HR-3448-118
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 647.
Sponsored by Elise Stefanik (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would expand the National Park Service's American Battlefield Protection Program in three ways. It would allow acquisition grants to be awarded to Indian tribes and nonprofit organizations, and would extend those grants to cover Revolutionary War and War of 1812 battlefield sites. It would also broaden the restoration grant program to include battlefield land owned by states, tribes, local governments, and nonprofits, and would require the program to report to Congress on preservation activities and battlefield conditions every 10 years, with the first report due within 2 years of enactment.
Who benefits
Indian tribes and nonprofit organizations that were previously ineligible for battlefield acquisition grants would gain access to new federal funding. State, local, and tribal governments that own battlefield land would become eligible for restoration grants. Historians, archaeologists, and preservation professionals would see expanded employment and research opportunities. Tourists, educators, and students who visit or study Revolutionary War and War of 1812 sites would benefit from better-preserved battlefields. Local economies near battlefield sites may benefit from increased heritage tourism.
Who is hurt
Private landowners near designated battlefield areas could face increased pressure to sell or restrict use of their land, though the bill does not compel sales. Federal taxpayers would bear the cost of expanded grant programs and new reporting requirements, though the bill does not specify funding amounts. Existing grant applicants — such as local governments that previously competed for a smaller pool of funds — could face more competition if the eligible applicant pool grows without a corresponding increase in total funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original program left out two of America's most historically significant conflicts — the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812 — creating an arbitrary gap in federal preservation efforts. They contend that expanding eligibility to tribes and nonprofits recognizes that many critical battlefield sites are held by non-governmental entities that lack the resources to preserve them without federal partnership. Supporters also argue that the mandatory reporting requirement adds meaningful accountability, ensuring Congress receives regular, structured information on whether preservation goals are being met. They note that battlefield preservation generates measurable economic returns through heritage tourism and protects irreplaceable cultural resources that, once lost to development, cannot be recovered.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding the grant program's eligibility without specifying new appropriations could dilute funding for battlefields already in the program, potentially leaving previously covered sites worse off. They contend that adding Revolutionary War and War of 1812 sites significantly increases the federal government's preservation footprint and financial exposure without a clear cost estimate or funding mechanism. Opponents may also argue that battlefield preservation is primarily a state and local responsibility, and that broadening federal grants to nonprofits and tribes shifts decision-making authority away from elected governments toward private organizations. They further suggest that the 10-year reporting cycle is too infrequent to provide meaningful congressional oversight of how grant funds are being used.