Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - NATIONAL INDIAN FOREST RESOURCES MANAGEMENT › § 3115a
Allows Indian tribes to ask federal land managers to make agreements so the tribe can protect or restore tribal forest or rangeland and nearby federal land. Federal land means National Forests or public lands run by the Bureau of Land Management. Indian forest land or rangeland means trust land or land the United States holds for a tribe or tribal member that has or can have forest or similar vegetation. "Indian tribe" and "Secretary" are defined to mean the tribe and the Agriculture or Interior Secretary, depending on which agency manages the land. Within 120 days after a tribe asks, the Secretary may start any needed environmental review or signal intent to work with the tribe, and after the review may make a contract or agreement. Projects must involve federal land next to tribal land and meet rules like showing a threat from fire or disease, a need for restoration, that no other contract already covers the work, and that the land issue is special to that tribe (for example treaty or cultural reasons). If a request is denied, the Secretary must explain why, suggest ways to fix problems, and offer a schedule to consult. The Secretary may pick the best-value proposal and must consider tribal factors like trust status, cultural ties, treaty rights, traditional knowledge, landscape features, agency relationships, and tribal access. A report to Congress about requests and agreements was required within 4 years after July 22, 2004.
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Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 3115a
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73