The Strategy To Privatize The Public Domain
Submitted by geo on Wed, 30/05/2007 - 02:15
The coordinated and decades-long effort to privatize the public lands of the
United States, nearly a third of the nation, is now bearing fruit. The
Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s that sought to transfer power to states and
local units, and that provided the Reagan Administration with James Watt as
Interior Secretary, morphed into the Wise Use Movement that sprinkled
antigovernment grassroots organizations across the nation. Wise Use, in turn,
has given rise to so-called "free- market environmentalism" that consists
largely of a network of corporations and conservative foundations and think
tanks intent on gaining control of the public domain.
"The organizing principle of this paper is one of ascending radicalism from
reform through volunteerism and privatization of services to the outright
abolition of public ownership and the transfer of the parks to private
parties." - James P. Beckwith, Jr., 1981. "Virtually everything President
Bush is doing to America is, at some level, related to privatization of our
commons. Today we are witnessing the middle game portion of the Corporate
Takeover of Everything Agenda. It scares me to imagine what the end-game will
look like." - Scott Silver, 2003
The coordinated and decades-long effort to privatize the public lands of the
United States, nearly a third of the nation, is now bearing fruit. The
Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s that sought to transfer power to states and
local units, and that provided the Reagan Administration with James Watt as
Interior Secretary, morphed into the Wise Use Movement that sprinkled
antigovernment grassroots organizations across the nation. Wise Use, in turn,
has given rise to so-called "free- market environmentalism" that consists
largely of a network of corporations and conservative foundations and think
tanks intent on gaining control of the public domain. This collective is
using all of its political clout, every legal loophole, every economic
argument, and all of the public relations and media spin its billions can
buy. Privatization, the word, is frequently avoided in favor of code terms
such as "public - private partnerships", "competitive outsourcing" and
"stewardship contracting".
Platoons of Bush appointees, right out of industry, are now rewriting
regulations to move the privatization agenda rapidly forward. Beckwith, 1981
The architects of free market environmentalism have been candid. The
quotation above, from an essay written by law professor James P. Beckwith,
Jr. and published in the Cato Journal in 1981, dealt with the privatization
of public parks, but its principles are applicable to all public lands. In
brief, the stepwise strategy has been to begin the privatization process with
volunteerism, and then to transfer to the private sector positions now held
by government employees. Finally, public ownership would simply become a
memory. Beckwith argued that public ownership of parks is a "monopoly [that
allows for] suboptimal pricing". He acknowledged that low fees exist because
federal law requires that they be "fair and equitable" but claimed this is
simply a political ploy by legislators to win votes from "voters who consume
recreation." Parks should not belong to all of the people, he argued, but
only “to those who use them, and that is only some of 'the people'". His
plan to privatize was simple: "Existing public parks could either be given
away or sold to the highest bidder." Without doubt, major corporations and
the very wealthy would quickly become the new owners. In the world Beckwith
set forth, we who are presently the owners of the land, become known
variously as "customers", "clients" and "consumers". Beckwith understood that
a sudden takeover of public land would quickly trigger reaction and proposed
that privatization be introduced by degrees, with the "most tentative step"
being recruitment of volunteers and later "the contracting out of support
services to private firms operating for profit". Governmental bureaucrats, he
argued, have no incentive to economize, and with low-bidding private
companies providing services, the system would function with maximum economic
efficiency.
A shift in this direction is now advancing rapidly in the Department of
Interior. Just a year ago Interior Secretary Gail Norton reported that some
3,500 positions in the U.S. Park Service would be marked for privatization.
Now, as of January, 2003, Interior, after hiring (for a reported $5 million)
the firm CH2MHill to produce a "competitive sourcing" plan, has expanded the
plan to privatize 11,807 of the 16,470 positions in the U.S. Park Service -
nearly 72%. According to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility
(PEER), the contract was simply given without any bidding process to
CH2MHill, a company that is anything but neutral, since it does billions of
dollars in business by maintaining federal facilities. CH2MHill is free to
bid on positions that have been privatized through its recommendation. In the
system Beckwith prescribed, where market demand is all-powerful and cloaked
as Liberty herself, if "customers" are not willing to pony up what managers
charge, what then? In such a scenario, lands "might even cease to be parks at
all because recreationists might not be willing to pay enough to bid away the
land from alternative purposes." What "alternative purposes"? Toward what
kind of future could this lead Yellowstone and the rest of what are now the
public's lands? Where profit is king, one need only give free rein to the
imagination. And the situation with the National Parks is just a beginning.
