|
TRANSCRIPT
INTERVIEWEE: Bob Armstrong (BA)
INTERVIEWER: David Todd (DT)
LOCATION: Austin, Texas
DATE: June 23, 1999
TRANSCRIBER: Robin Johnson
SOURCE MEDIA: Mini-DV
REELS 2021 and 2022

Please see the Real Media video record of reels
2021 and
2022
from our full interview with Mr. Armstrong.
Please note that videos
include roughly 60 seconds of color bars and sound tone for technical
settings at the outset of the recordings.
Note: Boldfaced numbers indicate
timemarks on VHS tape copy of interview
DT: My name is David Todd and I’m here on
June 23, 1999, representing the Conservation History Association of
Texas. We’re in Austin, Texas and we’ve got the honor to talk to Bob
Armstrong about his many contributions to the legislature, the Park
and Wildlife Commission, the General Land Office and other groups
including the Department of Interior to conservation in Texas and many
other parts of the country. Thank you for participating.
02:13 - 2021
BA: I’m happy to be here.
DT: Talk about your early days and if there
might be people in your family or teachers or early friends who helped
encourage you and get you interested in the outdoors and conservation.
02:33 - 2021
BA: I guess my early recollection was that
my dad used to take me fishing me a lot. The lakes were new. The LCRA
had just built them and we went quite a bit of out to the lakes.
Probably the more definitive thing was I—I had asthma and so they sent
me to Santa Fe at a very early age, eight years old. And I went to a
camp one year and then worked there from nine on. And we went into the
Sangre de Christo Mountains. We were in camp for a week and then we would
be out for a week. And we did that every other week for eight weeks.
And I did that for most of my growing up life. We were there when they
exploded the bomb in Los Alamos but this was—and we were there when
the war ended. But that was my early on recollection. I learned to
trout fish and my mother was a Missourian and so they took me to
Castville, Missouri where they had a great State Park, Roaring River
Park and it was easier to leave me down at the park than it was to
look after me at—at—back at home. So I went down to the park and I
learned to fish before I was seven years old when it was really hard
to catch those fish. But I was a fly fisherman from then on. And that
sort of got me started.
DT: Can you talk about the connection between
some of your outdoor hobbies and your interest in the outdoors and
conservation?
04:33 - 2021
BA: Well, I’ve always fly fished in some
of the prettiest places in the world but—and I—I think Alaska is—is
one of those. But it—I—I really didn’t become an environmentalist at
any time. It just sort of grew on me and I—it—it probably grew out of
fishing and—and—and we did a lot of hiking up in the New Mexico
Mountains. And so—another thing was that I flew. I’ve got 5000 hours
and I flew a lot but most of the time that we
05:16 - 2021
BA: flew, we flew west. So that—that
was—we’d fly to backpack vacations or I’d take other people up to a
mountain home in the west. So a lot of the flying had got me into a
lot of places. I always made the same number of take-offs and landings
which was a goal that you tried to do.
DT: You served in the Texas State Legislature
representing Austin. Could you tell me about some of your interests
and projects?
06:09 - 2021
BA: Well, in the legislature, you have a
lot of things that you can do. The first year I was there, I tried to
do everything. I tried, you know—and Austin representatives have a lot
to do because you have a bunch of state agencies that ask you to do
things. But there were several of us that—and—and I know you’ve
interviewed a lot of them, Kennard, Schwartz, I don’t know if
you’ve—you’ve done Eckhardt, Neil Caldwell was quite a influence on my
life. And we got together and decided that, first of all, the beaches
were—were the forefront of our efforts because we knew if we didn’t
save the beaches we—we would—we’d lose a lot of momentum. And—and
so—and the beaches were popular with the people. So we had a beach
package and then later I got interested in—in the conservation aspects
of the fact that we—we didn’t have an inner agency council where
everybody looked at the environment. They—they would—they would spin
around in their own little sphere and not—and never look at what they
were doing at—to somebody else. So the Railroad Commission would make
rules that might be against the
07:44 - 2021
BA: General Land Office or the Parks and
Wildlife. And so I set up an inner agency council and so that we—we
would at least come together and take a look at the environment. Now
what happened to that was interesting. First of all, the only time I
ever went was to watch Hugh Yantis. And Hugh Yantis was—was a—the
Water Board member and he was sort of the devil incarnate but he had a
viewpoint and he said that polluters had rights too. And so, you know,
but anyhow, we—we set up that group and then I got on it when I became
Land Commissioner. And—and it was pretty rough sledding and then all
of a sudden we elected Bullock and we elected some other people to the
Attorney General’s office, John Hill, and we began to do pretty well.
Then when Clements came in, he changed it to the Energy and Natural
Resources Committee and appointed a bunch of energy people and so it
was—it was interesting in the—in the way it happened. But--but it was
one of the first things that we did to try to look at the effect of
everything the state did for the environment. And so I had worked on
that in the legislature and later as Land Commissioner.
DT: What kind of impacts did the study
identify?
