnote 3] Money in the new 
account is available to BLM and the other three agencies to purchase 
inholdings, and in some cases, land adjacent to federally designated 
areas that contain exceptional resources. 

The federal land management agencies have two methods for identifying 
land to acquire under FLTFA. First, the agencies can nominate parcels 
through a process laid out in state-level implementation agreements 
that were developed under the direction of a national memorandum of 
understanding (MOU). Second, the Secretaries can directly use a portion 
of FLTFA revenue to acquire specific parcels of land at their own 
discretion. The national MOU laid out the expectation that most 
acquisitions would occur through the state-level process. 

FLTFA places several restrictions on using funds from the new U.S. 
Treasury account. Among other things, FLTFA requires that (1) no more 
than 20 percent of the revenue can be used for BLM's administrative and 
other activities necessary to carry out the land disposal program; (2) 
of the amount not spent on administrative expenses, at least 80 percent 
must be expended in the state in which the funds were generated; and 
(3) at least 80 percent of FLTFA revenue required to be spent on land 
acquisitions within a state must be used to acquire inholdings (as 
opposed to adjacent land) within that state. In addition, the national 
MOU sets the allocation of funds from the FLTFA account for each 
agency--60 percent for BLM, 20 percent for the Forest Service, and 10 
percent each for the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Park Service, 
but the Secretaries may vary from these allocations by mutual 
agreement. 

BLM Has Raised Most FLTFA Revenue from Land Sales in Nevada: 

At the time of our review, BLM had raised $95.7 million in revenue, 
mostly from selling 16,659 acres. As of May 2007, about 92 percent of 
the revenue raised, or $88 million, came from land sales in Nevada. 
Revenue grew slowly during the first years of the program and peaked in 
fiscal year 2006, when a total of $71.1 million was generated. BLM's 
Nevada offices accounted for the lion's share of the sales because (1) 
demand for land to develop had been high in rapidly expanding 
population centers such as Las Vegas, (2) BLM had a high percentage of 
land in proximity to these centers, and (3) BLM had experience selling 
land under another federal land sales program authorized for southern 
Nevada. During the period we reviewed, BLM offices covering three other 
states--New Mexico, Oregon, and Washington--had raised over $1 million 
each, and the remaining seven BLM state offices--Arizona, California, 
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah, and Wyoming--had each raised less than 
$1 million. Most BLM field offices had not generated revenue under 
FLTFA. As of August 2009, BLM reported raising a total of $113.4 
million in revenue for the FLTFA account from the sale of about 29,400 
acres. According to these revised BLM data, Nevada still accounted for 
the majority of FLTFA sales revenues--about $88 million, or 78 percent 
of the total revenue. 

BLM Faces Challenges to Future Sales Under FLTFA: 

BLM faces several challenges to raising revenue through future FLTFA 
sales, according to officials in the 10 BLM state offices and 18 BLM 
field offices we interviewed for our 2008 report. Many of these 
challenges are likely to continue if FLTFA is reauthorized. The 
following lists, in order of most frequently cited, the challenges 
officials identified and provides examples: 

* The availability of knowledgeable realty staff to conduct the sales. 
BLM staff said realty staff must address higher priority work before 
land sales. For example, Colorado BLM staff said that processing rights-
of-way for energy pipelines takes a huge amount of realty staff time, 
100 percent in some field offices, and poses one of the top challenges 
to carrying out FLTFA sales in Colorado. In Idaho, staff also cited the 
lack of realty staffing, which was down 40 percent from 10 years ago. 

* Time, cost, and complexity of the sales process. Much preparation 
must be completed before a property can be sold. For example, several 
offices cited the cost and length of the process to ensure that a sale 
complies with environmental laws and regulations. In addition, 
obtaining clearances from experts on cultural and natural resources on 
a proposed sale can be time-consuming. 

* External factors. BLM officials cited such factors such as public 
opposition to a sale, market conditions, or lack of political support 
as challenges. For example, Colorado BLM officials said that they have 
faced strong local opposition to sales, and the El Centro Field Office 
staff in California cited the lack of demand for the land from buyers 
as a challenge. 

