S-785-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Dan Sullivan (R-AK)
What it does
This bill would extend by five years — from December 29, 2025, to December 29, 2030 — the deadline for eligible Alaska Native veterans to apply for land allotments under the Alaska Native Vietnam Era Veterans Land Allotment Program. The program allows Alaska Native veterans who served in the Armed Forces in Vietnam between August 5, 1964, and December 31, 1971, or their heirs, to receive up to 160 acres of federal land in Alaska. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), within the Department of the Interior, administers the application process.
Who benefits
Alaska Native veterans who served during the Vietnam era and have not yet applied for their land allotment. Heirs of deceased eligible veterans who may need additional time to gather documentation and file claims. Alaska Native communities and families who stand to gain land assets. Legal and administrative professionals who assist with land claims. Potentially, Alaska Native tribal organizations that support members through the application process.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who bear the administrative cost of a five-year program extension. The Bureau of Land Management, which must continue staffing and resourcing the program. Other potential users or claimants of the federal land parcels in Alaska that remain encumbered during the extended application window. Alaska state and local governments that may have competing interests in the disposition of federal lands.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that many eligible veterans and their heirs are elderly or have already passed away, making documentation and application processes difficult to complete within the original deadline. They contend that the allotment program was created to remedy a historical inequity — Alaska Native veterans were excluded from homestead land programs available to other veterans during the Vietnam era — and that a five-year extension is a modest, targeted measure to ensure all eligible individuals have a fair opportunity to claim what they are legally owed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the program has already been in place long enough for eligible veterans and heirs to have filed claims, and that repeated deadline extensions create administrative uncertainty and delay the final resolution of federal land status in Alaska. They contend that open-ended extensions impose ongoing costs on the BLM and may conflict with other land management priorities, and that a defined outreach effort — rather than a blanket deadline extension — would be a more targeted and efficient approach to reaching remaining eligible claimants.