S-1008-119
Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 28.
What it does
This bill would waive a federal requirement that the Cape Fox Corporation — the Alaska Native village corporation for Saxman, Alaska — receive approximately 185 acres of land within its home township to fulfill its remaining land entitlement under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA). Instead, it would allow Cape Fox to select approximately 180 acres of surface land within the Tongass National Forest outside its current selection boundary, provided it notifies the Department of the Interior in writing within 90 days of enactment. Upon that conveyance, the subsurface rights to the same land would be transferred to Sealaska Corporation, the regional Alaska Native corporation for southeastern Alaska. A public access easement would be reserved on all conveyed land.
Who benefits
Cape Fox Corporation shareholders — Alaska Native members of the Saxman village — who would receive land better suited to their needs in place of a parcel they are not required to accept. Sealaska Corporation and its shareholders, who would gain subsurface rights to the newly selected land. Alaska Native communities broadly, to the extent the bill models a flexible approach to resolving long-standing ANCSA land entitlement backlogs. The general public retains access via the reserved easement.
Who is hurt
The U.S. federal government would transfer approximately 180 acres of Tongass National Forest land out of federal ownership, reducing the federal land base. Other users of Tongass National Forest — including recreational users, timber interests, and conservation groups — could be affected depending on the specific parcel selected. Taxpayers bear any administrative costs associated with the survey, conveyance, and easement recording process. Competing land users or claimants in the area of the new selection could be displaced or restricted.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Cape Fox's land entitlement under ANCSA has remained unresolved for decades due to a rigid township selection requirement that does not reflect the practical needs of the Saxman community. They contend that allowing Cape Fox to select comparable acreage in the Tongass National Forest fulfills the original congressional intent of ANCSA — to provide Alaska Native communities with economically and culturally meaningful land — while the reserved public easement ensures continued public access. Completing long-delayed Native land entitlements, they argue, is a matter of honoring federal obligations to Alaska Native peoples.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring federal Tongass National Forest land outside Cape Fox's existing selection boundary sets a precedent for bypassing the geographic constraints Congress built into ANCSA, potentially opening the door to similar requests that could cumulatively reduce the national forest land base. They contend that the subsurface conveyance to Sealaska — a separate regional corporation — could create split-estate complications and future resource conflicts, and that the 90-day selection window provides insufficient time for environmental review or public comment on which specific parcels are affected.