HR-2987-115
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 862.
What it does
This bill would replace the existing Public Lands Corps program with a new, broader program called the 21st Century Conservation Service Corps (21CSC). It would place youth and veterans in paid civilian service positions to maintain, restore, and improve public lands, waterways, infrastructure, and cultural and historical resources across the United States. Participating members would receive wages, stipends, living allowances, and/or educational credits, along with job skills training and credentials.
Who benefits
Young people (youth) seeking paid work experience, job training, and educational credits; veterans seeking civilian employment pathways and skills development; tribal communities through a dedicated Indian Youth 21CSC track on tribal lands; outdoor recreationists and the general public through improved access to and maintenance of public lands; nonprofit and tribal organizations that steward land and water resources; and communities near public lands that may see economic activity from outdoor recreation.
Who is hurt
Private contractors and landscaping or construction firms that currently compete for public lands maintenance work, who may lose contracts to lower-cost corps labor; federal agencies that may face administrative burdens coordinating across the 14 participating departments and agencies; taxpayers who would fund wages, stipends, educational awards, and program administration; and potentially current federal employees in land management roles if corps members displace some of that work.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 21CSC would address a well-documented, multi-billion-dollar maintenance backlog on public lands while simultaneously providing meaningful employment, job training, and educational opportunities to two underserved groups — youth and veterans. By coordinating across 14 federal agencies, the program would reduce duplication and stretch federal dollars further than siloed agency efforts. Supporters also contend that placing corps members in tribal communities through the Indian Youth 21CSC track would deliver economic and conservation benefits to historically underserved populations. The model builds on decades of demonstrated success by programs like AmeriCorps and the original Public Lands Corps, which have shown that service corps can deliver cost-effective conservation work while building a skilled workforce for the outdoor economy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding a federal service corps across 14 agencies would create a sprawling, difficult-to-manage bureaucracy prone to duplication, waste, and mission overlap — the very problems the bill claims to solve. They contend that corps member wages and benefits, combined with multi-agency administrative overhead, may make the program more expensive per project than simply contracting with private firms, which already employ skilled workers in these trades. Critics also raise concerns that the bill's broad eligibility for projects on private land with a "public benefit" could blur the line between public service and subsidized private labor. Finally, opponents may argue that educational award incentives and noncompetitive federal hiring preferences for corps members give participants advantages over other job seekers who did not participate in a federally funded program.