S-2098-119
Committee on Indian Affairs. Hearings held.
Sponsored by Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to transfer approximately 3.4 acres of federal land in Anchorage, Alaska, to the Southcentral Foundation (SCF), an Alaska Native-owned nonprofit health organization, at no cost and with no conditions attached. The transfer would be made by warranty deed with no U.S. reversionary interest, meaning the federal government would permanently give up ownership. The bill would also divide environmental liability for the property: SCF would not be responsible for contamination that existed before the transfer date, while HHS would not be responsible for contamination that occurs after SCF takes control.
Who benefits
The Southcentral Foundation and the Alaska Native and American Indian communities it serves — approximately 65,000 people in the Anchorage area — who would gain a permanent, cost-free facility for expanded health and social services. SCF itself benefits from acquiring a valuable real estate asset without payment. Alaska Native communities broadly benefit from strengthened tribal health infrastructure. HHS benefits by shedding ongoing property management obligations and future environmental liability.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would forgo any proceeds from the sale or lease of the property. Other organizations that may have sought to purchase or use the land through a competitive process. Neighboring property owners or the surrounding Anchorage community could be affected if pre-existing environmental contamination on the site is not fully remediated. Future federal agencies that might have used the land for other public purposes would lose access, as no reversionary interest is retained.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Southcentral Foundation has operated on or near this land as part of its federally recognized role delivering Indian Health Service-funded care, and that transferring the property formalizes a longstanding functional arrangement while strengthening tribal self-determination under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act. They contend that SCF's model — which serves roughly 65,000 Alaska Native and American Indian people and has been recognized nationally for reducing emergency visits and improving outcomes — requires stable, owned facilities to sustain long-term health infrastructure that the federal government is otherwise obligated to provide.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that conveying federal land at no cost and with no conditions or reversionary interest sets a precedent for permanent disposal of public assets without competitive process or taxpayer compensation, and that the absence of any use restriction means the property could eventually be repurposed away from health services with no federal recourse. They contend that the environmental liability split — while facially reasonable — could leave pre-transfer contamination costs unresolved if HHS's retained obligations are not clearly funded, potentially burdening either the federal government or the surrounding Anchorage community.