HR-6277-119
Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Dan Newhouse (R-WA)
What it does
This bill would create the Timber Production Expansion Guaranteed Loan Program, administered jointly by the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior. It would authorize up to $220 million in federal loan guarantees for individuals or businesses that own or operate sawmills or other wood-processing facilities in rural areas, provided those facilities are within 250 miles of federal land identified as high-priority for ecological restoration through vegetation removal. The Secretaries would be required to identify eligible federal lands within one year of enactment and update that list every five years.
Who benefits
Existing sawmill and wood-processing facility owners in rural areas near federal lands, who could access federally backed financing to expand or upgrade operations. Entrepreneurs seeking to establish or reopen sawmills in those areas. Lenders who issue the underlying loans, whose risk is reduced by the federal guarantee. Rural communities near federal forests that may see job creation or economic activity from expanded milling capacity. Federal land managers, who could see lower costs for forest thinning and restoration projects if nearby processing capacity increases. Tribal communities, since Indian forest land and rangeland are explicitly included as eligible federal land.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the financial risk if guaranteed loans default, up to the $220 million ceiling. Sawmill operators outside the 250-mile radius or outside rural areas, who are ineligible for the program. Environmental organizations and communities that oppose increased timber harvesting on federal lands, who may see expanded milling capacity as an incentive for greater vegetation removal. Competing lenders who offer non-guaranteed financing and may be disadvantaged by the subsidized terms. Potentially, wildlife and ecosystems if expanded processing capacity leads to vegetation removal beyond ecologically appropriate levels.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that a lack of nearby milling infrastructure is a major cost driver for federal forest restoration projects, and that rebuilding rural sawmill capacity would directly lower the expense of thinning overgrown, fire-prone federal lands. They contend that decades of mill closures have left many western and rural communities without the processing capacity needed to make forest restoration economically viable, and that loan guarantees — rather than direct grants — leverage private capital while limiting federal exposure to a defined $220 million ceiling. They also argue the bill advances wildfire risk reduction by making vegetation removal projects more cost-effective.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federally subsidized loan guarantees for sawmills create a financial incentive to expand timber harvesting on public lands beyond what ecological restoration alone would justify, effectively using conservation language to underwrite commercial logging infrastructure. They contend that the bill's eligibility criteria — proximity to lands identified for "vegetation removal" — are broad enough to support mills that primarily serve commercial timber interests rather than genuine restoration goals, and that the 250-mile radius is wide enough to include facilities with little practical connection to the targeted federal lands. They further argue that taxpayers bear default risk without clear performance standards tying loan outcomes to measurable restoration results.