HR-4219-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Ed Case (D-HI)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of the Interior, through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to establish the National Wildlife Refuge System Invasive Species Strike Team Program. It would require at least one trained strike team in each Fish and Wildlife Service region to detect, monitor, and rapidly respond to invasive species on and adjacent to National Wildlife Refuge lands and waters. The bill would authorize $15 million per year for fiscal years 2026 through 2030 (totaling $75 million) and require progress reports to Congress at two and five years after enactment.
Who benefits
Wildlife refuge visitors and outdoor recreationists who benefit from healthier ecosystems. Native plant and animal species protected from invasive competitors. Farmers and landowners adjacent to refuges whose land may be buffered from invasive species spread. State and tribal wildlife agencies that would gain access to federal expertise and resources. Nonprofit conservation organizations eligible for grants and cooperative agreements. Ecotourism businesses dependent on healthy refuge ecosystems. Hunters and anglers who rely on native species populations.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the $75 million authorization. Competing federal programs that may face indirect budget pressure. Landowners adjacent to refuges who could face increased federal coordination activity on or near their property, even if voluntary. Suppliers of invasive species used in commercial contexts (e.g., certain aquaculture or horticultural industries) that may face stricter management pressure near refuges.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that invasive species cause an estimated $120 billion in annual economic damage in the United States and are the second-leading cause of native species decline, making early detection and rapid response programs among the most cost-effective conservation tools available. They contend that the National Wildlife Refuge System — spanning 95 million acres — lacks a consistent, coordinated strike team structure, and that this bill fills a documented operational gap by codifying and funding a program that already exists in limited form, giving it statutory permanence and reliable resources.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill authorizes $75 million over five years for a program that duplicates existing federal invasive species efforts across the USDA, USGS, and other Interior agencies, raising concerns about redundancy and inefficient use of limited conservation dollars. They contend that management of invasive species on lands adjacent to refuges — including outreach to private landowners — could expand federal reach beyond refuge boundaries without sufficient safeguards, and that the authorization level may be inadequate to meaningfully address the scale of the problem across all Fish and Wildlife Service regions.