S-368-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 115.
Sponsored by Martin Heinrich (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would make permanent a federal program that manages the sale and exchange of public lands identified for disposal under approved land use plans. It would also expand the definition of "federally designated area" to include all lands within specified boundaries, not just those designated as of July 25, 2000. Additionally, it would make the Federal Land Disposal Account permanent and exempt certain lands already eligible for sale under other public land laws from the program's requirements.
Who benefits
State and local governments in Western states, which receive a share of proceeds from federal land sales for conservation and acquisition purposes. Conservation organizations and land trusts that use those proceeds to acquire priority lands. Ranchers, developers, and private buyers seeking to purchase federal lands identified for disposal. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which gains a stable, permanent funding mechanism for completing appraisals and legal requirements for land transactions.
Who is hurt
Environmental and conservation groups that prefer federal retention of public lands, who would see more land made available for sale or exchange. Tribal nations and Indigenous communities whose ancestral or treaty-connected lands could be included in a broader pool of lands eligible for disposal under the expanded definition. Taxpayers who believe federal lands are undervalued at sale and that permanent disposal authority reduces public accountability. Outdoor recreation users and wildlife advocates who may lose access to lands transferred out of federal ownership.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that making the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act permanent would give the Bureau of Land Management a reliable, long-term tool to rationalize the federal land portfolio — disposing of low-priority parcels while using the proceeds to acquire lands with higher conservation, recreation, or community value. They contend that the original FLTFA, which expired and required repeated reauthorization, created uncertainty that slowed beneficial land transactions and left the Federal Land Disposal Account without a stable funding base. Expanding the definition of "federally designated area" to include all lands within current boundaries, rather than only those designated before July 25, 2000, would reflect on-the-ground realities and ensure the program keeps pace with updated land use plans. Supporters also note that proceeds flow back to states and localities, providing tangible economic benefits to Western communities that host large amounts of federal land and have limited local tax bases.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that making the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act permanent removes a critical oversight mechanism — the periodic congressional reauthorization process — that allows lawmakers to evaluate whether the program is serving the public interest before extending it. They contend that expanding the definition of "federally designated area" beyond lands designated as of July 25, 2000 could significantly enlarge the pool of public lands eligible for disposal, potentially accelerating the transfer of lands that communities, tribes, and conservationists rely on for recreation, cultural heritage, and wildlife habitat. Critics also raise concerns that appraisal processes for federal land sales may undervalue public assets, resulting in below-market transfers that disadvantage taxpayers. Finally, opponents argue that permanently exempting certain lands eligible under other public land laws creates overlapping and potentially conflicting disposal authorities that reduce transparency and public participation in land management decisions.
Constitutional context
Federal authority over public lands is grounded in the Property Clause (Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2), which grants Congress the power to dispose of and make rules for federal territory. The Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause also underpin federal land management statutes. The Tenth Amendment is relevant to the extent that land disposal affects state sovereignty and revenue-sharing arrangements. Post-Loper Bright (2024), courts independently review agency interpretations of statutes like FLTFA, meaning BLM's discretion in defining "federally designated area" or conducting appraisals could face heightened judicial scrutiny. Sackett v. EPA (2023) and WV v. EPA (2022) signal that courts may apply the major questions doctrine if BLM exercises broad discretionary authority over large land portfolios without explicit congressional authorization.
Checks and balances
By making the program permanent, Congress would shift ongoing oversight authority from the legislative branch (which previously reviewed the program at reauthorization) to the executive branch (specifically BLM within the Department of the Interior). The permanent Federal Land Disposal Account would give the executive branch a self-sustaining funding stream not subject to annual appropriations review, reducing Congress's power of the purse over this program. The expanded definition of "federally designated area" would broaden BLM's administrative discretion in determining which lands qualify for disposal proceedings.
Historical precedent
The original Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act (FLTFA) was enacted in 2000 and previously reauthorized in 2008. The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA) established the broader framework for public land disposal and exchange that FLTFA operates within.