HR-5911-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Jeff Hurd (R-CO)
What it does
This bill would direct the U.S. Forest Service to transfer ownership (fee simple title) of approximately 45 acres of land, Crystal Reservoir, Full Moon Dam, and associated water rights in Ouray County, Colorado, to the City of Ouray at no cost to the city (except survey costs). The city would be required to keep the land open to the public for recreational use, assume responsibility for Full Moon Dam, avoid commercial development, and protect upstream wetlands. A reversionary clause would return the land to the federal government if the city violates the terms, and the Forest Service would retain a perpetual easement for the Red Mountain Ditch.
Who benefits
City of Ouray residents and local government, which would gain ownership and control of a recreational asset at no cost. Recreational users — including anglers, hikers, and outdoor enthusiasts — who would have continued public access to the reservoir. Local tourism businesses (outfitters, lodging, restaurants) that benefit from recreational traffic. Ouray County taxpayers who gain a locally managed open space. The Forest Service, which would shed maintenance and dam safety obligations for the site.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers broadly, who would forgo any proceeds from the land transfer (the conveyance is at no cost). The Forest Service, which loses jurisdiction and management authority over the parcel. Upstream wetland-dependent wildlife and ecosystems, which rely on the bill's protective conditions being enforced — if those conditions are not adequately monitored, environmental harm could result. Future users if the city's stewardship or financial capacity to maintain the dam proves insufficient. Neighboring landowners or water rights holders who may be affected by changes in water management under new ownership.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that transferring Crystal Reservoir to the City of Ouray places management in the hands of the local community that uses and depends on it most, ensuring more responsive stewardship than a distant federal agency can provide. They contend the no-cost conveyance is appropriate because the city assumes significant financial liability — including responsibility for Full Moon Dam, a regulated structure — and because the land will remain permanently open to the public, preserving the public benefit that justified federal ownership. The reversionary clause and wetland protection conditions provide enforceable safeguards against misuse.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring publicly owned federal land at no cost sets a precedent for giving away assets that belong to all Americans, not just local residents, without fair compensation to the federal treasury. They contend that placing dam safety responsibility on a small municipality like Ouray — which may lack the technical expertise and financial resources to maintain aging water infrastructure — could create public safety risks and future federal liability if the city defaults on its obligations. The bill's wetland protections depend entirely on the Forest Service's discretionary enforcement of the reversionary clause, which may prove difficult to trigger in practice.