HR-8913-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by David Valadao (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would authorize the U.S. government to relinquish its reversionary interest in two small parcels of land in Tulare, California, originally granted to a railroad under an 1866 federal law. The relinquishment would take effect only when Union Pacific Railroad conveys the parcels to the City of Tulare. Once clear title is established, the City would be able to improve and restore the facilities currently on the land — a youth outdoor recreation area and a historic women's club building — with all documentation costs paid by the City.
Who benefits
The City of Tulare, California, which would gain clear, unencumbered title to the two parcels. Youth in Tulare who use the outdoor recreation facility, which the City could then improve. Members and patrons of the historic women's club, whose building could be restored. Local residents and businesses in Tulare's business corridor who may benefit from improved facilities. Union Pacific Railroad, which would be able to complete a sale it already desires to make. Tulare County, which would gain a more clearly titled property on its records.
Who is hurt
The federal government would permanently give up any future reversionary interest in the parcels, foreclosing any future federal use or recapture of the land. Neighboring landowners or the general public could theoretically lose a future federal backstop on land use, though existing rights of access are explicitly preserved by the bill. No direct financial cost falls on federal taxpayers, as documentation costs are borne by the City.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal reversionary interest is a dormant legal technicality — the United States has never exercised it in over 150 years — and that its continued existence serves no practical federal purpose while actively blocking the City from improving community assets. They contend that Congress already took the same action for all surrounding parcels in Public Law 105-195 (1998), making this bill a straightforward completion of that prior legislative intent for two parcels inadvertently omitted.
Opponents argue
Opponents could argue that permanently extinguishing a federal property interest, even a dormant one, sets a precedent for quietly disposing of federal land rights without full public review or compensation to the Treasury. They might also contend that the bill bypasses the standard federal land disposal process under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, which typically requires fair market value consideration, and that the public receives no direct payment for the relinquishment of a federal interest.