In the February 5 issue of the Washington Post, Christopher Lee cites
President Bush as wanting federal agencies to compete out as many as 850,000
federal jobs. Charging For The Sky There is an errie quality to the
mechanical cold-heartedness with which Beckwith deals with our land. It's as
if he were considering the fate of plastic widgets or writing a doomsday
scenario. "The gate fee", he wrote, "could cover such hard-to-charge-for
amenities as the sky, broad vistas, and fragrant flowers." Specific fees
would be charged for other services and activities such as hiking, bird
watching, and the like.
There is irony in that privatization of public domain would be pressed so
strongly at this particular time, just as the nation has been given examples
not only of rampant corporate fraud but also of the spectacular failure of
airport security as a for-profit enterprise, its employees incompetent,
ill-trained and underpaid for profit’s sake, this making it necessary for
the government of the people to step in. Former Forest Service supervisor
Gloria Flora, writing for Headwater News, put it this way: "What will our
experiences be like when services, professionalism and even wildlife are
managed for profitability? Can you picture former airport security guards
stuffed into Park Service uniforms -- disgruntled, unqualified, and underpaid
-- in charge of our national treasures? Will carnival rides be installed next
to Old Faithful to augment the income stream?"
Beckwith's essay, prepared for a 1980 conference titled "Property Rights and
Natural Resources: A New Paradigm for the Environmental Movement", was
sponsored by the Cato Institute and the Center for Political Economy and
Natural Resources of Montana State University at Bozeman. He acknowledged the
editorial assistance of Terry Anderson and John Baden, both of whom now, two
decades later, have become leaders of the privatization agenda. Anderson is
public lands adviser to President George W. Bush. Terry Anderson and PERC
It’s difficult to overestimate the power of language manipulation. The
Political Economy Research Center (PERC), heads its website with the note.
"The Center for Free Market Environmentalism". This use of "environmentalism"
in connection with the language of free market economics one now sees again
and again, not only with PERC, but with a host of similar groups, as if it
were a valid form of environmentalism rather than a tactic in the overall
strategy for taking control of the public’s land. It's the principle of
hitting the public mind constantly with a falsehood until, in time, it has a
ring of truth. Go to PERC's website www.perc.org , click on "links", and one
is led to a list of 55 of the country's most powerful rightwing foundations
and organizations committed to deregulation of industry and to the
privatization of everything. PERC's basic premise is that ownership and
management of land by government is bad for the environment, and that private
property rights lead to better "stewardship of resources".
Our government is depicted not as an entity "of, by, and for the people" but
as something far, far away and characterized by faceless, incompetent,
bureaucrats. PERC advances its agenda through policy analysis, conferences,
books and articles, and "education". Its funding comes from a host of the
country's most conservative foundations - Bradley, Sarah Scaife, John M.