09:19 - 2021
BA: Well, we—we—we looked at everything we
did and—and—and looked at what it was doing to other people. And—but
we—and we met regularly and at that time, we were beginning to pass
some environmental legislation and so it was—it—it was—it was just a
broad look at what we were doing for the environment in the state.
DT: How did you manage to move that package?
(misc.)
DT: How did you move a package of bills
through the legislature like the beaches or this one setting up the
inner agency?
10:11 - 2021
BA: First of all, well, the inner agency
council, I think we passed by house resolution. And that’s somewhat
easier than—but we had to get the others’ approval. And so—and you got
to remember that the—the—the time was fairly ripe for this to do—to be
done. And so we—we—but mainly we—we had the idea and sometimes we’d
just kind of slip it in when—when the house was not busy. And so—but
it was good legislation and it was kind of hard for people to oppose
it.
DT: What sort of signs did you see that you
thought that the legislature or the contingency out in the public
might be receptive?
11:08 - 2021
BA: Well the—it—the—the plain fact was we
were doing some violence to the coast and—and people saw that. People
in Houston would see it. And so, you know, it just—it—it—it sort of
grew but we were—we were ahead of ourselves, I think in those, in
[Babe] Schwartz and [Bob] Eckhardt and [Don] Kennard. They just—they—they—they—they
just—they thought we ought to do it because we ought to do it.
DT: Were there any outspoken opponents to
your efforts?
11:41 - 2021
BA: Sure, but—but, you know, and we had to
accommodate them. But—but it—we still, I thought, later on when we
were doing the coastal program, we did things that ahead of time that
most of the states were just then gathering up the steam to do with
the coastal program. We had already done them, in large part, with the
beaches because of that early legislation.
DT: Can you go into the beaches legislation a
little bit?
12:16 - 2021
BA: Well it was—we—well, first of all, we
had to guarantee access so there was beach access law. I carried a
bill that protected sand dunes. That we—we left the dunes—we—we said
there would be no dredging of—of the sand dunes to put the sand
somewhere else. Then we had, you know, little bills that—about
what—what you could do with advertising and stuff on the beaches. And
so, you know, it was those—those—those kinds of packages. That—I—there
were six bills and I can’t remember all of them but each of us took
one of those bills and carried it in the house.
DT: Were there any conservation bills that
you carried in the hill country or around Austin?
13:08 - 2021
BA: No, we didn’t do much about that.
The—we—we—we worked—I—at one point, I discovered that we didn’t have a
Sierra Club in Texas. And—or at least not in Austin. And so I went—I
was—I was traveling out west and I went to a guy whose name was Orin
Bonney who was from Houston and he wrote the Bonney Guide to the peaks
of—of Wyoming. Although he was from Houston. And so I went to him and
said we needed a Sierra Club and he said, well [David] Brower has
empowered me to do whatever I want to so go back. And he gave me a
couple of names and so we—we formed the Sierra Club with three guys or
four guys, I think and it’s since grown to, I think, over three
thousand members here in Travis County.
DT: Can you describe some of the early
meetings or projects that you had?
14:21 - 2021
BA: Not really. We—we just met.
Originally, you know, we were meeting not to work on legislation.
We—we met to plan canoe trips and to go out west. And so that was the
kind of things that we did. We—we—we were fairly non-political but, of
course, I went to some of the meetings in the west where—where Brower,
you know, had—was—was involved and, of course, he quite because it
wasn’t political and so forth. But anyhow, it—I—I—I disremember all of
the things that happened. But—and I—I—I’ve subsequently met Brower
when I was in Interior and it was a—it was a great meeting. And we met
at the Kings Range later which was fun.
DT: Can you tell about some of the canoe
trips that you organized through the Sierra Club?
15:25 - 2021
BA: Well, we—we—we didn’t do the canoe
trips so much as they—they just sort of happened. We did the lower
canyons. Burleson was a pioneer there and we estimated that maybe we
were among the first 1500 that ever went down the lower canyons and it
was quite a trip to do at that time. But I suppose we—we probably—I
can remember six or seven times that we did the lower canyons.
Burleson found a dead person in the river and he called the river and
the next time, the sheriff had to come down. The next time he asked
him, he said, now if you find another dead person in the river, the
next time you go down, don’t call me because I have to come down here
when you do this and it’s probably just somebody that fell in the
river and drowned. And so he was asked not to call the sheriff if he
found another dead man in the river. But it was—it was pretty wild
those days.
DT: I noticed that you were active in other
non-profit groups, among them the Nature Conservancy.
16:47 - 2021
BA: Well, I was on the board and we—we
worked, I guess, the best thing we did was Enchanted Rock which was up
for sale and we saved it and made it into a park.
DT: Tell about that.
17:05 - 2021
BA: Well, I just was involved inferentially
but Ms. Johnson was big in that and—and then we—we also worked with
the—I think we worked—I—I—with—I can’t remember the—the name of the
park but it was on the Guadeloupe in—in—but we—we—we—Andy Sansom was
working as Executive Director of Nature Conservancy and he got me
interested in it and I was—was involved.
