Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§251g Land acquisition; study and investigation of use of private lands; transmittal to President and Congress; transfer of lands to Secretary of Agriculture; excluded property within Indian reservation; continuation of concession contracts; termination of concession contracts and purchase of possessory interest; Indian hunting and fishing rights

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXVII— - OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK › § 251g

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Secretary may buy, accept, swap for, or get from other federal agencies private land and private aquatic areas inside the park changed by sections 251e–251m. Land the United States gets this way becomes part of Olympic National Park and is run under park rules. The Secretary must remove from the park up to 2,168 acres of private land and public roads in Grays Harbor County near Lake Quinault. Before doing that, the Secretary must study how those private lands are used now and might be used in the future and how removing them would affect the lands and the park. The study must be sent to the President and to Congress within two years of October 21, 1976, and the removal will take effect unless either the House or the Senate votes to disapprove it by a simple majority within 90 legislative days after Congress gets the study. Land removed under sections 251e–251m can be swapped for non-federal land inside the park, or it can be transferred without payment to another federal agency, to the State of Washington, or to a local government if the Secretary thinks that is right. If federal land goes to the Secretary of Agriculture for national forest use, it becomes national forest land and follows those laws. If removed land lies inside an Indian reservation it can be put in trust for the tribe, but any company with a contract to provide public services must be allowed to keep doing so under that contract. The Secretary of the Interior may pay franchise fees from such contracts to the tribe, and if a contract ends the United States must buy the contractor’s possessory interest under the Act of October 9, 1965 (79 Stat. 969). Putting land in trust this way does not give the tribe any hunting or fishing rights it did not already have.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §251g

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, within the boundaries of the park as revised by and pursuant to sections 251e to 251m of this title, the Secretary is authorized to acquire lands, privately owned aquatic lands, and interests therein by donation, purchase with donated or appropriated funds, exchange, or transfer from any Federal agency. Property so acquired shall become part of Olympic National Park and shall be administered by the Secretary subject to the laws and regulations applicable to such park. The Secretary is authorized and directed to exclude from the boundaries of the park such private lands and publicly owned and maintained roads within Grays Harbor County which are near and adjacent to Lake Quinault, and which do not exceed two thousand, one hundred and sixty-eight acres in total. Prior to excluding such lands from the park, the Secretary shall study and investigate current and prospective uses of the private lands, as well as the implications of their exclusion both for the lands involved and for Olympic National Park. The results of such study shall be transmitted to the President and to the Congress within two years of October 21, 1976, and shall take effect unless disapproved by simple majority vote of the House of Representatives or the Senate of the United States of America within ninety legislative days of their submission to the Congress. Property excluded from the boundaries of the park by sections 251e to 251m of this title may be exchanged for non-Federal property within the boundaries; or it may be transferred to the jurisdiction of any Federal agency or to the State of Washington or a political subdivision thereof, without monetary consideration, as the Secretary may deem appropriate. Any such Federal property transferred to the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Agriculture for national forest purposes shall upon such transfer become part of the national forest and subject to the laws and regulations pertaining thereto. Any property excluded from the park by sections 251e to 251m of this title which is within the boundaries of an Indian reservation may be transferred in trust to such Indian tribe, subject, however, to the express condition that any concessioner providing, public services shall be permitted to continue to provide such services in such manner and for such period as set forth in his concession contract, that the Secretary of the Interior is authorized to pay all franchise fees collected from the concessioner under the contract to said Indian Tribe, and that in the event his contract is terminated, the United States shall purchase his possessory interest in accordance with the Act of October 9, 1965 (79 Stat. 969).11 See References in Text note below. The acquisition of lands by the United States in trust for an Indian tribe pursuant to sections 251e to 251m of this title shall not confer any hunting or fishing rights upon such tribe which were not vested in such tribe prior to the acquisition of such lands.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

References in Text

Sections 251e to 251m of this title, the first three times appearing in text, was in the original “this Act” and, where last appearing, was in the original “this title”, meaning Pub. L. 94–578 and title III of Pub. L. 94–578, respectively. The Act of October 9, 1965 (79 Stat. 969), referred to in text, is Pub. L. 89–249, Oct. 9, 1965, 79 Stat. 969, known as the National Park System Concessions Policy Act, which enacted subchapter IV (§ 20 et seq.) of this chapter and amended section 462 of this title, prior to being repealed by Pub. L. 105–391, title IV, § 415(a), Nov. 13, 1998, 112 Stat. 3515.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 251g

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73