HR-1276-119
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. Ordered to be reported without amendment favorably.
Sponsored by James Comer (R-KY)
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of the Interior to remove all deed restrictions — including easements, exceptions, reservations, terms, conditions, and covenants — from approximately 3.62 acres of land at 2956 Park Avenue in Paducah, Kentucky (the Paducah Memorial Army Reserve Center). The restrictions were placed on the land when the Interior Department conveyed it to the City of Paducah via a quitclaim deed on April 27, 2012. The bill would clear those encumbrances from the title, giving the City of Paducah full, unrestricted use of the parcel.
Who benefits
The City of Paducah, Kentucky, which would gain unrestricted use of the parcel and greater flexibility to develop, sell, or repurpose the land. Local developers or businesses that may seek to use or purchase the land once restrictions are lifted. Paducah residents who could benefit from any new development, services, or tax revenue generated by the unrestricted parcel. Local government officials who would have greater administrative flexibility over the property.
Who is hurt
Parties whose interests were protected by the original deed restrictions — for example, neighboring property owners or community groups who may have relied on the restrictions to limit certain uses of the land. Environmental or conservation interests, if any of the original restrictions were intended to protect natural features of the parcel. Federal taxpayers, to the extent the original restrictions preserved a public interest or federal purpose in the land's use. Any parties who negotiated or depended on the 2012 deed conditions remaining in force.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original deed restrictions have outlived their purpose and are preventing the City of Paducah from making productive use of land it has owned since 2012. They contend that local governments are best positioned to determine how surplus federal land should serve their communities, and that removing outdated encumbrances restores full local control over a relatively small parcel. They may also argue that the restrictions create administrative and legal complications that impede economic development in the area.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the original deed restrictions were deliberately negotiated when the federal government transferred the land in 2012, and that removing them by statute bypasses the legal and administrative process that would normally govern such changes. They contend that the restrictions may have served important public purposes — such as limiting incompatible land uses near a former military installation — and that eliminating them without a full review could harm neighboring residents or undermine the intent of the original transfer agreement.