Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - GENERAL ASSISTANCE ADMINISTRATION › Chapter CHAPTER 69— - PAYMENT FOR ENTITLEMENT LAND › § 6903
Sets how much money a local government gets for federal land inside its borders. The payment is the larger of two per‑acre amounts for each acre of entitlement land in the unit. One option is $0.93 per acre in fiscal year 1995, $1.11 in 1996, $1.29 in 1997, $1.47 in 1998, and $1.65 in 1999 and after. That amount is reduced (but not below zero) by what the unit received the year before under a payment law, and it cannot exceed a population‑based cap. The other option is $0.12 per acre in 1995, $0.15 in 1996, $0.17 in 1997, $0.20 in 1998, and $0.22 in 1999 and after; it is also subject to the same cap. "Payment law" means ten specific older federal laws listed in the statute. Population is counted the same way the Secretary of Commerce counts residents. No unit can be credited with more than 50,000 people. Units with under 5,000 people use the highest dollar figure from the cap table. Units with 5,000 or more round their population to the nearest thousand and use a table of dollar figures that starts at $110.00 for 5,000 and declines to $44.00 for 50,000 to set the cap. The State’s chief executive must report to the Interior Secretary how much the State passes to each local unit from payments it got under a payment law. Each October 1 after the Payment in Lieu of Taxes Act became law, the Interior Secretary must adjust the dollar amounts above using the Consumer Price Index for the 12 months ending the previous June 30.
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Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 6903
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73