HR-6300-119
Ordered to be Reported in the Nature of a Substitute (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 25 - 14.
Sponsored by Harriet Hageman (R-WY)
What it does
This bill would amend the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA) to extend the same grazing lease and permit framework that currently applies to National Forest System lands to national grasslands. Currently, ranchers with grazing agreements on national grasslands operate under a different legal category than permittees on other federal lands. The bill would close that gap by updating the statutory definition to include all National Forest System lands — which encompasses national grasslands — ensuring uniform treatment under FLPMA Section 402. It explicitly preserves all other existing laws governing national grasslands, including the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act and the Public Rangelands Improvement Act of 1978.
Who benefits
Ranchers and livestock operators who currently hold grazing agreements on national grasslands, who would gain the same legal protections, procedural rights, and permit stability as permittees on other federal lands. Rural communities in Great Plains states (e.g., North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas) where national grasslands are concentrated, who depend economically on livestock operations. Agricultural lenders and businesses that serve ranching operations, who may benefit from greater legal certainty around grazing rights. State governments in grassland-heavy regions that have an interest in stable agricultural economies.
Who is hurt
Environmental and conservation groups that prefer the current, more flexible management framework for national grasslands and may view standardized permitting as reducing agency discretion to limit or adjust grazing. Wildlife advocates concerned that uniform permitting could make it harder for the Forest Service to reduce grazing pressure in ecologically sensitive grassland areas. Competing land users — such as hunters, hikers, and recreation-focused businesses — who may see expanded or more entrenched grazing as reducing access or habitat quality. Taxpayers who subsidize below-market federal grazing fees, a cost that could grow if permit stability increases the number or duration of active grazing agreements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that ranchers on national grasslands are currently treated as second-class permittees despite using federal land for the same purpose as those on National Forest or BLM lands, creating an arbitrary legal inconsistency. They contend that uniform permitting provides the long-term certainty that ranching families need to make capital investments, secure financing, and sustain multi-generational operations — and that the bill does not expand grazing into new areas or override any other protective statute, making it a narrow, technical fix rather than a broad policy shift.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that national grasslands were established under the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act with a distinct conservation mandate — restoring lands damaged by the Dust Bowl — and that folding them into the standard FLPMA permitting framework could erode the Forest Service's flexibility to manage grazing in ways that protect soil, water, and wildlife. They contend that standardized permit protections may make it harder for agencies to reduce or revoke grazing agreements when ecological conditions deteriorate, effectively locking in livestock use on lands that may need periodic rest or restoration.