Minnesota legislators, always looking for a whipping boy, decided this session to create the impression that of the many problems confronting the state -- most created by the Legislature -- the continued acquisition of lands to benefit fish and wildlife, and on which the public may camp and otherwise recreate, is of utmost importance.
The attack is being couched many ways, the latest being that the Department of Natural Resources doesn't know how much land it owns or how it's being managed. So why add more?
For many legislators, the assertion is a smokescreen and beside the point.
Does the state Transportation Department know how many roads its owns and whether potholes in each are identified, much less being repaired?
Does the Pollution Control Agency know the whereabouts of every polluted river and lake in Minnesota and whether they're becoming dirtier or cleaner?
Of course not.
This manufactured land conflict is instead about power and money, specifically about the Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council and the Legislative Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR).
Citizens and legislators share power on each, and while neither group can spend money, both recommend to the Legislature how tens of millions of dollars are allocated each year to benefit fish, wildlife and, generally, the state's lands and waters.