Title 16 › Chapter 84— HEALTHY FOREST RESTORATION › Subchapter V— HEALTHY FORESTS RESERVE PROGRAM › § 6572
The Secretary of Agriculture, working with the Secretaries of the Interior and Commerce, must describe which forest ecosystems can join the Healthy Forests Reserve Program. Private forest land, or private land being restored to forest, can enroll if doing so will maintain, restore, or measurably increase the chance that a species listed as endangered or threatened under section 1533 will recover, or if it will help species that are candidates for listing, listed by a State, of special concern, or named a species of greatest conservation need in a State wildlife plan. The Secretary must also favor land that boosts biodiversity, protects habitat for those species, or increases carbon storage. Land can only be enrolled with the owner’s consent. Enrollment can be done through a 10-year cost-share agreement, a 30-year easement, a permanent easement (or an easement for the longest term allowed by State law). For Indian tribes, “acreage owned by Indian tribes” can include trust land, land with federally restricted title, land with tribal use or occupancy rights, fee land held by a tribe, and land owned by a native corporation. Tribal land may enroll under a 30-year contract equal in value to a 30-year easement, a 10-year cost-share, a permanent easement, or any combination. The Secretary must prioritize projects that give the greatest conservation benefit to endangered or threatened species first, then to the other listed or at-risk species, and must weigh cost-effectiveness. With an owner’s agreement, easements may be changed or ended for a compelling public need, but fair compensation and steps to avoid or fix harm to the protected forest values are required.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 6572
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60