HR-494-115
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 151.
Sponsored by Earl Carter (R-GA)
What it does
This bill would expand the boundary of Fort Frederica National Monument on St. Simons Island, Georgia, increasing the maximum acreage from 250 to 305 acres — an addition of up to 55 acres. The Department of the Interior would be authorized to acquire land and interests within the new boundary only through donation or voluntary purchase from willing sellers. The bill explicitly prohibits the use of condemnation or eminent domain to acquire any land or interests.
Who benefits
Visitors to Fort Frederica National Monument, who would gain access to a larger protected historic site. Historians, archaeologists, and researchers interested in colonial-era American history. Residents of and tourists to St. Simons Island, Georgia, who may benefit from expanded public green space and heritage tourism. The National Park Service, which would gain authority to manage a larger protected area. Conservation and historic preservation organizations with an interest in protecting the site.
Who is hurt
Private landowners adjacent to the current monument boundary whose property falls within the newly designated area may face reduced market flexibility, as their land could be targeted for acquisition — even though the bill limits acquisition to willing sellers. Local property tax bases could be reduced if additional acreage is transferred to federal ownership, which is tax-exempt, potentially affecting Glynn County, Georgia, tax revenues. Developers or private interests with plans for land near the monument boundary could see those plans constrained by the expanded federal footprint.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that expanding the monument boundary is a targeted, low-impact way to protect an irreplaceable piece of American colonial history. Fort Frederica, established by James Oglethorpe in 1736, played a decisive role in securing British control of Georgia and shaping the future of the American Southeast. The 55-acre expansion would allow the National Park Service to protect historically significant land that may contain archaeological resources currently outside federal protection. Critically, the bill includes strong private property protections: no land can be taken by eminent domain, and all acquisitions must come from willing sellers at agreed-upon prices. This means no landowner can be forced to sell. Supporters also contend the expansion would boost heritage tourism on St. Simons Island, supporting local businesses and the regional economy at no mandatory cost to taxpayers, since acquisitions depend on donations or voluntary transactions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that even a voluntary-acquisition-only expansion places de facto pressure on nearby landowners, who may feel their property rights are diminished once their land is designated within a federal monument boundary — affecting property values and future use options without compensation. Critics also contend that expanding federal land holdings, even modestly, reduces the local tax base in Glynn County, shifting the fiscal burden onto remaining private property owners. Some argue that the federal government already manages vast acreage of national monuments and parks, and that additional expansion — however small — continues a pattern of growing federal land ownership at the expense of local and state control. Others may question whether the 55-acre addition meaningfully advances historic preservation goals that could not be achieved through state, local, or private conservation mechanisms, raising questions about whether federal intervention is the most efficient or appropriate tool for this purpose.