Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 103— - EXPANDING PUBLIC LANDS OUTDOOR RECREATION EXPERIENCES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - SIMPLIFYING OUTDOOR ACCESS FOR RECREATION › Part Part A— - Modernizing Recreation Permitting › § 8541
Require the Secretaries to review and improve how special recreation permits are issued. From January 1, 2021, to January 1, 2025, they must study the permit process and find ways to remove duplicate steps, lower costs, speed up processing, and create simpler permits, including permits for organized group activities. Within 1 year after they finish that work, they must update any agency rules and guidance, including those for environmental reviews, to put the improvements in place. Each Secretary must use available tools (like tiering to program reviews) to make environmental review more efficient. By 2 years after January 4, 2025, each Secretary must check whether existing categorical exclusions fit this law, decide if changes or new exclusions are needed under NEPA, and update rules and guidance. Except where another law (section 1133(c) or (d)) requires it, the Secretary must not make a needs assessment a condition for issuing a special recreation permit under section 6802(h). Within 3 years after January 4, 2025, the permit application (and reissuance) must be available online, by mail or email, and in person at the local field office. Definitions: “special recreation permit for an organized group recreation activity or event” — a type of permit for certain organized group activities; “youth group” — a provider mainly serving people age 25 or younger. If visitor-use days are allocated among providers, organized group permits are not counted against that allocation. If public use is open and space exists, a provider (including a youth group) can ask to hold an organized group activity. The Secretary must decide whether the activity would have more than minimal effects. If effects are only minimal and no extra conditions are needed, a permit is not required. For the covered activity types, the Secretary may or will issue a permit with appropriate terms when needed to protect resources or avoid conflicts. The Secretary may waive fees, can limit or stop activities for resource, administrative, or safety reasons, and any issued permit must meet required health and safety standards.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 8541
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73