Title 16 › Chapter 1— NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter VI— SEQUOIA AND YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARKS › § 45f
Adds Mineral King Valley—about 16,200 acres that used to be the Sequoia National Game Refuge—to Sequoia National Park. The park boundary is shown on a map (Boundary Map, Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park, No. 102–90,000, dated April 1975) that the public can view. The old Game Refuge is ended and the Secretary must take over the land and any remaining refuge funds for park use. The Secretary may make small boundary changes after telling the House Committee on Natural Resources and the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources in writing. The Secretary may buy, accept as a gift, exchange for, or get lands from other federal agencies to manage the area. Property owners may be allowed to keep use or occupancy rights if the Secretary agrees; the owner picks the length of that right when the land is acquired and is paid fair market value minus the value of the retained right (unless the land is donated). The Secretary can end those rights if the use conflicts with park purposes and must pay the value of the unused part. Special rules apply depending on whether land was used commercially in the ten years before November 10, 1978. The Secretary should consider hardship sale offers, may buy whole parcels that cross the park line to avoid extra costs, and may acquire the road into Mineral King with a right-of-way up to an average 200 feet (state land only by donation) while preventing silt damage. The Secretary must report acquisitions and plans to the congressional committees. The area must be run under national park laws. Federal leases or permits in place before November 10, 1978, may continue if compatible and can be renewed in five-year steps for those who held them on that date and their heirs, but the Secretary can end them if needed. Within two years of November 10, 1978, the Secretary, working with California, must write and send a comprehensive management plan to the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs and the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. The plan must include public input, involve other federal and state agencies, and protect wildlife (the State of California must be consulted on wildlife rules except in emergencies). Money may be appropriated as needed to buy lands. Congress notes the area is good for year-round recreation but says building permanent downhill ski facilities would harm its ecological values.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 45f
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60