DT: In later years, I understood that you
served on the Trust for Public Lands. Can you tell us about that?
17:52 - 2021
BA: Well that—that was a very exciting
time in my life. We—we met in various places but principally in San
Francisco. The—the Nature Conservancy had started in Washington and,
at some point, they decided that there was room for two of them and so
the guy moved out to San Francisco and started the Trust for Public
Lands. And it was very exciting time. Doug Ferguson and—who was, I
guess, Stephen Spielberg and Georgia Lucas’ lawyer was—was a
member and so was Marty Rosen. Marty Rosen was probably
18:37 - 2021
BA: the spark plug, the two of them just
ran it. And I got on the board because Terry Hershey asked me to—said
we needed another Texan. And we—we—we did a lot of good and that, you
know, led me to the west during a time when I didn’t have anything to
do. And so I—I served on that board and—and it was a great experience.
DT: You mentioned Terry Hershey. Could you
describe some of the private citizens that had been friends of
conservation and maybe supporters of yours?
19:21 - 2021
BA: Well, Terry Hershey was a supporter of
mine and she, you know, there’s just only one Terry Hershey. She’s big
on the bayous of Houston. Then—but she also has a great place in—up in
Blanco County and she has an even greater place up above the Navajo
Reservoir in New Mexico. And she really believes in what she does and
she’s just a great board member. And I think she was a—a—a—well I—I—I
suppose she was a Parks and Wildlife member, I think. And so she—she
may have been quasi private and public but she was—she is a good head
and all of us just ran—ran together. I mean, we—I have a campout
every—every spring and people come from all over the state and
that—we—we—we meet on a weekend and before the ticks come and before
the snakes are out and we have a grand time. And it’s mostly—now it’s
turned into a musical event. Boy, we have great pickin’. You’ve—I’m
sure you’ve heard Bob Burleson play and—and so—but we all kind gather
together and Molly Ivins comes and Bill Hobby and those people and we
just hang out for a week ever—Ned Fritz is always there.
DT: Could you indulge us with any music
playing?
21:11 - 2021
BA: Well I probably wouldn’t because I
don’t do as much of that as I used to do. I write funny songs.
I’ll—I’ll—I’ll tell you one.
(misc.)
21:42 - 2021
BA: Well I’ve got one called, I’ve Had
Enough so Hush Rush.
DT: I’d love it if you’d tell us some.
21:51 - 2021
BA: Well I—I—there--there was one session
which I—I wrote a couplet for and it was—it was a session on medical
malpractice and all the insurance people came in and everything else.
But I looked at that session and I said, "As we all watched them in
their top form, passing bills more real than theoretical, when judged
on the basis of benefit and harm, all the malpractice wasn’t medical".
(misc.)
DT: After you served in the legislature, you
were elected to be Commissioner of the General Land Office. Tell us
about that election.
22:56 - 2021
BA: Well, first of all, I ran against
Jerry Sadler and I think in fairness, Jerry Sadler was of an era whose
time had passed and he had opposed the—the National Seashore Park. He
had opposed the park out in—in Guadeloupe Mountains and he thought
that it all ought to be Texas and we shouldn’t have any national
influence. But I thought that there—there was room for me to—to run
and I ran. And I flew my own airplane and that—that gave me an ability
to--to get from place-to-place. Now I made a lot of landings at night
and on instruments when—but I—but I—but I did it and it was a great
time. And Dave McNeely was my flack at the time and he—he was—he—he
said that he—that I flew and he prayed and he wasn’t sure that he
believed in God but he did that time and then later on he has become a
believer in God. But we had—we had a great time and—and we won that
race. But—and I thought that there were things that we—we needed to
do. The first thing that I did was to code all of the tracks on the
Gulf. We had them divided into sections and the oil companies came to
me and they said, you know, you can run an environmental campaign but
this is ridiculous. We—we don’t need to do all this. But the upshot of
it was we knew that—that tracks that were under six feet of water and
above the—the thin track, produced all of this spartina grasses and
all of the things that the coast had to offer. And so we said, we’re
just not going to dredge into those tracks. Then we said that where
the whooping cranes were—were prevalent, we—we just were going to draw
a line, ten miles outside of that. And we might go in and dredge when
the birds were out but we—we—we’d certainly before drilling any—any
kind of—anyhow, the upshot of it was that all of the companies were
mad at me and we put the rules into effect. And the plain fact was
that Louisiana Offshore was stopped because of a lack of environmental
restrictions. Federal Offshore was stopped because of a lack of
environmental restrictions. We held these sails all the way through
because we were doing it right. And—and it—and so I got asked over to
Louisiana to ask them, you know, how we’d done it and how we’d—so that
was another thing that—that we—we were just a little ahead of out time
when—when we did that. And I—I think we put the first billionth dollar
in the school fund. We put the second billionth dollar in the school
fund and we would have put the third billionth there if I’d stayed
there a month longer. But Gary Mauro got that honor and he—and I think
it’s up to seven billion now.
