HR-8954-119
Subcommittee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Jeff Hurd (R-CO)
What it does
This bill would amend the Indian Tribal Regulatory Reform and Business Development Act of 2000 by transferring all administrative responsibilities and jurisdiction currently held by an unspecified "Secretary" under that Act — with respect to a tribal regulatory Authority — to the Secretary of the Interior. The transfer would take effect on the date the bill is enacted. No new programs, funding, or substantive policy changes are created; only the administrative home of existing responsibilities would change.
Who benefits
The Secretary of the Interior and the Department of the Interior, which would gain consolidated authority over tribal regulatory matters. Tribal nations and tribal businesses that may benefit from having oversight consolidated within Interior, which has a longer institutional history with tribal affairs through the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Federal employees at Interior who may gain jurisdiction and resources. Potentially tribal governments that prefer a single, familiar federal point of contact for regulatory matters.
Who is hurt
The agency or office currently holding these administrative responsibilities, which would lose jurisdiction. Federal employees in that office whose roles may be reduced or eliminated. Tribal stakeholders who may have developed working relationships with the current administering office and prefer the existing arrangement. Tribal businesses that may face a transition period of uncertainty or disruption as responsibilities shift between agencies.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Department of the Interior — through the Bureau of Indian Affairs and its Office of Indian Energy and Economic Development — has the deepest institutional expertise in federal-tribal relations and is the natural home for tribal regulatory oversight. They contend that consolidating these responsibilities within Interior eliminates duplicative or fragmented administration, reduces bureaucratic confusion for tribal governments navigating federal requirements, and aligns this function with the broader federal trust responsibility to tribes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring administrative authority without a detailed transition plan, additional resources, or clear statutory guidance could create a period of regulatory uncertainty harmful to tribal businesses and governments that depend on consistent federal oversight. They contend that the bill's brevity — a single paragraph with no implementation timeline, staffing provisions, or accountability mechanisms — risks disrupting existing relationships and workflows without any demonstrated evidence that the current arrangement is failing or that Interior is better positioned to handle these duties.