I've said it before and will say it again. Government is government. Whether it's federal government, state government, or local government; all good citizens should keep a leery eye on it. As a public land user group, our recreation isn't 100% safe from any of them. None of them are our eternal BFFs.
Personally, as an individual, I feel like I have more sway with my state lawmakers than I do with my federal lawmakers. I can call my state senator or my state representative on the phone and he/she will answer personally and discuss my concern at length. The federal lawmakers: not so much. On the other hand the federal government has one huge thing going for them, with so much red tape and bureaucracy, things happen very slowly: which is an advantage to the citizens in public lands issues - IMO.
To the subject of a managing agency, I keep hearing the State Parks/ SITLA arguments and I'm not sure they completely hold water.
The State Parks have very specific recreational purposes and they collect recreational fees to support them: their structure and purpose is completely different from public lands in general (personally, I think the State Parks problems have to do simply with relying too much on flooded sagebrush fields to generate revenue). It would be like comparing the current management of National Park Service properties to the current BLM properties. I'm not sure there is enough similar about the funding sources, use, and types of lands to even put together a coherent analysis.
As for SITLA, it again has a very specific mandate attributed to a very specific set of land parcels. To suggest that most public land under a state ownership would become subject to the same purposes and procedures as current SITLA land is a bit of a stretch in my view. A Utah Homesteading Act, designed to attract more taxpayers, seems just as unrealistically likely to me.
Within the State Of Utah's Department of Natural Resources is an already existing "Division of Forestry, Fire & State Lands." I think if any currently existing State organization should be looked at as a forecast for how that state might manage some future state public lands program, this division would be the one to look at, not State Parks nor SITLA. Personally, I know nothing of it's history and management practices to make a case for or against it.
Either way, it would take as much work and scrutiny to keep the State legislators in check and would require as much cooperation with a State public land agency as is required now with Congress and the US Department of Interior.
Anybody that feels there is a realistic chance that the public lands WILL eventually get turned over to the state, should start developing those relationships with their State legislators and with various divisions within the Utah DNR now. Sounds like a lot of you don't think it's realistic though. I believe SUWA is betting against it as well. I imagine their current media push is the same as it's always been. Simply feigned and exaggerated shock. Designed to attract the attention of potential supporters of ARRWA in the US Congress. And to create a false sense of urgency for the ARRWA, before a long, drawn out march toward the Supreme Court turns HB 148 into old, unexciting news (either that or a sense of urgency for a use of the Antiquities Act). It simply wouldn't make sense to spend lots of advertising dollars now, to create hype against something that has several years of litigation before it would become a viable issue. It would be better to save those dollars for some future election year just prior to implementation of the theoretic new Utah public land agency. Speaking of ARRWA, isn't it about that time of year?
As an aside, to an earlier comment, my understanding is that congressionally designated Wilderness Areas and National Park Service properties are not being sought by the State in it's suit.