DT: It seems like Gary Mauro has continued
that legacy. How did you arrange the commission where it was possible
for conservation to move beyond your own career the.
27:00 - 2021
BA: Well it—he, you know, he—he was smart
about that. And he just did what was—he—he just kept on going. He did
a lot of things that I was unable to do. He finally passed the coastal
program and he did a wonderful job of cleaning up the Gulf. And I
think, you know, we—we all just work together. And—and he—he continued
on. Wasn’t—wasn’t because of anything we did, I think it was because
it was right.
DT: I understand that you leased land to oil
and gas companies and also to Audubon. Can you describe some of those
efforts?
27:43 - 2021
BA: Yeah, we—we—we looked at the coast and
there were some islands that—that needed protection and we didn’t have
any ability. I—basically I operated the land office. I—I’ve got a list
of the people that were there and it’s a pretty thin list of—so—so we
would try to get other people in from places like Audubon to—to take
the—what we called Bird Island and—and manage it. And it was a very
successful program. It was really a kind of a deal that we
subsequently did an interior which was to involve more of the public
in—in—in the business of government.
DT: I also understand that you put some
restrictions on leases in the Franklin Mountains for oil and gas
production.
28:45 - 2021
BA: Well it was oil—it was—it was not—it
was not only oil and gas but it—it was also—they had a lot of minerals
that they thought were involved in the Franklin Mountains and we just
didn’t—we thought that that—those mountains were too important to El
Paso and so we—we—we let them alone. And we—we eventually—it was not
without a lot of hardship because the guy was very aggressive but—but
I think we—we—we finally got everything right in—as—as right as we
could in Franklin Mountains.
DT: I also heard there were conditions put on
some of the agricultural leases of Western Lands.
29:37 - 2021
BA: Well we—we—we tried to do that and
what—what we did was, you know, a lot of the land that Texas owned was
little bits and pieces or as my old law partner used to say, they were
chips and whetstones that were out there in—in the—in the public lands
of the west. What we tried to do was—was we got the legislature to
give us the authority to take the lands that one section in a big
ranch, we would sell that to the landowner but then we would—and—and
reserve the minerals. But then we would take that money and put it in
a pot and then when we got enough of a pot, well then we’d would buy a
big ranch and the big ranches we could lease for good money. Whereas
the little pieces of 40, 60, 640 acres wouldn’t—wouldn’t lease very
much. You got to understand that out there 640 acres is not much.
You—you—sometimes you run one cow 640 acres or two cows. And so, you
would—but we put together a couple of—of ranches and—and—and did that
which I thought let us manage them more correctly and—and also we made
more money.
(misc.)
DT: Could you tell me about the acquisition
of Matagorda Island?
31:41 - 2021
BA: Well, you know, Matagorda was in—in
the—there—there were two phases in Matagorda. The first phase was the
bombing range. And we tried to get the bombing range over into Parks
and Wildlife or the Fish Wildlife and Parks. The second phase was the
Wynn property which was the south end of the island. And I had a long
history with Matagorda Island. I—I--when I was in college,
freshman/sophomore, we would go down there and they would make us a
trade. We would herd the cattle for two days and then we would get to
fish for red fish for one day. And so that was a good trade and we
would go to Matagorda Island. And actually they were still bombing
that range and—and sometimes we’d be herding cattle and they
would—and—and we hoped they were accurate with their bombing. But
anyhow, I had known the Wynns for a long time and—and so I just—all I
did was I put in my two cents worth for the Wynns to put that
into—into the park system and I think it was one of the—the great
things that we have done—is to get that island into a—a—a—the park
system.
DT: Could you describe the island and what
makes it special to you?
33:29 - 2021
BA: Well, of course, what makes it special
is the whoopers go across from—from the mainland to the island. And
virtually the only place that they—they do cross and so it would be
that alone would make it—but—but it’s just got a world of ducks, red
fish, and trout and it’s—it’s—it—it just is a place that needs to be
left alone. And—and—and—and it’s one of the few places that will be
left alone in—in perpetuity. And I think that
34:11 - 2021
BA: that’s—that’s in—in—the—the people can
go down there and go across in a ferry and they—the beaches are
wonderful and I think it’s a marvelous acquisition for us to—for the
state to have and for the federal government to have.
DT: Was there much pressure to put a causeway
or a bridge across to the island.
34:37 - 2021
BA: Well there—there was always…
(misc.)
DT: Did you work for Ann Richards and then
you went to the Park and Wildlife Commission?
34:48 - 2021
BA: No, I went to work for Ann Richards
after Parks and Wildlife. I was on Parks and Wildlife from ’90 to—no,
from ’84 to ’90, yes. And then I worked for her until the time I went
to Interior.
DT: Could we talk about your appointment to
the Parks and Wildlife Commission?
35:19 - 2021
BA: My appointment to the Parks and
Wildlife Commission was something that I wanted to do because always
before I had been having to decide as between what would make money
for the state through oil and gas, and what was right for the state.
