S-360-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 179.
What it does
This bill would expand and rename the Public Lands Corps, a program that places young people in conservation work on federal lands. It would lower the minimum participant age from 16 to 15, raise the maximum age to 35 for military veterans, add the Department of Commerce and NOAA to the program's oversight structure, extend eligible work sites to coastal and marine areas, create a new Indian Youth Service Corps for conservation work on tribal lands, and allow graduate students ("consulting interns") to participate. It would also modify funding rules, add background check requirements, and authorize alumni support services.
Who benefits
Young people ages 15–25 seeking paid conservation work experience and job training; military veterans up to age 35 who gain access to the program and federal hiring preferences; Native American youth and tribes who gain a dedicated Indian Youth Service Corps with outreach support; graduate and professional students who qualify as consulting interns; nonprofit organizations that can now receive recruitment and placement contracts; federal land management agencies (Interior, Agriculture, Commerce/NOAA) that gain a larger volunteer and worker pool; coastal and marine ecosystems that become eligible for Corps conservation projects.
Who is hurt
Private contractors who currently compete for conservation and restoration work on federal lands may lose contracts to Corps participants who can perform similar work at lower cost; taxpayers who fund the program face potentially higher costs as the eligible participant pool and project scope expand; organizations that previously received the mandatory $8 million priority-project allocation lose that guaranteed funding stream, as the bill repeals it; applicants with certain criminal histories who would be screened out under the new background check requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that expanding the Corps would connect more young Americans — including veterans and Native youth — to meaningful work experience while maintaining and restoring the public lands, coastal waters, and tribal resources that millions of people use. They contend that lowering the entry age to 15 reaches at-risk youth earlier, when job training has the greatest long-term impact, and that extending eligibility to veterans up to age 35 honors their service by providing a structured pathway back to civilian employment. Supporters also argue that adding NOAA and coastal/marine habitats modernizes a program originally designed for land-based parks, reflecting the growing importance of ocean and Great Lakes conservation. The Indian Youth Service Corps component, they say, gives tribes direct control over culturally appropriate conservation projects on their own lands, addressing a longstanding gap in federal youth employment programs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding the Corps' scope, age range, and agency footprint would increase federal spending and administrative complexity without clear evidence that the program produces lasting employment outcomes for participants. They contend that repealing the mandatory $8 million allocation for priority and disaster-relief projects removes a targeted funding guarantee, potentially leaving critical conservation needs unmet in favor of broader, less urgent activities. Opponents also argue that allowing the Secretary to cover up to 90% of project costs reduces the financial accountability of participating organizations, and that adding consulting interns — graduate students performing management analysis — stretches the program beyond its original mission of hands-on youth conservation work. Some may further argue that extending federal program authority into coastal and marine areas and tribal lands raises questions about jurisdictional overlap with existing agency mandates and tribal sovereignty frameworks.