HR-8638-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Thomas Suozzi (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Trails System Act to designate the Washington Spy Ring National Historic Trail — a roughly 50-mile route along Long Island's North Shore in New York, running from Great Neck through Nassau and Suffolk Counties to Port Jefferson along village streets and Route 25A. The trail would connect key sites associated with the Culper Spy Ring, a Revolutionary War intelligence network that gathered information for General George Washington. Administration of the trail would be delegated to the North Shore Promotion Alliance, a 501(c)(6) nonprofit organization, in cooperation with the Secretary of the Interior.
Who benefits
Residents and visitors along Long Island's North Shore who would gain access to a federally recognized historic trail. Local tourism businesses — hotels, restaurants, shops — in Nassau and Suffolk Counties that could see increased visitor traffic. The North Shore Promotion Alliance, which would gain federal recognition and an administrative role. History and education organizations interested in Revolutionary War heritage. Local governments along the route that may benefit from increased economic activity. Descendants of Culper Spy Ring members whose ancestors would receive national recognition.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who may bear any federal administrative or signage costs associated with the designation, though the bill does not include an explicit appropriation. Property owners along the designated route who may face increased foot or vehicle traffic near their land. Competing historic trail designation proposals that may be deprioritized as a result of congressional attention and National Park Service resources being directed here. Other 501(c)(6) organizations or public agencies that might have sought the administrative role.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Culper Spy Ring played a decisive role in the American Revolution — credited with exposing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Point and preventing a British ambush of French forces in Rhode Island — and that this national significance warrants federal recognition. They contend that designating the trail would preserve and promote Revolutionary War heritage along a historically rich corridor, drive heritage tourism to Long Island communities, and provide an educational resource connecting Americans to a formative chapter of the nation's founding.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that trail designation, even without a direct appropriation, creates future federal obligations for signage, maintenance coordination, and National Park Service oversight that impose costs on taxpayers for a geographically narrow, locally specific route. They contend that delegating administration to a 501(c)(6) trade organization — rather than a public agency or established historical society — raises questions about accountability and whether a business promotion group is the appropriate steward of a federally designated national historic trail.