And it—it would—and I saw Parks and Wildlife as a chance to really do
something for conservation without any inhibition. And so, I think
the—the two or three things that we did that stand out was we—we
stopped red fishing on a commercial basis in—on the coast. And we—we
decided that the red fish were a sport fish. As a practical matter,
the guys that used to fish for red fish and—and serve them in the
restaurant turned into guys. And they—they had a slight interruption
but they—they did well. And I think that that was one of the
significant things that we did. Then I was always interested in what
we would do toward buying land. All the way through the—my term as
Land Commissioner, I had tried to get the Anderson Ranch into public
hands and I had been very frustrated all the way through. And I
noticed that somebody talked about the fact that Bill Hobby had been
all—my strong ally on this and I noticed that at Bob Bullock’s
funeral, they--they went down to talk about it at—at Schultz’ after
his funeral. And Glen Castleberry said to Dave McNeely, you know,
we—we—Hobby wanted that ranch and Bob Bullock was going to certify it
and he said well, I won’t certify the ranch but I’ll certify eleven
million dollars. Ten million can go to the ranch and then a million
can go to Parks and Wildlife—I mean, to—to DPS. And so they—but—but we
didn’t get it because of the house. We never did—and so for—I—it’s
hard for me to remember. I used to say 19 years but I—I think it
was—it may have been a little less than that. But, in any event, that
ranch hung around. Mr. Anderson was very patient. They tried some
other things that didn’t work but eventually when I was on Parks and
Wildlife, I got to make a motion and Andrew Sansom had—had—had done
the legwork and we bought the Anderson Ranch which ended a—a—a—a lot
of—of—of—of my hard work and—and we just got it. Doc Briscoe thought
that it was just scenery and that we shouldn’t pay that much for it.
But the plain fact was it was scenery and—but we—and it’s one of the
premiere pieces of property in—in—in West Texas. The—the thing that
makes is so great and I—you learn about it every time you go out
there, there—there was a cataclysmic happening some millions of years
ago in the Chinatis and they erupted, formed the Chinatis but the
Chinatis were dry. As that eruption went down toward the Big Bend and
at the Anderson Ranch, it became—there—there was a lot of water
underlying the Anderson Ranch and virtually every place that you go
you can either drill a well which some of the early settlers did and
then they would build a tank and spar out from that tank. And so there
was water all over it because and—and there—consequently there were a
lot of deer and a lot of bird life principally due to the water
there—there. I think two—two wells at the main ranch house that—that
produced four hundred gallons a minute, which is just unbelievable for
that part of the country. Then when you got on down to the Big Bend,
it—it sort of died out again. But it was just this area which occurred
because of the—the events in the Chinatis that—that caused it to—to be
underlain with a lot of water. And so that’s—that’s part of the good
things about it. But it’s, you know, it has an average elevation of
4500 feet and it’s high Chihuahuan desert and it’s just a—a—a
magnificent place. And we—we—we went out there a lot of times. You
know, when Kennard did his study, it was on everybody’s first list of
real places that we ought to buy and so we did it.
DT: Can you talk about any subsequent
discussions about how to develop the ranch and use it?
41:09 - 2021
BA: That—that’s—that’s been after my time
on Parks and Wildlife. We—we actually bought it within a year or so of
the time I left and they—they have—I—I don’t know about all that
they’re doing.
(plane flying over)
41:46 - 2021
BA: But I—I don’t know about what they’re
doing but I—but I’m going out there quite a bit. And I—I li—I li—I’m
going to do it more.
DT: You were appointed by Governor Richards
as Energy Advisor?
42:11 - 2021
BA: Well, after I got out of Parks and
Wildlife, I was looking for something to do and she got elected and so
she asked me to be her kind of advisor on energy and natural resources
and so I went back from—to—I—I—I had an office in—in—in her shop
and—and we did a lot of legislation and then I ran the energy program
which I thought was pretty interesting and then Lena Guerrero. Leonard
was on the Railroad Commission and we did a plan of energy for the
whole state. We—into the future—we—we—the—the plain—the fact is the
Energy Department in Washington only looks at how they can make money.
They—they don’t really look at the overall. But we looked at coal, we
looked at the wind energy. We looked at fusion and gas and oil and we
had two hundred of the best people in the State of Texas that got
together in—in a group and we put together—we—we—we then divided it up
into oil and gas and wind and coal and so forth. But we—we had a
pretty good program for Texas to—to follow throughout the—the years
in—into the future. And I think that they ought to do that with the
Energy Department but I never have been able to get them to do
anything in—in Washington because they—they—they divide coal and—and
gas and you just can’t do it. Natural gas is a—would be a great thing.
It would cost more but they ought to do that. And so they’ve, you
know, we do scrubbing and I—but when the Office of Service (?) that
was under my jurisdiction runs the coal in the United States and you
got to have both of them.
DT: What do you think the future might bring
for energy in the State of Texas?
