HR-1927-115
Became Public Law No: 115-104.
What it does
This law directs the Department of the Interior to create a U.S. Civil Rights Network within the National Park Service (NPS). The network would connect NPS units, eligible historic properties (with owner consent), and educational or research facilities tied to the African American civil rights movement from 1939 to 1968. Interior would produce educational materials, provide technical assistance, and adopt an official network symbol. The network would automatically expire seven years after enactment.
Who benefits
Students and educators who gain access to new federally produced educational materials about the civil rights movement. Visitors and researchers who benefit from a coordinated network of civil rights sites. State, local, and private property owners of historic civil rights sites who receive federal technical assistance and recognition. Tourism-dependent local economies near designated civil rights sites. Historians and academic institutions engaged in civil rights research.
Who is hurt
Private property owners who may face indirect pressure to participate in the network, even though participation requires their consent. Taxpayers who fund the administrative costs of establishing and operating the network. Competing NPS priorities and programs that may receive fewer resources if agency staff and budgets are redirected toward network activities. Organizations or communities whose civil rights history falls outside the 1939–1968 window and are therefore excluded from the network.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the African American civil rights movement is one of the most consequential chapters in American history, and that a coordinated federal network ensures these sites and stories are preserved, connected, and accessible to all Americans. They contend that scattered, underfunded local sites risk losing their historical integrity without federal coordination and educational support. By requiring property owner consent and setting a seven-year sunset, the law respects private property rights and limits open-ended federal commitment. Supporters also argue that producing standardized educational materials helps ensure historically accurate information reaches students and the public nationwide.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new federal network, even a time-limited one, adds bureaucratic layers to the NPS without a clear funding mechanism, potentially diverting resources from existing park units and programs. They contend that state and local governments, along with private historical organizations, are better positioned to manage and interpret regional civil rights history without federal coordination. Some argue that the seven-year sunset is insufficient to prevent the network from becoming a permanent federal program through future reauthorization. Others raise concerns that the federal government's role in selecting and certifying historic sites could introduce political considerations into what should be a locally driven preservation process.