AlaskaNews
My Feed

Content discovery

Topics

Issues and interests

Locations

News by place

Organizations

Agencies, boards, and groups

Elections

Elections and time-bounded civic events

Calendar

Upcoming meetings and civic events

Source material

Speakers

People quoted on the platform

Transcripts

Search every public meeting (subscribers)

Video Clips

Quoted moments on video

Photos

Community gallery

Podcasts

Articles read aloud

How It WorksLog inSign up
AlaskaNewsAlaska News

Local news, from the source.

Public meetings deserve coverage.
Every claim links to the original source.

Browse

  • My Feed
  • Topics
  • Locations
  • Organizations
  • Elections
  • Speakers
  • TranscriptsSubscribers
  • Podcasts
  • Calendar
  • Photos
  • Video Clips

Get involved

  • Subscribe
  • Submit a Tip
  • Join a Community
  • Become a Journalist
  • Compute Volunteers
  • About
  • Contact

Resources

  • RSS
  • How It Works
  • API
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Communities News LLC. All rights reserved.

Part of the Communities News platform

House Natural Resources (Begich): Markup of H.R. 9250 (Rep. Westerman), “Great American Outdoors Act 250”

Alaska News • June 24, 2026 • 54 min

Source

House Natural Resources (Begich): Markup of H.R. 9250 (Rep. Westerman), “Great American Outdoors Act 250”

video • Alaska News

Articles from this transcript

Foreign-visitor park fee survives a House vote, with stakes for Alaska

A U.S. House committee kept a $100 surcharge on foreign visitors to popular national parks, a fee with real stakes for Alaska's tourism-dependent gateway communities.

AI

A renewed federal fund to fix public lands could land hardest in Alaska

A U.S. House committee advanced the Great American Outdoors Act 250, renewing a public-lands repair fund — with outsized stakes for Alaska's federal parks and forests.

AI
Manage speakers (10) →
5:21
Bruce Westerman

The committee will come to order. The chair notes the presence of a quorum pursuant to committee rules. Members of the committee may submit written opening statements for the record. Ask that members may revise and extend their remarks on the bills to be considered at this markup. And have those remarks included in the record.

5:36
Bruce Westerman

Without objection. So ordered. Without objection, the chair is authorized to declare recess of the committee at any time. Pursuant to Committee Rule 3, I announce that I may postpone further proceedings today on the question of approving any measure or matter or adopting an amendment on which a recorded vote is ordered. I now recognize myself for an opening statement.

5:58
Bruce Westerman

Good morning, and thank you for joining us for our full committee markup of H.R. 92. 9250. From Yosemite's giant sequoias to the geysers of Yellowstone and the rugged shores of Acadia, our national parks and public lands tell the story of America. Throughout American history, these wondrous creations, often called America's best idea, have inspired Congress to come together in support of the conservation of our uniquely American landscapes.

6:27
Bruce Westerman

That's why it's fitting today the committee is meeting to consider H.R. 9250, Legislation that will reauthorize the Great American Outdoors Act's Legacy Restoration Fund for an additional 5 years, renewing one of President Trump's signature conservation achievements from his first term. In partnership with Ranking Member Huffman, we have come together on this historic legislation with the support of 140 bipartisan co-sponsors, 70 Republicans and 70 Democrats, and more than 140 organizations. The process began last Congress when the committee held oversight hearings to examine the implementation of GAOA. In this Congress, the committee traveled to Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming and to Hot Springs National Park in Arkansas to see the LRF's investments firsthand and to hear from local stakeholders about ideas to improve the program for the future.

7:20
Bruce Westerman

The result is a bipartisan, bicameral bill that builds on the success of the original law, while incorporating lessons learned from the last 5 years. Reforms included in HR 9250 will encourage more public-private partnerships, better prioritize deferred maintenance projects to visitor-facing recreation assets, create new transparency and accountability requirements, and streamline project delivery. The result is that more visitors will be able to safely and reliably access campgrounds, trails, roads, boat launches, hunting areas, and recreation sites across America. Importantly, this legislation recognizes that maintaining our national parks, our forests, our public lands, and BIE facilities for the next 250 years requires more than simply repairing aging infrastructure. It requires getting creative and wisely stewarding taxpayer dollars.