44:56 - 2021
BA: Well, I—I read that a lot and I
suppose that’s true but—but I would guess that it was that electrical
energy or was that oil and gas or what…it seemed to me that we export
a lot of product from our refineries in Houston and--and they go north
and east or wherever but, you know, we—we get our coal from
Montana—I’m sorry, from Wyoming and a little bit from Montana. But
that was, you know, that—that’s—that was what I learned once I got to
the Big Land Office which is—we had instead of 22 ½ million acres, I
ran 268 million acres. And plus all the federal offshore and we—we,
you know, the—the—the—the
46:05 - 2021
BA: railroads are responsible for the coal
industry. And what happens is they—they—they were all up there and so
as the coal industry grew, they became influential and we—we get the
coal for our plant in—down by Bastrop from—from the—from the plants
in—in—that—that are in Wyoming. It’s—it’s—it’s an interesting fact
that they can dig a scoop of coal and put it on a conveyor belt and
send it up, chop it up and put it on a train and if that is the last
car on the train, that coal is in the ground and an hour and a half
later it’s on its way to Texas or to Montana or to other places. Now
if you can imagine that and—and they—that—that—that’s—that’s the coal
industry. Now and—and fortunately it’s very clean. Unfortunately, on
the other hand, everything that’s mined in the east with the mountain
top removal and things like that, are not clean coal and they have to
have scrubbers when they produce the oil and gas from that, I mean,
produce the fuel from—from those—from those—from—from the
eastern—eastern coal. But we managed with a cooperative agreement with
the states, all of the eastern coal and all of the western coal.
DT: Can you tell us about leasing policies
and the conditions they put on protecting the land compared with those
of the Department of Interior?
48:56 - 2021
BA: Well, you—first of all, you’ve got to
remember that I—I kind of came to the forefront in GLO [General Land
Office] but the Interior was already leasing land and had done it for
many years. We had a lot of problems at the beginning because
everybody got enamored of how much people were going to pay to lease
the land in the federal domain. What we finally decided to do
49:32 - 2021
BA: after much hardships and fights in
Congress and everything else, was not to worry about how much they
paid for the leases. What we did was we decided that how they cared
for the land was what was important and we had, you know, I could
conduct four offshore leases and get twice the money. If—if I
conducted audits on those—on the offshore leases, we—we could get
twice the money that we could get out of all the money that was paid
for public lands because it—it just didn’t make that much difference.
There—there—there were only 19,000 lessees and so—so we decided
that—that the health of the land was important. And so when I started
at the Interior, we had a very—a very signal meeting. We met in Tahoe
and we got all the people together that were the lessors, all of our
people that were state lessees—lessors and then we got the people that
wanted to use the land. We got the environmentalists, we got the
grazers, we got the miners and we—we—we said now, what do y’all expect
us to do and, of course, the plain fact was the west was growing
exponentially and people were bumping into each other. All of a sudden
people that wanted to fish were saying well, why can’t I fish? Why—why
do all these cattle have to be in the right by where I go to fish and
the ranchers would say, well they got to drink. And so there were all
of these things but—but we—we—we crafted a program where every state
would have an advisory committee. We, at the outset, we had not
treated New Mexico where they graze all year any different from
Montana where they graze four months out of the year. And so we
were—so we—we had a Montana advisory committee called a RAC, Resource
Advisory Committee, and—but—but the main thing, instead of just
ranchers on the advisory committee, which was all there was in the
past, we had environmentalists, we had fishermen, we had miners and we
had local people and—and the—the RAC really had—had bridged this gap
between the west growing as opposed to the way it used to be and what
we were going to do with the lands of the west. And so—I—I—I’ll harp
back to the GLO where we leased to Audubon. We—we also got people that
would—would—would take care of—of the land and the—so it—it—I think
we’re on the way to a good program. And—and Mike Dombeck was the
Director, Acting Director of BLM [Bureau of Land Management] during
that time and he carried that off. He has now gone to the Forest
Service where he is really shaking them up frankly because he is—he
is—he is picking the fights that he wants to pick and he is doing the
same thing to the forest service which I think is a great thing. And
so I think you’ll see that—that—that the way the federal government
manages the land is in cooperation with the people on that land is a
far better situation than—than what we had when we—when we started.
DT: How do think it compares to what you were
doing here in Texas?
53:45 - 2021
BA: It—it was probably, you know,
it—they—they’re different. The—the west is—is—is different but, you
know, we—I—I—I look at both of them as progress but in—in different
ways.
DT: Tell us about the controversy about
non-profit groups that are conservation-oriented, submitting bids for
leasing lands.
54:39 - 2021
BA: Well it—it—it’s hard. First of all,
you have to own land, some segment of land in order to lease land. And
I—I—I would think that the—the forest guardians would—would—would have
problems but if they got the land and then leased it, you know,
it—it’s a problem with the—first of all, there are grazing leases
on—on federal lands that are BLM and there—there are grazing leases on
federal lands that are Forest Service. So you’ve got those two
competing—but I haven’t seen that as much of a problem where
they’re—they’re—where they’re leasing because they--they don’t own the
land to get the land to—to lease.
DT: Did you see much coordination between
USDA and Department of Interior?