* Program and legal restrictions. The Arizona State Office staff and 
the Elko, Nevada Field Office staff cited the sunset date of FLTFA, 
less than 3 years away at the time of our review, as a challenge to the 
disposal of land under FLTFA because the sunset date might not allow 
enough time to complete many more sales. Other offices said the MOU 
provision requiring a portion of the land sale proceeds to be used by 
the three other agencies reduces BLM's incentive to conduct land sales 
because BLM keeps only 60 percent of the revenue. Another challenge, 
especially in Nevada, has been the enactment of land bills for Lincoln 
and White Pine counties.[Footnote 4] In total, BLM staff estimated 
that, once mandated land use plan amendments were completed, these two 
acts would result in the removal of about 148,000 acres from FLTFA 
eligibility. 

* Land use planning. Some offices cited problems with the land use 
plans. For example, the Idaho Falls District Office staff said that 
specific land for sale is hard to identify in old land use plans. 
Nevada's Elko Field Office staff said that some lands that could be 
offered for sale were not available because they were not designated in 
the land use plan at the time of FLTFA's enactment. 

We identified two additional issues hampering land sales activity under 
FLTFA. First, while BLM had identified land for sale in its land use 
plans, it had not made the sale of this land a priority during the 
first 7 years of the program. Furthermore, BLM had not set goals for 
sales or developed a sales implementation strategy. Second, some of the 
additional land BLM had identified for sale since FLTFA was enacted 
would not generate revenue for acquisitions because the act only allows 
the deposit of revenue from the sale of lands identified for disposal 
on or before the date of the act. 

Agencies Had Purchased Few Parcels with FLTFA Revenue: 

At the time of our review, BLM had reported that the four land 
management agencies had spent $13.3 million of the $95.7 million in the 
FLTFA account. More specifically: 

* The four agencies spent $10.1 million to acquire nine parcels 
totaling 3,381 acres in seven states--Arizona, California, Idaho, 
Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, and Wyoming. 

* BLM spent $3.2 million for administrative expenses between 2000 and 
2007 to conduct FLTFA-eligible sales, primarily in Nevada. 

The agencies acquired these lands between August 2007 and January 2008--
more than 7 years after FLTFA was enacted. These acquisitions were 
initiated using the Secretaries' discretion, and most had been 
identified but not funded for purchase under another land acquisition 
program. As of October 2007, no land had been purchased through the 
state-level interagency nomination process that was established by the 
national MOU and state agreements. Acquisitions had not yet occurred 
under the state-level process because it took 6 years to complete the 
interagency agreements needed to implement the program and because 
relatively little revenue was available for acquisitions outside of 
Nevada, owing to FLTFA requirements. 

As of November 2009, BLM reported the following: 

* The Secretaries had approved $66.8 million for the acquisition of 39 
parcels since FLTFA's enactment in 2000. 

* Of the $66.8 million, agencies spent a total of about $43.8 million 
to acquire 28 parcels totaling 16,738 acres and the remainder of the 
approved acquisitions was being processed. 

* $48.6 million of the $66.8 million in acquisitions for 22 parcels had 
been nominated through the state-level interagency process rather than 
through Secretarial discretion. Of the $48.6 million nominated through 
the state-level process, the agencies have acquired 12 parcels with 
$24.6 million in FLTFA funding. 

* $5.1 million has been spent on FLTFA administrative expenses to 
conduct land sales overall. 

Agencies Face Challenges in Completing Additional Acquisitions: 

BLM state and field officials we interviewed for our 2008 report cited 
several challenges to completing additional acquisitions under FLTFA. 
Many of these challenges are likely to continue if FLTFA is 
reauthorized. The following lists, in order of most frequently cited, 
the challenges officials identified, and provides examples of these 
challenges. 

