HR-2215-119
Became Public Law No: 119-25.
Sponsored by Seth Moulton (D-MA)
What it does
This law renames the Salem Maritime National Historic Site in Salem, Massachusetts as the Salem Maritime National Historical Park. It also directs the Department of the Interior to conduct and report on a boundary study evaluating whether nearby sites and resources related to maritime history, coastal defenses, and military history should be added to the National Park System as part of the newly renamed park.
Who benefits
Visitors and tourists to the Salem, Massachusetts area who may gain access to a broader set of historically significant sites. Local businesses — hotels, restaurants, shops — that could benefit from increased tourism if the park expands. Salem residents and local historians who have an interest in preserving and elevating the area's maritime and military heritage. The National Park Service, which gains a potential pathway to expand its footprint in the region. Educators and students who use national parks as learning resources.
Who is hurt
Private landowners within or near the study area who may face uncertainty about potential future federal acquisition or land-use restrictions if the boundary is eventually expanded. Local and state governments that could see reduced property tax revenue if land is transferred to federal ownership. Taxpayers who bear the cost of conducting the boundary study and any future park expansion. Competing historical preservation organizations or sites in the region that may lose visitors or funding attention to a federally designated park.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Salem's maritime history — including its role in early American trade, coastal defense, and military heritage — is of national significance and deserves the fuller recognition and resources that come with "National Historical Park" status. They contend that the boundary study is a prudent, low-cost first step that gathers facts before any expansion decision is made, ensuring that any future changes are evidence-based and deliberate rather than rushed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the redesignation and boundary study, while modest in scope, set the stage for a potential federal land expansion that could burden taxpayers with acquisition and maintenance costs and create uncertainty for private property owners in the study area. They contend that local and state governments are better positioned than the federal government to manage regional historical resources, and that the redesignation adds administrative overhead without a demonstrated need.