HR-4984-118
Became Public Law No: 118-274.
Sponsored by James Comer (R-KY)
What it does
This law transfers control of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium Campus from the National Park Service to the District of Columbia. The District may then develop the campus for stadiums, commercial and residential buildings, parks, and other public uses. At least 30% of the campus must remain parks and open space, federal funds cannot be used for stadium construction, and the transfer can be reversed under certain conditions.
Who benefits
District of Columbia government, which gains authority to develop a large federally held campus; D.C. residents who would gain new housing, commercial amenities, and public green space; sports teams and organizations seeking a new stadium site in D.C.; real estate developers and construction firms pursuing contracts on the campus; local businesses that would benefit from increased foot traffic and nearby development; D.C. taxpayers if development generates new local tax revenue.
Who is hurt
Current users of the campus who may be displaced during redevelopment; D.C. residents or advocacy groups who prefer the land remain under federal stewardship or as open space beyond the 30% minimum; National Park Service, which loses administrative control of the campus; federal taxpayers if environmental cleanup costs allocated under the memorandum of understanding fall to the federal government; neighboring communities that could experience increased traffic, noise, or density from large-scale development.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that transferring the RFK campus to D.C. unlocks a large, underutilized piece of land that has sat largely dormant for decades, allowing the District to address its own housing shortage, generate local jobs, and build community amenities without relying on federal decision-making. They contend that local government is better positioned than the National Park Service to manage urban development, and that the 30% open-space requirement and prohibition on federal stadium funding protect the public interest while still enabling economic growth. Supporters also note that D.C.'s unique status as a federal district has historically limited its control over its own land, and this transfer is a step toward greater self-determination for D.C. residents.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring federally held land to D.C. permanently reduces the public's national stake in a historically significant site, and that commercial and residential development could prioritize profit over community needs — particularly affordable housing. They contend that the 30% open-space floor is insufficient to offset the density and congestion that large-scale development would bring to surrounding neighborhoods. Opponents also raise concern that the memorandum of understanding on environmental cleanup costs could leave federal taxpayers responsible for significant remediation expenses, and that the reversion clause may not provide adequate protection if the District fails to meet its obligations. Some argue the process bypasses broader public input that a full federal land-use review would require.