* Time, cost, and complexity of the land acquisition process. To 
complete an acquisition under FLTFA, four agencies must work together 
to identify, nominate, and rank proposed acquisitions, which must then 
be approved by the two Secretaries. Officials at two field offices 
estimated the acquisition process took about 2-1/2 to 3 years. BLM 
officials from the Wyoming State Office and the Las Cruces, New Mexico, 
Field Office said that, with this length of time, BLM must either 
identify a very committed seller willing to wait to complete an 
acquisition or obtain the assistance of a third party in completing an 
acquisition. In terms of cost, some offices noted that they did not 
have the funding required to complete all of the work involved to 
prepare land acquisitions. In terms of complexity, a Utah State Office 
official said BLM has more control over the process for submitting land 
acquisitions under the Land and Water Conservation Fund than FLTFA 
because FLTFA requires four agencies in two departments to coordinate 
their efforts. 

* Identifying a willing seller. Identification of a willing seller can 
be problematic because, among other things, the seller might have 
higher expectations of the property's value. For example, an Ely, 
Nevada, Field Office official explained that, because of the then-high 
real estate values, sellers believed they could obtain higher prices 
from developers than from the federal government. Furthermore, an Idaho 
State Office official said that it is difficult to find a seller 
willing to accept the appraised price and wait for the government to 
complete the purchase. 

Even when land acquisition nominations are approved, they may not 
result in a purchase. For example, in 2004, under FLTFA, two approved 
acquisitions for inholdings within a national forest in Nevada were 
terminated. In one case, property values rose sharply during the 
nomination process and, in an effort to retain some of his land, the 
seller decided to reduce the acres for sale but maintain the price 
expectation. Furthermore, the seller decided not to grant the Forest 
Service access through the parcel he was retaining, thus eliminating 
the opportunity to secure access to an inaccessible area of the 
national forest. In the other case, during the course of the 
secretarial approval process, the landowner sold portions of the land 
included in the original transaction to another party, reducing the 
land available for the Forest Service to purchase. According to Forest 
Service officials, in both cases the purchase of the remaining parcels 
would not fulfill the original purpose of the acquisitions owing to 
reductions in resource benefits. Therefore, the Forest Service 
terminated both projects. 

* Availability of knowledgeable staff to conduct acquisitions. BLM 
officials reported that they lacked knowledgeable realty staff to 
conduct land acquisitions, as well as other BLM or department staff to 
conduct appraisals, surveys, and resource studies. Staff were occupied 
working on higher priority activities, particularly in the energy area. 

* Lack of funding to purchase land. BLM officials in some states said 
they lack adequate funds to acquire land under FLTFA. For example, 
according to a field office official in Burns, Oregon, just one 
acquisition in a nearby conservation area would have nearly drained 
that state's FLTFA account. 

* Restrictions imposed by laws and regulations. BLM officials said that 
legal and other restrictions pose a challenge to acquiring land. For 
example, officials in the BLM Arizona State Office and the Grand 
Junction, Colorado, Field Office said that some federally designated 
areas in their jurisdictions were established after the date of FLTFA's 
enactment, making the land within them ineligible for acquisition under 
the act. In terms of regulations, BLM Carson City, Nevada, Field Office 
officials told us that the requirements they must follow regarding the 
processing of title, survey, and hazardous materials issues posed a 
challenge to conducting acquisitions. 

* Public opposition to land acquisitions. According to BLM officials 
from the Elko and Ely Field Offices in Nevada, the public did not 
support the federal government's acquisition of federal land in their 
areas, arguing that the government already owned a high percentage of 
land and that such acquisitions resulted in the removal of land from 
the local tax base. 

We also found that the act's restriction on the use of revenues outside 
of the state in which they were raised continues to limit acquisitions. 
Specifically, little revenue was, and still is available for 
acquisitions outside of Nevada. Furthermore, progress in acquiring 
priority land had been hampered by the agencies' weak performance in 
identifying inholdings and setting priorities for acquiring them, as 
required by the act. Finally, the agencies had yet to develop effective 
procedures to fully comply with the act and national MOU. Specifically, 
the agencies--and primarily BLM, as the manager of the FLTFA account-- 
had not established a procedure to track the act's requirement that at 
least 80 percent of funds allocated toward the purchase of land within 
each state must be used to purchase inholdings and that up to 20 
percent may be used to purchase adjacent land. And with respect to the 
national MOU, BLM had not established a procedure to track agreed-upon 
fund allocations--60 percent for BLM, 20 percent for the Forest 
Service, and 10 percent each for the Fish and Wildlife Service and the 
Park Service. 

