Title 43 › Chapter 33— ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT › § 1621
No contract that charges a percentage of the value of the land or money given under this chapter can be enforced against Alaska Natives, Regional Corporations, or Village Corporations. Lands and revenues given by the chapter cannot be taken by lien, judgment, or other legal action to pay such a contract. The Secretary must quickly issue patents to people who lawfully entered public lands for homesteads, headquarters, trade/manufacturing sites, or small tracts and who met all legal requirements. People who entered before August 31, 1971 keep their right to use and occupy the land until they meet the patent rules, unless they entered in violation of Public Land Order 4582 or failed to keep up occupancy. Valid mining claims made and recorded before August 31, 1971 are protected for five years so the claimant can meet mining-law requirements and seek a patent. If an unpatented claim outside a conservation system unit but inside lands selected by a Village or Regional Corporation lapses after August 31, 1971 for failure to meet mining rules, the non-conservation part can be treated as part of the corporation’s selection and may be conveyed, unless that would give more acreage than the law allows. The Secretary must promptly sort out claims in conservation units. Effective November 2, 1995, the Bureau of Land Management will turn over administration of mining claims entirely within lands conveyed to a Regional Corporation to that corporation; claimants must meet the general mining laws and section 1744, file with the Regional Corporation as needed, and any contests go to U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska without naming the United States. Revenues from such claims after November 2, 1995 go to the Regional Corporation under section 1606(i) rules, except proportionally if a claim is only partly within conveyed land; Haida Corporation is treated like a Regional Corporation but its revenues are not subject to section 1606(i). The Secretary, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Agriculture, and the State of Alaska may exchange lands or interests, including Native selection rights, with Native and other corporations, the State, or federal agencies to consolidate or manage land. Exchanges are normally for equal value, but cash can be used to balance values and the Secretary may approve unequal exchanges if it is in the public interest. If a Village Corporation selects land inside the National Wildlife Refuge System, the Secretary must replace those acres by adding other public lands in the State to the Refuge System, and any patent for land inside a refuge must keep refuge laws in effect and give the United States a right of first refusal if the Village ever sells the land. Most withdrawals made under the chapter end within four years of December 18, 1971 (some end in three years), but lands selected by corporations stay withdrawn until conveyed and the Secretary can end withdrawals when no longer needed. Withdrawn lands remain under federal administration until conveyed, and the Secretary may issue interim conveyances when lands are not yet surveyed; interim conveyances give the same rights as patents until a survey and patent are completed. If a Village Corporation does not receive its full land entitlement, the Secretary may withdraw twice the needed amount and give the Village 90 days to pick what it wants, or the parties can agree to segregate land instead. Patents within national forests must limit timber export for five years and require sustained-yield management and environmental protections at least as strict as nearby forest lands for twelve years. No Village or Regional Corporation may select land within two miles of any home rule or first class city boundary as it stood on December 18, 1971 (except boroughs), or within six miles of the Ketchikan boundary. An Alaska Native Regional Corporation or affiliate holding a personal communications service FCC license at enactment that has paid or complied with payment schedules may transfer that license without penalty; any amounts due to the United States for the initial grant become due when the transfer is completed, and the FCC must approve or deny an application within 90 days or it is deemed granted.
Full Legal Text
Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1621
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60