Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER LXIII— - NATIONAL SEASHORE RECREATIONAL AREAS › § 459e–1
The Secretary may buy, get by gift, trade for, or otherwise get land, water, buildings, and other property inside the seashore boundaries as money and gifts become available. The State of New York, Suffolk County, or any local government must agree before the Secretary can take their property. Federal property there can be moved to the Secretary’s control if the agency in charge agrees. The Secretary can sign contracts that promise future spending, but the United States only has to pay if Congress actually provides the money. When enough land is owned by the United States to run a unit, the Secretary will announce the Fire Island National Seashore in the Federal Register. The Secretary will not pay more than the fair market value he sets. He may swap federal land for private land of about equal value and use cash to balance any difference. The Secretary generally cannot force the sale of privately owned improved property inside the seashore or in the listed communities if the local zoning rules are valid, unless the owner agrees. One exception allows taking property by condemnation in an about eight-mile area from the east edge of Brookhaven town park at Davis Park to the west edge of Smith Point County Park. Individual owners who held the property on July 1, 1963, may choose one of three options if condemned: sell outright for fair market value, keep a life estate (price lowered by the life interest value), or keep a 25-year estate (price lowered by that value). “Improved property” means a building begun before July 1, 1963, plus up to 2 acres for a house or up to 10 acres for business uses. The Secretary will not condemn undeveloped land in the Dune District shown on map OGP–0004 (May 1978) while owners keep it natural, and land he acquires there must stay natural. Property taken by condemnation may be sold to the highest bidder, not for less than fair market value, and must be sold with use limits that meet the rules in section 459e–2(a) and any applicable zoning. Money from those sales can be kept and used by the Secretary, without further Congressional approval, only to buy more land under sections 459e to 459e–9. If condemnation starts, the Secretary, through the Attorney General, may ask the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York for an order to stop uses or building that break the rules in section 459e–2(a) or would make Dune District land no longer natural; any such order ends as provided in section 459e–2(g).
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 459e–1
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73