S-1341-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 397.
What it does
This bill would direct the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to set annual permit fees for private recreational residences (cabins) located on National Forest System land, using a tiered system based on the appraised value of each lot. It would also establish a $1,200 transfer fee (adjusted for inflation) whenever a cabin permit changes hands due to a sale. Beginning in FY2024, the USDA could keep and spend the collected fees — without a separate congressional appropriation — to fund the recreational residence program and other National Forest recreation programs.
Who benefits
National Forest recreation programs and their users would benefit from a dedicated, self-sustaining funding stream. Cabin permit holders whose lots are appraised at lower values would be placed in lower fee tiers, potentially paying less than under a flat or less-differentiated system. Permit holders who lose significant access to their cabins would benefit from the fee suspension or reduction provision. Alaska cabin permit holders benefit from an explicit exemption protecting their existing rights under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). Permit holders who dispute an appraisal benefit from the right to arrange a second, independent appraisal.
Who is hurt
Cabin permit holders whose lots are appraised at higher values would face higher annual fees than under the prior system. All permit holders would face a new $1,200 transfer fee upon selling or transferring their cabin, increasing the transaction cost of ownership changes. Permit holders who have not had a recent appraisal would be subject to interim fees starting January 1, 2014, before the new appraisal cycle is complete. Prospective buyers of recreational residence permits would face higher upfront costs due to the transfer fee. The repeal of the Cabin User Fees Fairness Act of 2000 removes the prior statutory framework some permit holders may have relied upon.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that private cabin owners have long enjoyed access to publicly owned National Forest land at fees that do not reflect the fair market value of that access, effectively subsidizing a relatively small group of private users at the expense of the general public. A tiered, appraisal-based fee system would ensure that permit holders pay fees proportional to the actual value of the land they occupy, making the arrangement more equitable. Allowing USDA to retain and spend collected fees without annual appropriations would create a stable, dedicated funding source for recreation programs that benefit all National Forest visitors — not just cabin permit holders. The inflation adjustment mechanism would prevent fees from eroding in real terms over time, and the built-in 10-year review would ensure the system remains fair and accurate.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill imposes significant new financial burdens on cabin permit holders — many of whom are middle-class families who have maintained these residences for generations — without adequate transition protections. The tiered fee structure tied to appraised lot values could produce steep, unpredictable fee increases in high-value forest areas, threatening the affordability of long-standing family cabins. The $1,200 transfer fee adds a new cost to ownership changes that did not previously exist, potentially discouraging families from passing cabins to heirs or new owners. Granting USDA the authority to retain and spend fees without further congressional appropriation reduces legislative oversight of how public land revenues are used, shifting spending control from Congress to the executive branch. The repeal of the 2000 Fairness Act eliminates established protections before the replacement system is fully proven.