8:11
Bruce Westerman

The bill establishes new sustainable funding sources to support investments to reduce the public lands and Bureau of Indian Education and Maintenance backlog, such as the codification of foreign visitors fees and new pathways for philanthropic support so these national assets may receive investment without relying totally on taxpayer funding or burdening American families. These investments also have significant economic benefits. By improving visitor access and encouraging tourism, this legislation will support more than 72,000 jobs and over $26.4 billion in economic activity. Activity for gateway and tribal communities near national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, and public lands. Before I yield back, I want to thank and recognize Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum for championing the reauthorization of this important program.

9:02
Bruce Westerman

Also want to thank our bipartisan House and Senate colleagues in this effort, and especially Ranking Member Huffman and his team for the work that we've done to get to this point. Ultimately, this legislation will be a birthday gift to America. They will help us maintain, modernize, and improve access to our nation's most treasured national assets for the next 250 years. I look forward to working with my bipartisan and bicameral colleagues to get this bill to President Trump's desk as soon as possible. I look forward to the discussion today.

9:35
Huffman

I yield back and recognize Ranking Member Huffman for an opening statement. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I want to begin by recognizing you and your willingness to work across the aisle to invest in our national parks and public lands. We disagree on a fair number of things. That is pretty obvious to folks who track the proceedings of this committee. But despite all of that, this is not one of the things we disagree on— funding our parks.

10:02
Huffman

And I want to thank you for the opportunity to work with you, your staff, has done a great job here, and it's a welcome beacon of progress in getting something done even in a difficult political climate. Although we still got to get it over the finish line. So, this moment reflects the overwhelming sentiment of the American people who believe our national parks and our public lands are treasures that have to be protected. Today we will vote on a bipartisan bill, as you mentioned, with to all of these bipartisan co-sponsors to reauthorize the Legacy Restoration Fund, one of our nation's most successful investments in the National Park System. Originally passed in 2020, the Legacy Restoration Fund has invested nearly $6 billion in 400 projects across all 50 states and 5 U.S. territories.

10:53
Huffman

When Congress took that historic step of passing the first Great American Outdoors Act 5 years ago, It was a bipartisan promise to restore our national parks by addressing the deferred maintenance backlog on our public lands. The meaning of that promise looks very different at every park. In some cases, it might be new visitor centers. Elsewhere, wastewater treatment facilities, trails, campgrounds, roads, transmission lines, you name it. If the National Park System, as you mentioned, is America's best idea, funding this deferred maintenance backlog, which is often not the most glamorous part of, of the park system and our public lands, but certainly the important connective tissue that keeps everything running.

11:36
Huffman

Doing all of that is keeping faith with America's Best Idea. What all these projects have in common is that they improve visitor experiences, they make our parks safer, they help protect our treasured public lands, for the next generation. Today's markup is an important milestone for reauthorizing this fund. The legislation is a work in progress, but we are close to a bipartisan, bicameral agreement on a final bill. Even so, it's important to remember that the Legacy Restoration Fund has always just been one step towards Congress's work to fully invest in our national parks.

12:13
Huffman

It's not the only step, it is not the final step, Congress has to follow up passage of today's bill with measures that increase annual appropriations for maintenance and construction, which over decades have taken cut after cut in appropriations bills, even as our parks continue to see record-breaking visitation. We also can't make these investments matter the way they should without remembering the people that make our parks fun. Function and carry out the work that we're talking about here, our park rangers and other public servants. Over the past 18 months, every land management agency has experienced a devastating loss of staff. Parks and public lands all over the country.

