HR-5694-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 588.
Sponsored by Nicholas Begich (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would prohibit states from banning the importation, sale, transfer, trade, barter, or possession of marine mammal ivory, bone, or baleen that was legally produced by an Alaska Native as an authentic article of handicrafts or clothing. It would not affect federal law governing marine mammal products, nor would it apply to products not certified as authentic Alaska Native articles.
Who benefits
Alaska Native artisans and craftspeople who produce and sell traditional ivory, bone, and baleen handicrafts. Alaska Native communities whose cultural practices and economic livelihoods depend on marine mammal harvesting and craft production. Collectors and buyers of authentic Alaska Native art in states that currently restrict such sales. Alaska Native-owned galleries and retailers. Tribal economies in coastal Alaska that rely on marine mammal product trade.
Who is hurt
States that have enacted broad ivory or marine mammal product bans — such as California, New York, and Hawaii — would lose the ability to enforce those bans against authentic Alaska Native articles. Wildlife conservation organizations that support broad bans as a tool to reduce illegal wildlife trafficking may find enforcement more difficult if authentic-article exemptions create verification challenges. Competing non-Native artisans in states with bans who cannot sell similar materials may face an uneven regulatory landscape.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Alaska Natives hold a federally recognized right under the Marine Mammal Protection Act to harvest marine mammals and produce traditional handicrafts, and that state-level ivory bans — designed to combat illegal elephant ivory trafficking — have inadvertently swept up lawful Alaska Native cultural products. They contend that these bans impose a disproportionate economic and cultural burden on Indigenous communities whose traditions predate statehood, and that federal law should protect those rights from inconsistent state interference.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that broad preemption of state wildlife trade laws could complicate enforcement against illegal ivory trafficking, since distinguishing authentic Alaska Native articles from fraudulently labeled products in the marketplace is difficult and resource-intensive. They contend that states have a legitimate interest in maintaining comprehensive bans to close loopholes exploited by traffickers, and that existing federal exemptions under the Marine Mammal Protection Act already provide a pathway for authentic Alaska Native products without requiring states to lift their own restrictions.