Sec. 23-21. Purchase and sale of land by commissioner.
Sec. 23-21. Purchase and sale of land by commissioner. The Commissioner of
Environmental Protection may buy land in the state suitable for the growth of timber,
at a price not exceeding ten dollars per acre, unless a higher price is authorized by the
Governor. Such land shall be deeded to the state and shall be called a state forest. The
commissioner may accept deeds and devises of such lands which may be offered to the
state without cost. He may, with the approval of the Governor, sell or exchange any
land acquired for state forests or any easement or interest therein, and may, in the name
of the state, execute deeds for such purposes, provided no land shall be sold or exchanged
by said commissioner pursuant to this section unless land of at least equal fair market
value and reasonably equivalent usefulness has been substituted for such land. No provision of this section shall be construed to set aside any terms or conditions under which
gifts or bequests of land have been accepted for state forests.
(1949 Rev., S. 3447; 1971, P.A. 872, S. 184; P.A. 79-603.)
History: 1971 act replaced references to state forester with references to commissioner of environmental protection
and deleted obsolete provision requiring consent of state park and forest commission for purchase of land; P.A. 79-603
prohibited sale or exchange of land unless land of equal fair market value and equivalent usefulness is substituted for it.