12:57
Huffman

We must address agency staffing if we're going to truly keep faith with America's best idea. We must also ensure that our national parks and our public lands tell the whole story of American history, including our complicated past and our shared future, and especially doing that on the eve of our nation's 250th anniversary. Fixing our parks is a debt that we owe to the next generation. Reauthorizing the Legacy Restoration Fund is a very good first step to doing that, but it certainly is not enough. So I do look forward to working across the aisle on addressing the rest of the work that remains before us.

13:36
Bruce Westerman

And I want to thank you again, Mr. Chairman, as well as the committee staff on both sides of the aisle for working so hard to get us to this point. I yield back. Gentleman yields back. Pursuant to the markup notices, now in order to consider H.R. 9250, The Great American Outdoors Act 250, without objection, the bill will be considered as read and open to amendment at any point.

13:59
Hageman

Does any member wish to be recognized for purposes of debate on the bill? Ms. Hageman, you're recognized. Thank you, Chairman Westerman. Westerman, today I speak in support of the Great American Outdoors Act 250. It is appropriate as America turns 250 years old that Congress make progress on the preservation of our most treasured public lands.

14:25
Hageman

American exceptionalism shines across our national parks, forests, and refuges. A commitment to conservation is embedded in our American character and culture, forged in both taming the wilderness and preserving the wild nature of our homeland. Wyoming is home to many firsts: the first national park at Yellowstone, the first national forest at Shoshone, and the first national monument at Devil's Tower. Wyoming pioneered the creation of our public land system, and today I am proud to continue the tradition of carrying for our most sacred landscapes by co-sponsoring and supporting the Great American Outdoors Act 250. The first GAOA made significant progress reducing the maintenance backlog plaguing our national parks as they host millions of visitors from home and around the world.

15:14
Hageman

The Legacy Restoration Fund, established by a bipartisan legislation— legislative group, delivered almost $2 billion on an annual basis to address the deferred maintenance across our public lands. But there is still more work to be done. GAOA 2.0 builds on the historic progress of the first law to extend restoration resources across all public lands in desperate need of resources. Our public land continue— public lands continue to suffer under a more than $46 billion backlog in deferred maintenance. GAOA 2.0 will keep half the funding stream from sustained energy development while raising new funds to tackle the colossal backlog with higher fees from foreign visitors.

16:00
Hageman

GAOA 2.0 will open new avenues for public-private collaboration, authorize additional flexibility for agency spending, and enhance transparency with a new publicly searchable deferred maintenance database to be made available online. As chair of the Water, Wildlife, and Fisheries Subcommittee, I am pleased that this legislation will additionally enhance recreation and sportsman access on lands maintained by the Fish and Wildlife Service, thereby expanding the ability for all Americans to enjoy our open spaces. And finally, this bill will prohibit conservation funds from being used for new land acquisition that would inflate a federal footprint that has already proven almost too large to manage. America's 250th anniversary represents a generational opportunity to rally around what unites us. As we celebrate our common history, ideas, and fate.

16:54
Hageman

Preserving our most sacred public lands have always been at the center of our shared values, bridging divides with a universal inspiration found in the beauty of our homeland. Millions of Americans' best memories are made on our shared lands every year. The preservation of these landscapes has been indispensable to the story of our first 250 years, and it is fundamental to the prosperity of of our next 250. Thank you for the opportunity to speak on this important legislation. With that, I yield back.

17:23
Bruce Westerman

Gentlelady yields back. Is there further discussion on the bill?

17:30
Randall

Ms. Randall, you're recognized. Thank you. Sorry. Thank you so much, Chairman Westerman and Ranking Member Hoffman, for your leadership and hard work on bringing forward a bipartisan bicameral Great American Outdoors Act of 250. The Legacy Restoration Fund established in the Great American Outdoors Act of 2020 provided, as we know, much-needed funding to address decades of deferred maintenance, repair critical infrastructure, and improve visitor access and safety in national parks, wildlife refuges, and public lands.

