S-909-119
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 336.
Sponsored by Ruben Gallego (D-AZ)
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of the Interior to convey approximately 3,400 acres of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land in La Paz County, Arizona to the county at fair market value, upon the county's request. The conveyance would exclude any federal land containing significant cultural, environmental, wildlife, or recreational resources. As conditions of the transfer, the county and any future owner would be required to protect tribal artifacts, coordinate with the Colorado River Indian Tribes Tribal Historic Preservation Office, and allow tribal representatives to rebury unearthed artifacts. The land would also be withdrawn from federal mining and mineral leasing laws.
Who benefits
La Paz County, Arizona, which would gain ownership of land it could develop or sell for solar energy or other purposes. Solar energy developers who would gain access to privately held land in a high-solar-resource desert region. Local construction workers and tradespeople who may find employment in solar projects. The county's tax base, which could grow from development of currently untaxed federal land. The Colorado River Indian Tribes, who gain formal coordination rights and artifact reburial protections they may not have under current BLM management.
Who is hurt
Recreational users — hikers, off-road vehicle users, hunters — who currently have public access to BLM land that would become private. Environmental and conservation groups who prefer federal stewardship of desert lands. Competing solar developers who do not receive similar land transfers. Taxpayers broadly, if the fair market value received is below the land's long-term resource value. Wildlife and plant species dependent on undisturbed desert habitat, to the extent the exclusion criteria do not fully protect sensitive areas.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that transferring underutilized BLM land to local control accelerates solar energy development in one of the nation's highest-solar-resource regions, creating local jobs and expanding the county's tax base. They contend that the bill's built-in protections — excluding culturally, environmentally, and recreationally significant land, withdrawing mineral rights, and requiring tribal coordination — address the most common objections to federal land transfers while still enabling economic development that the federal government has been slow to facilitate.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that transferring public land to a county for eventual private development permanently removes it from federal stewardship and public access, a loss that cannot be undone if the exclusion criteria prove insufficient in practice. They contend that BLM already has existing authority to permit solar development on federal land through right-of-way leases, which would preserve public ownership and ongoing environmental oversight — making an outright conveyance unnecessary and potentially a precedent for broader federal land divestiture.