Olin, JM, Lambe, McKenna, Earhart, Koch, Carthage and Castle Rock -- the guts
of a force of roughly a dozen or so foundations that, since the 1960s, have
coordinated their efforts toward forging national policy favorable to
deregulation of industry and to privatization. Terry Anderson, PERC's
director (and a senior fellow at the rightwing Hoover Foundation), landed in
the consciousness of environmentalists in 1999 as lead author of an alarming
policy paper published by the Cato Institute, "How and Why to Privatize
Federal Lands". The paper, in which public ownership was painted "red" by
being identified as a "failure of socialism", was based on four assumptions:
That a given piece of land be "allocated to highest-valued use", that
transition costs (to private ownership) be kept to a minimum, that there be
"broad participation" in the divestiture, and that "squatter's rights" be
protected. The plan advanced was to allocate to each citizen "shares" in what
are now public lands. That's the "broad participation" part - everybody gets
"shares". But here's the rub: shares would be "freely transferred", i.e.,
sold on the open market. With 280 million citizens, what would an
individual's shares be worth? $5,000? $50,000? Whatever the value on the open
market, the poorer a citizen, the greater the inducement to sell quickly. But
even the middle classes, bombarded with college tuition, mortgages, medical
bills and the like, in time would be needing the cash their "shares"
represented. In the wings, corporations and the very rich would be waiting to
vacuum shares up. There would be a great sucking sound of the sort Ross Perot
once described, and within a generation or two what is now the priceless
heritage of all U.S. citizens would gravitate into the ownership of the
wealthy. Actually, Anderson's vision is for a process that would take place
over a 20-40 year span - about two generations. As the push to privatize
heats up, our common assets, held for us by a government of the people, are
drifting into the control of the private sector, no longer for public benefit
but for private profit. And we are failing to notice.
Anderson writes that his plan "provides opportunities and incentives for
environmentalists and their organizations to participate directly in the
ownership and management of amenity resources by bidding for surface rights
to parks and wilderness lands." But surely he knows this is nonsense, for how
could the environmental community ever compete with global corporate
interests, extractive industry and the billionaire set? For those who love
the land it would be panic time and a scratching together of any available
funds to save a few revered spots. And the language! "Amenity resources"
indeed! A soulless concept dripping with dollar signs and devoid of any
deeper sense of connection between humans and the natural world. Calling this
kind of economics "the dismal science" is much too kind. It says "Here's a
piece of land. Take a hike and enjoy. $50 please, in the interest of free
marketeering. Thank you, and have a great day. Nature, Inc.” Terry Anderson
became George W. Bush's adviser on public lands issues. In May of 1999, as
reported by Mark Hertsgaard in the February, 2003 issue of The Nation.
Anderson was one of a group that met with Bush at the Texas Governor's
mansion. Bush was advised, as Anderson explained, to "devolve some
responsibility for meeting environmental standards to local levels". Bush was
also advised at that time to give private property rights precedence over
public interests and to replace governmental law and regulation with the
laissez-faire principles of the free market - exactly what the privatization
lobby has worked toward lo these past four decades.
First The States and “Local” Interests In a 1995 report, "Conservative
Foundations and their Activist Grantees", the National Committee for
Responsible Philanthropy (NCRP) wrote that Ronald Reagan's 1980 election, and
his Administration's efforts to increase the authority of states, gave the
conservative collective opportunity to establish state power bases from which
it not only crafted and pressed legislation in all states but also mobilized
for impacting national policy. Don Eberly, a principal in the conservative
movement, was quoted as saying "We simply will not have power on the national
level until we declare war on state legislators". Indeed, it has been run as
a war, and one strategically so well organized, and with such an extensive
support network, that elements as diverse the Christian Coalition and the
National Rifle Association appear as part of a united front. And because the
conservative foundations have been joined by large corporations such as RJ
Reynolds Tobacco, Shell Oil, Pfizer, Phillip Morris, etc., the conservative
collective, now with billions of dollars at its disposal, has been able to
outspend progressive efforts many-fold in its mission to redesign national
policy. It’s propaganda campaign disseminates information to media and
supports a wealth of "educational" literature for all levels of consumption,
including school newspapers. It is within this vast network that PERC rests.
