HR-8539-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Sharice Davids (D-KS)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law to require that National Park Service (NPS) interpretive and educational materials — including signs, plaques, flags, online content, and other exhibits — be historically and culturally accurate. It would prohibit the Secretary of the Interior from removing, editing, or altering such materials unless doing so is necessary to update or add new accurate content, and would require consultation with relevant groups, including Tribal nations, before making changes. The bill would also require the Secretary to restore any accurate materials removed between January 20, 2025, and the bill's enactment within 180 days. Finally, it would direct the Government Accountability Office to report within one year on the status of co-stewardship agreements between federal agencies and Indigenous communities.
Who benefits
Visitors to the roughly 430 units of the National Park System who rely on exhibits for historical education. Indigenous communities and Tribal nations whose histories are represented in NPS materials and who gain formal consultation rights and a GAO review of co-stewardship agreements. Historians, educators, and researchers who value consistent, evidence-based public interpretation. Advocacy groups focused on preservation of civil rights, labor, and multicultural history at park sites. NPS staff and rangers whose interpretive work would be given statutory protection.
Who is hurt
The executive branch — specifically the Secretary of the Interior — would lose discretionary authority to update, remove, or modify NPS exhibits without meeting the bill's accuracy and consultation standards. Future administrations of any party would face legal constraints on curatorial decisions. Taxpayers could bear costs associated with the 180-day restoration mandate and the GAO report. Park administrators may face operational burdens from the consultation requirement. Groups who believe certain existing NPS materials are inaccurate or politically slanted could find it harder to have those materials changed.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that National Park sites serve as the nation's primary venues for public historical education, and that politically motivated removal of factually accurate exhibits distorts the historical record for the millions of Americans who visit each year. They contend the bill simply codifies a standard of accuracy that should already govern federal public education, and that the 180-day restoration requirement directly addresses documented removals of materials related to climate change, LGBTQ+ history, and Indigenous heritage that occurred after January 20, 2025. They further argue that the Tribal consultation requirement and GAO co-stewardship review fulfill longstanding federal trust obligations to Indigenous nations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill inserts Congress into curatorial and interpretive decisions that have traditionally been the executive branch's responsibility, and that the undefined standard of "historically and culturally accurate" would invite litigation over inherently contested historical interpretations. They contend that what counts as accurate history is often a matter of genuine scholarly debate — not a bright legal line — and that courts are poorly equipped to adjudicate disputes over exhibit content. They further argue the 180-day restoration mandate is a retroactive constraint on executive action that may conflict with the President's constitutional authority to direct executive agencies.