HR-410-119
Became Public Law No: 119-63.
Sponsored by Nicholas Begich (R-AK)
What it does
This law extends by five years — from December 29, 2025, to December 29, 2030 — the application deadline for the Alaska Native Vietnam Era Veterans Land Allotment Program. The program allows Alaska Native veterans who served in the Armed Forces in Vietnam between August 5, 1964, and December 31, 1971, or their heirs, to apply for up to 160 acres of federal land in Alaska. No new eligibility categories are created; only the application window is extended.
Who benefits
Eligible Alaska Native veterans who served during the Vietnam era and have not yet applied for a land allotment. Heirs of deceased eligible veterans who may still file on their behalf. Alaska Native communities broadly, as land allotments can support subsistence, cultural, and economic uses. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which gains additional time to process existing and new applications. Legal and advocacy organizations that assist Alaska Native veterans with federal land claims.
Who is hurt
Federal land managers and BLM staff who must continue administering the program for an additional five years, extending administrative workload and costs. Other potential users or claimants of the federal land parcels that may be allotted, including adjacent landowners, resource developers, and state or local governments with competing land-use interests. Taxpayers bear the administrative costs of the extended program, though these are expected to be modest.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Alaska Native Vietnam era veterans were uniquely denied land allotment opportunities available to earlier generations due to a federal land freeze imposed by the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971, and that many eligible veterans or their heirs have not yet been able to navigate the complex application process. They contend that a five-year extension is a modest and targeted remedy for a documented administrative backlog, honoring a commitment to a small, historically underserved group of veterans who served the country under difficult circumstances.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the program has already been in place for years and that repeated deadline extensions may signal structural problems with the program's design rather than a simple need for more time. They contend that continuing to hold federal land parcels in limbo for an extended period creates uncertainty for other land users, resource planners, and state and local governments in Alaska, and that Congress should instead address the underlying administrative barriers directly rather than deferring resolution through another extension.