Report Recommendations and Agency Actions: 

In 2008, we concluded that 7 years after FLTFA had been enacted, BLM 
had not taken full advantage of the opportunity the act offered. We 
recognized that a number of challenges prevented BLM from completing 
many sales in most states, which limited the number of possible 
acquisitions. Many of the challenges that BLM cited are likely faced in 
many public land sales because FLTFA did not change the land sales 
process. However, we believed that BLM's failure to set goals for FLTFA 
sales and develop a sales implementation strategy limited the agency's 
ability to raise revenue for acquisitions. Without goals and a strategy 
to achieve them, BLM field offices did not have direction for FLTFA 
sales. Moreover, the lack of goals made it difficult to determine the 
extent of BLM's progress in disposing of unneeded lands to raise funds 
for acquisitions. As with sales, progress in acquiring priority land 
had been hampered by weak agency performance in developing an effective 
mechanism to identify potential land acquisitions and set priorities 
for inholdings and adjacent land with exceptional resources, which 
FLTFA requires. Moreover, because the agencies had not tracked the 
amounts spent on inholdings and agency allocations, they could not 
ensure compliance with the act or full implementation of the MOU. 

Our report contained two matters for congressional consideration and 
five recommendations for executive action. We said that if Congress 
decided to reauthorize FLTFA in 2010, it might wish to consider 
revising the following two provisions to better achieve the goals of 
the act: 

* FLTFA's limitation of eligible land sales to those lands identified 
in land use plans in effect as of July 25, 2000. This provision 
excludes more recently identified land available for disposal, thereby 
reducing opportunities for raising additional revenue for land 
acquisition. 

* The requirement that agencies spend the majority of funds raised from 
eligible sales for acquisitions in the same state. This provision makes 
it difficult for agencies to acquire more desirable land in states that 
have generated little revenue. 

Our report also contained five recommendations for executive action to 
improve FLTFA implementation. BLM has taken several actions to 
implement our recommendations. Table 1 shows the recommendations from 
our 2008 report and the actions the agencies reported as of November 
2009. 

Table 1: GAO Recommendations to Improve FLTFA Implementation and Agency 
Actions, as of November 2009: 

GAO recommendation: BLM develop goals for land sales; 
Agency actions: 
* August 2008. BLM established FLTFA land sale goals for fiscal years 
2009 and 2010 of $25 million each, according to agency officials. To 
set these goals, a BLM headquarters official contacted each of the BLM 
state offices to determine the amount of eligible land sales that could 
be conducted in the final 2 years of FLTFA; 
* Fall 2009. BLM revised its land sales goal for fiscal year 2010 to 
$20 million.  

GAO recommendation: BLM develop a strategy for implementing its land 
sales goals; 
Agency actions: 
* August 2008. BLM developed a sales incentive program that provides 
seed money for planning and carrying out FLTFA-eligible land sales. 
Specifically, the program makes available up to $300,000 to eligible 
state and field offices for activities necessary to identify and pre-
screen properties for possible sale under FLTFA. At a minimum, offices 
are to prepare a list of specific tracts for sale, with legal 
descriptions and a copy of the respective land use plan that supports 
the potential sale. As of November 2009, six states--Arizona, 
California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, and New Mexico--had agreed to 
participate in the program, according to BLM officials.  