18:07
Randall

I just— I think last time we were here had a picture of a bridge that was failing in a national park in my community. During the 5-year authorization, the Great American Outdoors Act was the largest single investment in U.S. public lands history. And this bill today extends the legacy by providing those important dedicated maintenance funding monies, expanding opportunities for public-private partnerships, and supporting outdoor recreation access. This is the work that the American people sent us here to do. And I'm so proud of this bipartisan effort.

18:46
Randall

While it is such an important step forward, we know that there is more work to do in our public lands and in our districts all across the state. In my district, the Olympic National Park welcomed more than 3.5 million visitors in 2025, and I have— I don't know if you can see it right here, but a picture of all of the pins from folks from all around the world who came to Forks, Washington, tiny, tiny Forks, Washington, home of Twilight, but also the gateway to the Olympic National Park. You can't even fit more pins in this map right now because we have so many international visitors that generated over $25 billion annually to the state of Washington because of these international visitors. This is 24 miles from the Olympic National Park, and it's a place folks come to visit when they travel to the Olympic Peninsula. People came here from almost every country in the world, and folks have been contacting my office with concerns about the impact that the steep international fees might have on local economies surrounding Olympic National Park.

No audio detected at 19:00

20:01
Randall

We're already seeing the impact of reduced Canadian tourism on the Olympic Peninsula because of our relationship with Canada under this administration, and reduced tourism dollars from a steep park entry fee will strain business communities that are already trying to stay afloat in an economy that is suffering, not just from a lack of Canadian visitors, but from the increased tariffs that are impacting businesses and from the skyrocketing fuel prices because of Trump's war with Iran. It's not just Democratic businesses I'm talking about. I went to visit a hardware store owner who was very eager to meet me with a— wearing a Hawaiian shirt with flamingos and AK-47s on it. So that I knew where he stood on gun rights. We've got a mixed bag of neighbors in Forks.

20:53
Randall

It's a real purple rural community, and that community will suffer if we see a decline in tourism. So I am excited at the funding that this bill is investing in deferred maintenance and in preservation. And I also think we have to keep working so that our neighbors from around the world can bring their economic investments to communities like Forks and rural communities near national parks all across the country. Thank you so much. The lady yields back.

21:27
Hurd

The chair recognizes the gentleman from Colorado, Mr. Hurd. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Good morning. As an original co-sponsor of H.R. 9250, The Great American Outdoors Act, I'm proud to support this legislation.

21:39
Hurd

My district in western and southern Colorado is home to some of the most extraordinary public lands in our country. We have 3 national parks, 3 national monuments, 6 national forests, and millions of acres of publicly managed land. These places belong to all Americans, but stewardship requires more than designation. It requires maintenance. Across Colorado, the deferred maintenance backlog exceeds $890 million.

22:07
Hurd

And only continues to grow. Over the last year and a half, I've seen firsthand the consequences of that backlog, from aging infrastructure and deteriorating facilities to the challenges of recovering from wildfire damage at Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park. As we approach America's 250th anniversary, we have an obligation not only to preserve these places, but to pass them on in a better condition than we found them. That is what this legislation helps accomplish. It provides resources to address longstanding maintenance needs, improve visitor experiences, support park employees, and ensure that future generations can enjoy these places as we have.

22:47
Hurd

At the same time, supporting conservation and insisting on accountability are not competing priorities. We owe taxpayers both. As these funds are invested, Congress has a responsibility to ensure that they are spent responsibly and in accordance with the public trust. This legislation advances both stewardship and accountability, and I'm proud to support it. With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield back.

23:13
Bruce Westerman

Gentleman yields back. Mr. Hawley, you're recognized.

23:19
Grijalva

Or, Hawley, you're recognized for 5 minutes. I heard Hawley. I'm like, who is that? Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would be remiss if I did not acknowledge the role my father, Congressman Raul Grijalva, played in advancing the Great American Outdoors Act.

