HJR 48-TERMINATION OF FED LAND WITHDRAWALS    CHAIRMAN JOHN TORGERSON called the Senate Resources Committee meeting to order at 3:32 pm and announced HJR 48 to be up for consideration. Present were Senators Wilken, Stevens, Taylor, Elton and Chairman Torgerson. MS. JUDY OHMER, staff to Representative Pete Kott, said HJR 48 encourages Congress to amend its public lands laws to provide a timely way to return withdrawn land to fuller public use. Throughout much of the United states, especially the Western states and Alaska, the federal government has withdrawn lands for various reasons. Withdrawn lands are then off limits to other selections and designations such as state's right-of-ways, state selections, mining claims, Native allotments, etc. Many federal withdrawals were for public purposes such as parks and refuges; others were withdrawn to give agencies the flexibility to consider proposed uses of the land; and still others have been withdrawn for seeming arbitrary political purposes. When federal land is withdrawn it is closed until the withdrawal is remove, which in some instances requires an act of Congress. This creates the problem where land remains close to entry even when the original purpose for the withdrawal has been accomplished or has lapsed. In Alaska many of these federally withdrawn lands have been selected by the State of Alaska in accordance with the Alaska Statehood Act for transfer to become state- owned lands. Some of these lands in withdrawal status have high mineral potential that could benefit the state's economy. Other lands were selected for access corridors. In all cases, these state selected lands cannot be transferred and Alaska loses opportunities. HJR 48 requests that Congress amend our country's public lands laws so that the land withdrawals sunset in 10 years unless the agency responsible for managing the land provides Congress with a justification. HJR 48 also requests that Congress require the federal land managing agencies to compile a comprehensive listing of the withdrawn lands under their jurisdictions to include (1) the exact geographical coordinates of the withdrawals, (2) the legal authority for the withdrawal and (3) the document establishing the withdrawal and (4) the proposed disposition of the affected land and file a plan with Congress within one year defining how the withdrawals will be terminated. This requirement would extend to all agencies in the United States that manage public lands, as a lot of federal departments and agencies are involved in land management, but some are ones that wouldn't immediately come to mind like the Post Office, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Defense, the Bureau of Land Management, the National Park Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service, etc. CHAIRMAN TORGERSON said on page 2, line 4 that "several states" are mentioned, but that the resolution wouldn't be sent to them. He asked states that refers to. MS. OHMER replied that she thought it referred to the western states. SENATOR WILKEN moved to pass HJR 48 from committee with individual recommendations and the attached zero fiscal note. There were no objections and it was so ordered.