By Lilly Stewart
The Homestead Act is where it all began. To encourage westward expansion in 1862, the federal government offered 160-acre plots of land to the American people for a modest filing fee and commitment to reside on and improve the acreage by cultivating crops or raising livestock. However, as homesteaders discovered, much of the land in the west is barren and rocky. It takes a lot of it to sustain a family, and the tools required for farming and ranching were expensive to acquire. That is why it’s not surprising that much of the land remained unclaimed by farmers and ranchers when the Homestead Act was discontinued in 1976 (except in Alaska, where it continued until 1986).
Everything left over remained the property of the government and became what we now know as federal or public lands. These lands are managed by federal agencies including the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service. In western states especially, agencies face the challenge of balancing multiple uses on federal (public) lands.
You might ask, “How are these resources managed in states with substantial public lands?” That is a great question. Federal lands in the western U.S. are used for grazing livestock such as cattle and sheep, producing energy and minerals, recreation and so much more.