23:32
Grijalva

Congressman Grijalva understood that our public lands are one of America's greatest treasures and that protecting them requires more than words. It requires sustained investment and stewardship. He fought to ensure that the future generations could enjoy healthy parks, public lands, outdoor spaces, regardless of where they lived or how much money they make. As his daughter and the representative for Arizona's 7th Congressional District, I'm proud to carry that forward. The responsibility to protect our public lands does not belong to one person or one generation.

24:05
Grijalva

It belongs to all of us. I remain committed to building on that legacy and continuing the work of protecting our public lands, cultural resources, and the natural heritage for generations to come. That commitment is especially important in Arizona, where public lands are woven into the identity of our economy. My state is home to some of the most iconic public lands in the country, including the Grand Canyon, Saguaro National Park, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, and Ironwood Forest National Monument, along with countless other parks, wildlife refuges, forests, wilderness areas, and culturally significant landscapes. These places are more than a destination on a map.

24:47
Grijalva

They are sacred places for tribal nations. They support local businesses and outdoor recreation economies. They provide critical wildlife habitat and connect millions of Americans to the outdoors. That's why continued investment in maintaining and protecting our public lands is so important, not just for Arizona, but for the future generations across the country. Thank you so much.

25:07
Bruce Westerman

I yield back. Mr. Halvin, I will say it was an honor to work with your father on the original Great American Outdoors Act, as well as other bills like the Explore Act. Chair recognizes the gentleman from Minnesota, Mr. Stauber. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.

25:22
Stauber

Ms. Grijalva, I will echo what the chairman just said. It was a privilege to serve with your father, and it's also a privilege to serve with you. And I thank you for your passion and your comments. I rise in strong support of H.R. 9250, The Great American Outdoors Act 250, and want to begin by thanking the chairman and the ranking member for their work in developing a good bipartisan bill that reauthorizes the Legacy Restoration Fund for another 5 years.

25:49
Stauber

Our national parks, national forests, and other public lands belong, as stated, to the American people. These public lands should be accessible and they should be well maintained. We owe this to the American people. The Legacy Restoration Fund is key to making this all possible. Just as I was proud to support its initial authorization 5 years ago, I'm proud to reauthorize and strengthen the program in the bills in the bill before us today.

26:16
Stauber

In addition to providing important funding for our national parks, national forests, and other public lands, this legislation will streamline the permitting, the permitting and completion of maintenance projects, help identify and prioritize the most important projects for completion, and finally make a dent in our deferred maintenance backlog. It also creates sustaining new revenue funding streams by codifying and expanding foreign visitor fees that bring our foreign visitor fees in line with our other countries around the world. Simply put, this legislation is a win for the American people. I also want to recognize one thing about the bulk of the revenue funding for the Legacy Restoration Fund: royalties from energy production on federal lands, notably traditional energy sources like natural gas, oil, and coal. The $1.9 billion in funding for our public lands that this bill authorizes over the next 5 years would not be possible if if we did not have robust energy production on our public lands.

27:23
Stauber

I am glad that this bill will garner strong bipartisan support from members of this committee, and I hope the underlying funding mechanism in this bill, domestic energy production, will receive that same bipartisan support. I urge my colleagues to join me in supporting H.R. 9250. Mr. Chair, yield back.

27:44
Bruce Westerman

Gentleman yields back. Is there any further discussion on the bill? Mr. Bentsch, you're recognized. Thank you, Mr. Chair.

27:50
Bentz

Thank you for this bill, which I strongly support. I just want to mention one thing about— maybe two things about language in the bill talking about the nature of an asset. And it says the term asset means any real property, and then it goes on to say including. And the reason I find that important is because in my district, Back in Oregon, there are 15.7 million acres of BLM land. And that, that land is included in the definition of asset.

28:20
Bentz

The improvement to the land or the maintenance of the land includes invasive species. Much of this land has been unfortunately invaded by different types of weeds. And it would be my hope that some of the 5% of this funding goes to helping address that incredibly important issue. I also want to mention that the bill contains a prohibition against acquisition of land or any interest in land, and that's extremely important to me, and I'm very happy for its inclusion in this bill. Mr.

