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Today, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Forest Service administer about seventy percent of the 657 million acres that remain in federal ownership. These agencies continue to transfer and sell federal land, but under more limited circumstances.
Unlike the US Forest Service, the BLM manages essentially no land in the eastern U.S. This is because BLM managed lands were created from surplus public lands that the federal government had not designated as National Forests or given to homesteaders.
The Forest Service sells timber and special forest products on a variety of contract and permit forms based on the complexity and/or value of the sale.
The BLM issues leases and permits for the public to use, occupy or develop public lands for a variety of purposes. Examples include commercial filming and photography, advertising displays, crop harvesting, residential occupancy, recreation facilities, construction equipment storage, assembly yards and well pumps.
Multiple uses under BLM management include renewable energy development (solar, wind, other); conventional energy development (oil and gas, coal); livestock grazing; hardrock mining (gold, silver, other), timber harvesting; and outdoor recreation (such as camping, hunting, rafting, and off-highway vehicle driving).
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The Bureau of Land Management The Bureau of Land Managements mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.
The BLM does not offer much land for sale because its congressional mandate, enacted in 1976, is to generally retain public lands in public ownership. However, the BLM does occasionally sell parcels of public land where our land-use planning finds it to be appropriate and in the public interest.
The BLM has discretion to grant a ROW when doing so is in the public interest. You need a ROW whenever you wish to build on public land or conduct any activity that would involve appreciable disturbance, alteration or damage to public lands.

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