HR-9325-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Randy Weber (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would establish the Lone Star Coastal National Recreation Area as a unit of the National Park System, covering portions of the Upper and Middle Texas Gulf Coast across five counties (Jefferson, Chambers, Galveston, Brazoria, and Matagorda). It would create a cooperative governance body — the Lone Star Coastal Partnership — made up of federal, state, local, and private representatives to develop and implement a management plan. Land inclusion would be strictly voluntary: no condemnation authority is granted, private landowners cannot be subjected to new regulations as a result of the designation, and existing activities such as hunting, fishing, off-road vehicle use, and oil and gas extraction would be explicitly preserved.
Who benefits
Recreational users (hunters, anglers, boaters, off-road vehicle users, and ecotourists) who would gain expanded access to coastal lands. Local economies in the five covered counties that could benefit from increased nature and heritage tourism. Conservation organizations and nonprofits that would gain a formal seat in governance and access to federal technical and financial assistance. Private landowners who voluntarily participate and may receive federal cost-sharing funds (up to 25% of project costs) while retaining ownership and existing use rights. Texas state agencies (Parks and Wildlife, Historical Commission) that would gain a formal coordination role. Future generations who would benefit from conserved coastal ecosystems. The Lone Star Coastal Alliance nonprofit, which is explicitly named as a fundraising partner.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would fund appropriations for administration, planning, signage, and technical assistance, though the bill requires a 3-to-1 non-federal match for large acquisitions. Competing recreational or commercial interests that may face indirect pressure if management plans restrict certain uses over time, even though the bill explicitly preserves existing activities. Environmental advocacy groups that prioritize stricter conservation protections may find the bill's broad carve-outs for oil and gas, off-road vehicles, and industrial infrastructure insufficient. National Park Service staff who would absorb new administrative responsibilities. Landowners adjacent to the recreation area who, despite explicit savings provisions, may face uncertainty about future land-use implications.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Texas Gulf Coast contains nationally significant ecosystems, cultural heritage sites, and recreational resources that currently lack coordinated federal support, and that this bill fills that gap without imposing new burdens on landowners. They contend the bill's design — voluntary participation, no condemnation authority, explicit preservation of hunting, fishing, oil and gas, and off-road vehicle use, and a 3-to-1 non-federal match requirement — makes it a fiscally responsible, locally controlled model that respects private property rights while unlocking federal resources for conservation and tourism that benefit the regional economy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that designating the area as a National Park System unit, even with savings provisions, creates a federal footprint that could gradually expand through future regulatory action, cooperative agreements, or Endangered Species Act triggers that the bill's carve-outs may not fully prevent. They contend that the bill's open-ended appropriations language ("such sums as may be necessary") lacks fiscal discipline, and that the governance structure — which gives the Secretary of the Interior final approval over the management plan — concentrates federal authority over a region where local and state control has historically predominated.