S-225-116
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
What it does
This bill would reauthorize the Battlefield Acquisition Grant Program through fiscal year 2028, extending its funding authority beyond its current expiration. It would also expand the American Battlefield Protection Program to cover battlefields from the American Revolution and the War of 1812, in addition to the Civil War sites already included. The bill would further add enhancement of visitor experiences at these sites as an explicit program goal.
Who benefits
Landowners near American Revolution and War of 1812 battlefield sites who may receive grants to preserve or sell historically significant land. State and local governments that host newly eligible battlefield sites and would gain access to federal preservation funding. Tourism-dependent businesses — hotels, restaurants, and tour operators — near newly covered battlefield sites. Historians, educators, and researchers who study the Revolutionary War and War of 1812 eras. Members of the public who visit these sites and would benefit from enhanced visitor experiences. Preservation and heritage nonprofit organizations that administer or partner on battlefield protection projects.
Who is hurt
Property developers and private landowners near newly covered battlefield sites who may face increased pressure — or reduced market demand — if adjacent land is acquired for preservation purposes. Taxpayers who fund the grant program, as reauthorization extends federal spending obligations through FY2028. Civil War battlefield advocacy groups and sites that previously had exclusive access to program funding may see resources spread across a larger pool of eligible sites. Federal budget priorities competing for discretionary spending may be displaced by the program's continued funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the American Revolution and the War of 1812 are foundational chapters in U.S. history, yet their battlefields have long been excluded from the same federal preservation tools available to Civil War sites. Many of these landscapes face irreversible loss to development, and once gone, they cannot be recovered. Reauthorizing the grant program through 2028 provides the continuity that state, local, and nonprofit partners need to plan and execute multi-year land acquisitions. Expanding visitor experience goals would strengthen heritage tourism, which generates significant economic activity in rural and small-town communities near these sites. Supporters also contend that preserving these sites is a low-cost, high-return federal commitment that honors the sacrifices of earlier generations while creating lasting public benefit.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the federal government's role in land acquisition and historic preservation is a function that states and localities are better positioned to manage, and that expanding the program to additional wars stretches limited preservation dollars thinner across a larger number of sites. They contend that reauthorizing the grant program without a rigorous review of its effectiveness continues spending that may not deliver proportionate public value. Some argue that private organizations and state historic preservation offices already have tools to protect these sites without additional federal involvement. Others raise concerns that federal land acquisition near private property — even voluntary transactions — can suppress surrounding land values and limit local economic development options. Fiscal critics note that extending the program adds to discretionary spending obligations at a time of budget pressure.