55:42 - 2021
BA: Well, there—there—there—there’s been
more because mainly the guy that leased all of the forest lands now
used to be the lessee or the lessor for the—the federal lands so
there’s a great deal of coordination but—but there’s still—they’re
still different. But the—the ownership or the—the—the group that—that
ran the Forest Service was controlled by a very small number of house
members that were—and senators that were in committees that—that—that
they gave away the forests and they—and they cut them. And then they
gave the money to the counties. I mean, that was kind of the way it
worked. Now we’ve got some people up there that are looking at—at—at
how things run and they—they look at the forest as something that
is—is an asset that—and—and not—not to be cut entirely. And so,
there—there’s—the BLM land, you know, we—we’re—we used to laugh about
it. If—if you—if you look at BLM land on the map, it’s brown and if
you look at Forest Service land, it’s green. And if you fly over it,
it’s pretty much that way. It’s brown land for the federal ownership
and the green land is forest service.
DT: What do you think the prospects are for a
change to the Mining Act?
57:30 - 2021
BA: Well it’s—it’s an enigma.
It—it—it—it’s—it should—it, first of all, it’s got to be changed. And
yet, for ages we’ve been operating under the, what is it, the 1776
Act. But the—the plain fact is the gold people would probably like to
do what Secretary Babbitt wants to do. They—they—they could, you know,
they—they mine gold for X dollars and they sell it for $286. And
there’s a spread in there when they could—that they could do
something. But, you know, it’s—it’s whether you lease it or sell it
and we think it ought to be leased. We think that the money ought to
go—we—we get no money. We—we think the money ought to go for
reclamation and—and—and prior reclamation of the west is really
screwed up because of some prior practices. And we need to do
something about that. And it—it, you know, I think that we
should—we—we should do it but—but they—they’ve got the Senate and they
locked us and—and the Senate can’t do very much. And with [Senator
Dale] Bumpers gone, I don’t know whether we’re going to get an Act or
not. I’d like to talk a little bit about the Land/Water Conservation
Fund.
59:09 - 2021
BA: We put, when I was there, 28.7 billion
dollars, that’s B as in billion, into the treasury. Those were leases
of uplands and offshore. When those leases are gone, they’re gone.
They—they can’t be replenished. The gas is gone, the oil is gone. I
think that the Land and Water Conservation Fund should be plowed back
into and—and—and I’m—I’m going to diverge from my boss on this, my
former boss. I would like to see them spend that money, at least in
part, if they could, for the-—or maybe park homes or park
improvements. He—he only thinks we should spend it to acquire more
land but it would seem to me that—that—that there—if—if—if it
was—to—to make improvements that lasted more than fifty years, that
you could spend some of that that way. But the—the plain fact is that
Congress looks at it as an offset against the budget and 28 billion is
a big number. I think it’s the biggest number of any source of money
to the treasury that—that we have. But except for the income tax. But
anyhow, I think that—that we ought to spend it for—to—so that the
public gets something back for what they spend and it’s—it—it’s a hard
go with OMB and people like that. Somebody said OMB is the only four
letter word in government but—but that’s the Office of Management and
Budget. But I think that—that—that they—they need to do something and
they—they’re going to try to do something about that. Other than that,
it’s been a good ride. I’ve—I’ve enjoyed managing land and—and it’s
all I’ve known how to do but—and I’ve—I’ve—I’ve been where things are
happening and haven’t—haven’t done everything we should but we’ve done
a lot. And so I’ve recently taken on the recreational aspect of public
lakes and we’re going to make that report to the Congress and so—and
some—sometime down the road I’m going to catch a red fish on a fly rod
and that’ll—that—that’s my next quest.
DT: Can you comment on how things have
changed at the different levels you have served on?
01:04 - 2022
BA: Well, I think that people are
certainly more aware that we have to watch what we do. And this is
true, particularly with the young people. They know. I’ve got a kid
that’s 14. I’ve got—I’ve got a kid that’s 35 but they’re much more
aware of how the—how we treat the land. The—I—I—I made a speech
probably when I was in the first years of the Land Office, when I said
that everything that the legislature has to deal with is occasioned by
growth. If you look at everything, and particularly land use
decisions, where you run the highways is where you run the schools.
That’s education. Where you do your business is occasioned—is
occasioned by where the schools are and—and, of course, here in Texas,
we have a—a great situation because we have more land and—but if you
don’t pay attention to it, you don’t want to put the feed lot on top
of the aquifer. It’s obvious. You don’t—you may not want to put a lot
of stuff on top of the aquifer. And I think we’re gaining on that. I
think the—the—the state is good and—and—and all states are good about
that. But the west is particularly hard put because you have a lack of
water at the time that you have a great influx of population. And so
we—we’ve really got to watch that but—but I—I see the west as—as the
BLM and the Forest Service maybe being the last vistas that we have
and the rest of them are—are going to have houses and those kinds of
problems. But we—we have an awareness now on the part of people that
are public life that—that are—are coming along and I think the
conservationists are pushing them in that direction. And it’s not just
pushing them, it’s just they’re—they’re alert to these kinds of
problems that—that we have. You know we’re—I think Denver, Las Vegas
and El Paso are the three fastest growing cities in the United States
and yet they’re cities that have acute water problems. So we’ll—we’ll
have to deal with this and—but we—I—I guess when I think back, the
trips that we made to Alaska were great because that was one of the
last, you know, big areas where it—it’s just huge and I—I love Alaska
perhaps as—as—as—as—as a lot of places but there are places in Idaho
that I like and there are places in New Mexico. It—it—it—but—I—I
really got to see all of the west. And it was—it—it was a—it was a
great ride.
