Special Recreation Permit Post Use Report - BLM - blm 2025

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This law is administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The act authorizes the sale or lease of public lands for recreational or public pur- poses to State and local governments and to qualified nonprofit organizations.
The Act allows the BLM to sell or lease public lands identified in its resource management plans to state and local governments or qualified non-profit organizations, for recreational use or other public purposes.
Our programs support American energy development and job growth, promote conservation, and enhance secure borderlands, all in service to the American family. This is the public benefit of our multiple-use mission.
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.
The rule recognizes conservation as an essential component of public lands management, on equal footing with other multiple uses of these lands. Americans rely on public lands to deliver food, energy, clean air and water, wildlife habitat, and places to recreate.

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Special Recreation Permits are issued to businesses, organizations, and individuals to allow the use of specific public land and related waters for commercial, competitive, and organized group use. Special Recreation Permits allow the land stewards to coordinate and track commercial and competitive use of public lands.
Congress tasked the BLM with a mandate of managing public lands for a variety of uses such as energy development, livestock grazing, recreation, and timber harvesting while ensuring natural, cultural, and historic resources are maintained for present and future use.
You must pay the required fees upon occupying a designated recreation use facility, when you receive services, or as the BLMs reservation system may require. These practices vary from site to site. You may contact the local BLM office with jurisdiction over the area or site for fee information.

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