John Baden and FREE As with PERC, so with FREE (the Foundation for Research
on Economics and the Environment, www.free-eco.org . FREE , also based in
Bozeman, Montana, has received millions of dollars from roughly the same
profile of foundations that funds PERC, and is a prime engine for free market
environmentalism in the area of "education". Preaching reliance on market
mechanisms and private property rights, rather than on environmental law, for
protection of the environment, it's chairperson, John Baden (a past member of
the National Petroleum Council), stresses decentralization - a shift of
control from what he calls "Green platonic despots in D.C." to "local
interests". He has written, apparently in all seriousness, that the agenda of
FREE is "the norm among progressive, intellectually honest and successful
environmentalists". One of FREE’s current projects is the “Charter
Forest” scheme, in which the national forests would no longer operate under
the “multiple use” mandate. Rather, each forest would be are managed by
whatever industry would be able to realize the greatest profit. For more than
ten years, FREE has been offering expense-paid seminars in its philosophy to
federal judges (It's invitation can be seen, at least at the time of this
writing, at http://www.mediatransparency.org/recipients/free.htm ). Seminars,
held primarily at resorts and private ranches in Montana, with good access to
trout streams and golf courses, include such topics as "The Environment: A
CEO's Perspective" and "Liberty and the Environment: A Case for Judicial
Activism" [emphasis added]. In the late nineties, FREE boasted that nearly a
third of the federal judiciary had either attended or was seeking to attend
its seminars, this as the Bush Administration now strives to pack federal
benches with rightist judges. The group also offers expense-paid courses for
university faculty and students, these reportedly taught on the campus of
Montana State University.
*User Fees*
User fees as tools for controlling use and "rationing access" to public land
is a central aspect of the privatization agenda. Here, the American public
that in its ownership capacity has for generations supported public lands
with its taxes, transforms into a population of paying customers. Beckwith,
in his 1981 landmark paper, underscored that user fees are feasible only if
nonusers can be excluded from users. Then, "if the price of recreation is
raised", he writes, "less of it will be demanded by consumers, and
overcrowding in the parks will be reduced". That this excludes lower income
citizens is not a factor of interest for free marketeers. The public
ownership model that American citizens presently enjoy makes it impossible to
exclude "non-users", and this impedes the path to the fee system envisioned
by the free market establishment. For this reason, Beckwith wrote, "it is
essential that property rights in the parks be defined, transferred, and
enforced..." In fact, the ongoing diminishing of federal funding of land
management agencies (under the guise of “streamlining” government)
strongly assists the privatization agenda, since it makes user fees ever more
necessary for the operation of land management agencies. The Bush
Administration is forging ahead in this direction. Grover Norquist, the key
rightwing strategist and White House advisor who spearheads the immense Bush
tax cut, was widely reported in 2001 as saying his goal is to shrink
government so that it will fit into a bathtub where he can then drown it.
This really is nothing less than to a plan to kill government of, by, and for
the people. With market incentives introduced into land management, data can
be collected and analyzed regarding customer preferences within the menu of
uses and services. Because income and ability to pay are not reliable
predictors either of taste or of understanding about the biological aspects
of natural landscapes, the door is opened to the most mechanized, destructive
and vulgar of activities, if those are what provide the most dollar votes.
What is presently managed for an entire population of owners, and in the best
interests of the land itself, would quickly become geared toward the
interests of those "users" providing the greatest profit. There is indication
that there is much money to be made in “industrial recreation”.
The American Recreation Coalition (ARC) represents every conceivable
snowmobile, jetski, ATV, 4-wheeler, off-roader, motorcycle and RV interest,
whether manufacturer, dealer, or user group, as well as petroleum interests
and Disney Corporation ( http://www.funoutdoors.com/members.html ). Even with
the public domain under its present public ownership, ARC's immense
financial, political, and public relations clout allows it to exert
considerable control on public land management. Despite the wishes of an
overwhelming majority of Americans, ARC has been instrumental in keeping
Yellowstone Park, the very crown jewel of the nation's parks, open to
snowmobile traffic. A privatizing of management would simply demolish any
remnants of the public interest presently holding at bay a total industrial
takeover.
Beckwith, PERC, FREE, ARC ... these are just parts of a massive and
massively-funded, interconnected system and long-term strategy dedicated to
the transfer of public domain into private hands. It is so vast and
multifaceted that it's difficult to keep tabs on it, and given the politics
and obligations of the present Administration, it is advancing with
frightening rapidity, largely unnoticed by a citizenry focused on terrorism
and foreign wars.
Bill Willers is a contributing writer for Liberal Slant













