Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - REDWOOD NATIONAL PARK › § 79c
The Secretary may get land and land rights inside Redwood National Park and up to 10 acres just outside the park for offices or other admin sites. The land can come by gift, purchase, swap, or other means, but land owned by the State of California can only be accepted as a donation and only with any old title conditions that come with it. The Secretary can spend federal money to manage and improve land the State donates if those title conditions allow it. On October 2, 1968 and on March 27, 1978, certain lands shown on official maps (and some downed trees cut before January 1, 1975 or after January 31, 1978) became United States property, except state-owned lands and a few limited exceptions. The Secretary must let existing operations wind down and allow removal of equipment and removable timber under rules that protect park resources, streambeds, and local timber needs. Owners whose property is taken will receive fair payment either from the Land and Water Conservation Fund (with 6% interest from the date of taking), by exchanging federal property, or a combination; claims go to the federal district court where the land is. Small ownerships (50 acres or less) count only if they are mainly nonresidential or nonfarm and only after the owner was notified within 60 days after October 2, 1968. The Secretary may buy whole parcels that cross the park boundary to avoid extra damage payments, then swap or sell the outside parts under federal property rules. The Secretary can also buy land along a stretch of highway near Prairie Creek to restore a tree screen, and can buy rights or make contracts with landowners around the park and upstream to protect timber, soil, and streams. For those protection deals, fee ownership is allowed only if lesser rights would cost much more; the Secretary must tell the Senate and House leaders before using money for anything other than gifts. Funds were made available starting March 27, 1978 for acquisitions and may be appropriated starting October 1, 1978 for contracts. The Secretary must try to keep senior employees, help local employment, study erosion and sediment sources in the Redwood Creek basin, manage nearby federal lands to reduce sedimentation, and may allow designated federal representatives access for research and rehabilitation work.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 79c
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73