GAO recommendation: Secretaries of Agriculture and of the Interior 
improve the procedures to identify and set priorities for acquiring 
inholdings; 
Agency actions: 
* May 2008. USDA stated that its Land Acquisition Prioritization 
System, generally used for land acquisitions under the Land and Water 
Conservation Fund, also satisfies the land acquisition prioritization 
requirements under FLTFA. USDA further stated that Forest Service would 
continue working with BLM to identify and set priorities for acquiring 
inholdings and that the Forest Service would coordinate with BLM to 
formalize the use of a single process to set priorities for land 
acquisitions; 
* November 2009. The Forest Service FLTFA program lead said that Forest 
Service has coordinated with BLM to formalize the use of a single 
process to set priorities for land acquisitions. She said that the 
agencies meet regularly to discuss FLTFA nominations; 
* April 2008. Interior agreed to continue to improve the procedures to 
identify and set priorities for acquiring inholdings; 
* November 2009. BLM officials said that the current Land and Water 
Conservation Fund system works well for FLTFA acquisitions and no 
changes have been made to this system. BLM has, however, intensified 
its efforts to educate state-level FLTFA implementation teams on the 
FLTFA land acquisition process. For example, the FLTFA lead said he has 
attended numerous state-level interagency team meetings to educate team 
members about the availability and use of FLTFA funds.  

GAO recommendation: BLM establish a procedure to track the percentage 
of revenue spent on inholdings and on adjacent land; 
Agency actions: 
* November 2009. BLM officials reported that BLM gathers and maintains 
data on each transaction and tracks whether the parcel is an inholding 
or adjacent land. Officials also reported that BLM is directing field 
staff to note in BLM's automated land status tracking system (LR2000) 
whether a parcel is an inholding or adjacent land.  

GAO recommendation: Secretaries of Agriculture and of the Interior 
establish a procedure to track the fund allocations for land 
acquisitions by agency as provided in the MOU; 
Agency actions: 
* May 2008. USDA stated that BLM is responsible under FLTFA for 
tracking the sales, proceeds, and disbursement of funds and that USDA 
will continue to assist BLM in tracking these funds; 
* November 2009. The Forest Service FLTFA program lead reiterated 
USDA's May 2008 statement that BLM is responsible for tracking the use 
of FLTFA funding. She said that the Forest Service is merely a 
recipient of FLTFA funding. She added that the national MOU allocations 
are only targets and that they do not necessarily represent a limit on 
how much funding an agency can receive; 
* November 2009. The BLM FLTFA program lead reported that BLM is 
gathering data on each FLTFA transaction by agency and will prepare a 
final report in compliance with the MOU at FLTFA's sunset if not 
reauthorized. He added that the allocations established in the MOU are 
goals only, and that, while the agencies will try to adhere to them, 
they ultimately will not be held to those allocations. As of November 
2009, BLM reports that of the $66.8 million approved by the 
Secretaries, 60 percent is for BLM, 30 percent is for the Forest 
Service, 5.5 percent is for the Park Service, and 4.5 percent is for 
the Fish and Wildlife Service.  

Source: GAO-08-196, USDA and Interior letters documenting planned 
agency actions in response to GAO recommendations, and information 
provided by BLM and Forest Service officials.  

[End of table]  

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy to 
respond to any questions that you or Members of the Subcommittee may 
have. 

Contacts and Acknowledgements: 

Contact points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public 
Affairs may be found on the last page of this testimony. For further 
information about this testimony, please contact Robin M. Nazzaro at 
(202) 512-3841. Individuals making key contributions to this testimony 
were Andrea Wamstad Brown, Assistant Director; Rich Johnson; Mark 
Keenan; Paul Kinney; Emily Larson; John Scott; Rebecca Shea and Carol 
Herrnstadt Shulman. 

[End of section]  

Footnotes:  

[1] GAO, Federal Land Management: Federal Land Transaction Facilitation 
Act Restrictions and Management Weaknesses Limit Future Sales and 
Acquisitions, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-196] 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 5, 2008). 

[2] Pub. L. 106-248 (2000) (codified as 43 U.S.C. § 2301 et seq). 

[3] S. 1787 and H.R. 3339, pending in the current Congress, would amend 
this limitation. 

[4] Pub. L. 106-298: Lincoln County Land Act Of 2000, as amended by 
Pub. L. 108-424 (2004) and Pub. L. 109-432, Title III, White Pine 
County Conservation, Recreation, and Development Act of 2006.  

[End of section]  

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