Title 43 › Chapter CHAPTER 35— - FEDERAL LAND POLICY AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - RIGHTS-OF-WAY › § 1761
Federal officials may give, renew, or sell rights to use public lands (but not designated wilderness) and National Forest lands for things like water systems (reservoirs, canals, pipes), pipelines that are not oil or gas, systems to move or store solids, electric power systems (applicants must also follow Federal Energy Regulatory Commission rules), radio and other communications, roads and other transport ways, and other needed public facilities. Before approving a right-of-way, the official must get plans, contracts, and other information about how the land will be used and any effect on competition. If the applicant is a business, it must disclose who is involved, including partners, affiliates, and any shareholder who owns 3% or more of the voting shares. The Secretary of Agriculture can manage rights-of-way on National Forest lands, including ones granted under earlier laws. For water systems on National Forest land that were built and operating before October 21, 1976, the Secretary of Agriculture must issue a permanent easement without reimbursement if several conditions are met (for example, the state follows the appropriation doctrine, the system is used only for farm irrigation or livestock watering, it is not used only on federal land, it has been kept in use, it has a valid state water right, required location information is provided, and the owner applied by December 31, 1996). These easements transfer with the same terms and no new fees. The holder must tell the Secretary within 60 days of any address or ownership change. Changes made to the system by October 21, 1976, are included; any extension after that date needs a separate approval. An easement may be suspended or ended under the law; it ends if the system is used for something other than irrigation or livestock watering, and not using it for five straight years is a presumption of abandonment. The United States does not claim any water rights or control over water use by this rule. If a right-of-way becomes dangerous and the holder refuses to fix it after consulting the Secretary, the Secretary can make the repairs and charge the holder. A hydro project licensed under part I of the Federal Power Act on land reserved under section 24 that did not get a permit before October 24, 1992, may keep operating without a new permit unless the Commission finds it uses additional public or National Forest lands not covered by the reservation.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1761
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73