Title 16 › Chapter 1— NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter XXVII— OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK › § 251g
The Secretary may buy, accept as gifts, trade for, or get from other federal agencies land and water areas inside the park area changed under sections 251e–251m. Land gained this way becomes part of Olympic National Park and is managed under the park’s rules. The Secretary must remove from the park up to 2,168 acres of private land and public roads in Grays Harbor County near Lake Quinault. Before doing that, the Secretary must study how the private lands are used now and might be used in the future, and send the study to the President and to Congress within two years of October 21, 1976. The removal will happen unless a simple majority of either the House or the Senate rejects it within 90 legislative days after Congress receives the study. Land removed can be traded for non‑federal land inside the park, or given without payment to another federal agency, to Washington State, or to a local government if the Secretary thinks it is right. If land is given to the Secretary of Agriculture for national forest use, it becomes part of the national forest and follows those laws. Land inside an Indian reservation can be transferred to a tribe to hold in trust, but any business that has a concession contract must be allowed to keep providing services as the contract says; the Secretary of the Interior can give franchise fees from that business to the tribe; and if the contract ends, the United States must buy the business’s possessory interest under the Act of October 9, 1965 (79 Stat. 969). Putting land in trust for a tribe does not give the tribe any new hunting or fishing rights beyond what it already had.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 251g
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60