DT: Is there any one place in particular that
you’ve enjoyed visiting the most?
05:18 - 2022
BA: Well, I like the ranch which is—it’s
only 40 miles from here but it’s in a—it’s in a big hole. For some
reason, all the people around it didn’t want to subdivide and so when
you fly over it, there’s a big hole of darkness that I—that I like
and—and—and, of course, we got the Golden Cheeked Warbler, we’ve got
the Black Capped Vireo and they’re—we’re trying to get the Black
Capped —I’m not sure that we’ve got them but they’re on the adjacent
ranch. One thing I said which I nearly got rode—ridden out on a rail
was that if we could get a place that had both the Golden Cheeked
Warbler and the Black Capped then we could kill two birds with one
stone. But—but they—I—I didn’t—I—I don’t—but—but we will—we’ll get
those places and—and—and—and—and—and that’s another thing that—where
conservation is—is—is going, you know, we—we—we are
06:33 - 2022
BA: actually doing these things. We—we’ve
hit and missed in the land that we bought in Travis County but—but
we—we at least we’ve hit some. And we—we’ve got the Wildlife Refuge
and—and I think this is good. The ranch is the highest point in Travis
County and I love to go up there and sit but I—I’ve hiked in the (?)
Mountains and I’ve done a lot of flying into strips that—that are
in—in—in Idaho and—and—and a lot of them that are in Taos. So, you
know, I—I’ve just—I’ve gotten to see a lot of this country.
DT: Can you give us a bird’s eye view of some
of the places that you like when you’re flying around?
07:32 - 2022
BA: Well, that—that—you know, when you go
to New Mexico, there are so many places. There’s Vermejo(?) Park
which—there’s an acquisition that we’re going to make, I hope which is
called Via Grande or Vica(?) Grande. And that, I think, is the last
big piece of property that I think the—the—the—that we—that should be
in public ownership. And they’re slowly getting it. It’s just about 45
miles west of Albuquerque but—but it’s a major piece and—and the
people that have it want—want to sell it if they can. And I don’t care
whether the Forest Service buys it or we buy it. I think
that—that’s—that’s a—a great—it’s got a 10,000 acre meadow in the
center which is part of a big bowl but I think that it—it’s a premiere
place. And—but I can go a million places in—in Colorado and watch the
Arkansas River go. I can take you to places in California that are
wonderful. The—the lower end of Arizona is magnificent. It’s higher
than you might think it is. And it—and—and all the way
through—it—I—there are just places that I—I could—I don’t think I
could pick a one. But—but I could take you to a lot of places that
would—would be good.
DT: What would your thought be for future
folks who would be interested in conservation?
09:51 - 2022
BA: Well, I think that’s a hard question.
I—I think I’d go back to the first thing my dad told me is if—if you
take care of this piece of land, it’ll take care of you. And so, you
would—I would say that the—it’s a finite resource. You don’t want to
traffic it up in the sense that you want to build on it. I’d like to
see a lot of the land left alone that—where everybody can use it and
that’s been most of what I’ve tried to do is—is to make that happen.
And we’ll—I guess there will be places like Australia that will
develop at some point and—and maybe not develop at some point. But—but
there’s—there’s still a lot of good country left if—if we manage it
properly, if we manage the watersheds and that’s very important. We’ve
got to take care of the watersheds. And, you know, when—when we got
there, I was asked by a senator at my confirmation hearing, what is
all this business about watershed or what do you mean when—when you
say you’re going to take care of the land? Well it—it’s something that
we just have to do and we’ll figure out how to do it and hopefully not
make too many mistakes when we do it. But I—I’m—I’m not much of a
thinker in terms of the future. I’m—I’m—I’m—I think in terms of how do
we handle it right now and—and maybe that’ll take care of the future.
DT: Did reading Rachel Carson have any
influence on your life?
12:06 - 2022
BA: I—I’ve—I read it but I—but it didn’t—I
didn’t—I would rather imagine Aldo Leopold had a little more to do
with—with what I thought.
DT: In what way?
12:18 - 2022
BA: Well just his ethic of—and—and he was,
you know, he—you know he hunted and fished and used the land but he
left it and—but—I’m—I’m for the Dombecks of the world. I’m—I’m for
guys that are doing what they’re doing NOW. I think that and—we’ve all
read everything but I—but it—it’s what you do with it that—that
counts.
End of reel 2022
End of interview with Bob
Armstrong
|