- Federal agenciesFacilitates return of specific federal parcels to a federally recognized tribe, supporting tribal cultural preservation…
- Local governmentsConsolidates ownership in ways that supporters may argue enable improved, locally informed land stewardship and cultura…
- Federal agenciesClarifies land status and management by adding acquired parcels to the San Bernardino National Forest and by reserving…
Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation Land Exchange Act
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S6578: 2)
This bill authorizes a land exchange between the Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation (the Nation) and the United States Forest Service in San Bernardino County, California.
If the Nation offers to convey roughly 1,460 acres of Nation-owned parcels to the United States, the Secretary of Agriculture must, within 120 days of receiving the offer, accept the offer and convey to the Nation roughly 1,475 acres of National Forest System land depicted on official maps, reserving an easement for Forest Service access on specified roads.
The precise acreage and legal descriptions are to be determined by surveys (the Nation pays for the survey of its lands), with limited authority for mutual minor boundary adjustments and map control in case of conflicts.
On content alone this is a routine, narrowly tailored land exchange with preservation and access safeguards and minimal fiscal impact, which historically have a favorable path in Congress or are bundled into larger public lands packages. The explicit FLPMA exemption and any local stakeholder concerns about future land uses are the main points that could prompt additional review or amendments.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a narrowly scoped, well-specified statutory vehicle to effect a particular land exchange, with clear parties, parcels, timelines, and basic conditions.
Procedural safeguards and transparency: centrists and conservatives worry about appraisal and public-review protections that may be reduced by the FLPMA exemption; liberals emphasize securing enforceable protections in the preservation agreement.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Local governmentsTransfers of federal land into tribal ownership could reduce public access or change law enforcement and permitting reg…
- Targeted stakeholdersExemption from FLPMA section 206 may bypass standard appraisal or valuation procedures or compensation mechanisms that…
- Local governmentsConveyance of federal land to the Nation (and receipt of Nation land by the United States) may change local tax and reg…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Procedural safeguards and transparency: centrists and conservatives worry about appraisal and public-review protections that may be reduced by the FLPMA exemption; liberals emphasize securing enforceable protections in…
A mainstream progressive would generally view this bill favorably as a negotiated transfer that can restore ancestral lands to a federally recognized tribe while also keeping other lands in federal conservation management.
The preservation condition for the Arrowhead landmark and the reservation of Forest Service easements are likely seen as positive protections.
They would want to ensure the agreement includes enforceable cultural- and environment-protective terms and robust tribal consultation with local stakeholders.
A pragmatic moderate would see this as a routine, targeted land exchange intended to consolidate management of particular parcels and to address tribal interests.
They would appreciate the clear maps, the reservation of easements for Forest Service roads, and the conservation outcome of adding land to the national forest, but would be attentive to process, valuation, and timing (120-day acceptance window).
Their support would depend on assurance that valuations are fair, environmental reviews adequate, and local stakeholders informed.
A mainstream conservative would approach this bill with caution, concerned about transferring federal land into tribal ownership and about bypassing standard statutory procedures.
The explicit exemption from FLPMA section 206 will likely be a focal point of concern because it appears to remove a normally applicable exchange framework and possibly limits appraisal or public-review requirements.
They may welcome that the Forest Service retains easements for roads, but could worry about precedents of reducing federal land holdings and impacts on public access, resource management, or liability.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
On content alone this is a routine, narrowly tailored land exchange with preservation and access safeguards and minimal fiscal impact, which historically have a favorable path in Congress or are bundled into larger public lands packages. The explicit FLPMA exemption and any local stakeholder concerns about future land uses are the main points that could prompt additional review or amendments.
- No cost estimate or agency report is included in the text; administrative or opportunity costs to the Forest Service are not quantified.
- Local stakeholder reactions (county, recreational users, environmental groups, or neighboring landowners) could create opposition or requests for modification that are not visible in the bill text.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Procedural safeguards and transparency: centrists and conservatives worry about appraisal and public-review protections that may be reduced…
On content alone this is a routine, narrowly tailored land exchange with preservation and access safeguards and minimal fiscal impact, whic…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a narrowly scoped, well-specified statutory vehicle to effect a particular land exchange, with clear parties, parcels, timelines, and basic conditions.
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.