Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 84— - HEALTHY FOREST RESTORATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - HEALTHY FORESTS RESERVE PROGRAM › § 6572
The Secretary of Agriculture, working with the Secretaries of the Interior and Commerce, must decide which forest types can join the Healthy Forests Reserve Program. To join, land must be private forest or private land being turned back into forest, and enrolling it must clearly either raise the chance that an endangered or threatened species listed under section 1533 will recover, or help species that are not listed but are candidates, State-listed, special-concern species, or species of greatest conservation need under a State wildlife action plan. The Secretary will give extra weight to land that increases biodiversity, protects habitat for those species, or stores more carbon. Land may only be enrolled with the owner’s consent. Enrollment can be by a 10-year cost-share agreement, a 30-year easement, a permanent easement, or an easement for the maximum length allowed by State law. For Indian tribes, “acreage owned by Indian tribes” covers trust land, title-held-with-Federal-restrictions land, land with tribal use rights, fee land held by a tribe, land owned by a native corporation, or combinations. Tribal land may be enrolled by a 30-year contract (valued like a 30-year easement), a 10-year cost-share, a permanent easement, or a mix of those. The Secretary must give top priority to lands that provide the biggest benefit to endangered or threatened species, and second priority to the other listed categories, while also considering cost-effectiveness to get the most environmental benefit per dollar. The Secretary may change or end an easement or other land interest only if the owner agrees and there is a compelling public need that serves the public interest. If an easement is ended, the Secretary must provide compensation. If an easement is changed, the owner must help pay modification costs, and the Secretary must make sure the change will not hurt the forest values the agreement protects; any harms must be fixed by restoring other land at no extra cost to the federal government, and the change must result in equal or greater environmental and economic value to the United States.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 6572
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73