Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 51— - ALASKA NATIONAL INTEREST LANDS CONSERVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS › § 3215
Approves many Alaska public-land entry applications filed under the laws of June 1, 1938; May 3, 1927; May 14, 1898; and March 3, 1891 if they were filed on time and the land was available. Those applications become approved on the 180th day after the law’s effective date unless the land description must be changed or one of several exceptions applies. Automatic approval does not apply when the land is inside a National Park, National Wildlife Refuge, or certain Wilderness units, or when the land was patented, selected, or reserved for the State of Alaska or for Alaska Native selection under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act; in those cases the application is handled under the other applicable laws. An applicant may fix a wrong land description, but the Department of the Interior must tell the State and other interested parties and give them time to protest. Protests can also be filed by a Native corporation, the State of Alaska, or any person claiming improvements, if filed by the 180th day after the effective date (or within 60 days after corrected-notice is mailed, if later). Entries on land withdrawn or classified for power projects are treated as open for these older laws unless the land is part of a licensed Federal Power Act project or actually used for power work; rights of reentry by the United States may apply and expire 20 years after the effective date if no license or use exists. Before issuing a patent, the Secretary must sort out and decide any other recorded claims to the same land (with some statutory exceptions).
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3215
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73