28:55
Bentz

Chair, I think this is, as I mentioned when I was joining you and other members of the committee down in Arkansas a week or so ago, the importance of our national parks and other federal lands for the rejuvenation of visitors and their mental attitudes and the education of the importance of the beauty of these places. Why? Because the source of the funding is a diminishing resource, that is the royalties from oil and gas. And we should be investing, as we are, in the types of, of things that this bill focuses upon. I strongly support this bill and urge everyone else to support it also.

29:41
Bentz

Yield back.

29:43
Bruce Westerman

Gentleman yields back. Is there any further discussion on the bill?

29:48
Bruce Westerman

Hearing none, it is now in order to consider amendments to H.R. 9250. We'll now consider the amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 9250 Offered by the chair-designated Westerman 81 A&S. Without objection, the amendment is considered read.

30:02
Bruce Westerman

And open to amendment at any point. I now recognize myself. I rise in support of my bipartisan ANS to H.R. 9250. The ANS represents the results of careful bipartisan and bicameral negotiations that reflect shared priorities to modernize, maintain, and improve our national parks, public lands, and Bureau of Indian Education facilities.

30:25
Bruce Westerman

The ANS brings the House legislation into alignment with bipartisan language that passed out of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee last week by voice vote. This ANS also reflects feedback and technical assistance offered from the Trump administration. The ANS includes several improvements to the original bill, including an additional offset on licensing of DOI intellectual property and additional streamlining provisions that will help expedite project consultations under the National Historic Preservation Act. The ANS also advances several priorities from the original House legislation. This includes enhancing transparency and reporting requirements, streamlining environmental reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, allowing for the disposal of assets on the deferred maintenance list, and new prohibitions on acquiring interest in land or decommissioning Forest Service and BLM roads.

31:18
Bruce Westerman

Since passing out of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee last week, we've been engaged in productive negotiations with our Senate counterparts to ensure the House's bipartisan priorities are reflected in the legislation. As a result, the ANS now includes important provisions that prioritize funding for visitor-facing recreation improvements and sportsman's access within the Fish and Wildlife Service. This ANS also includes improvements to the existing breakdown of transportation and non-transportation funding between the Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Land Management. These new caps more accurately reflect the existing deferred maintenance backlog at each agency and will more effectively target funds toward the highest priority projects. In total, this ANS builds on the success of the first iteration of GAOA while implementing key reforms that will strengthen this important program.

32:11
Bruce Westerman

This legislation will help federal land managers get projects done more quickly and efficiently while reducing deferred maintenance and restoring access. Once again, I thank Ranking Member Huffman for his partnership on this legislation and the ANS. I'd also like to thank our colleagues in the Senate for engaging in productive negotiations. We look forward to working with them to send this bill to President Trump's desk in time for America's 250th birthday celebrations. I urge everyone to support the ANS and the underlying bill.

32:42
Huffman

I yield back the balance of my time and recognize Ranking Member Huffman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I've already touched on some of the great work that we've been able to do so far. On our bill. Together we agreed to keep fixing our parks by extending the Legacy Restoration Fund, continue to address deferred maintenance, increase access, ensure that these treasures are protected for generations to come.

33:06
Huffman

The bipartisan bill includes some important adjustments to the Legacy Restoration Fund, such as increasing funding transparency, establishing clear project selection criteria, and making it easier to get these critical dollars out the the door. You mentioned this, Mr. Chairman, but I think it's very important. The House is not acting alone here. Last week, our colleagues in the Senate marked up the America the Beautiful Act, the sister bill to this one we're considering here today. Both chambers of Congress agree that the Legacy Restoration Fund has been wildly successful and that some updates will make it even better.

33:42
Huffman

Since the Senate's markup, a bipartisan bicameral group has come together to work toward a final bill that we can send to the President's desk, and I'm happy to say that we are getting very close to agreement. The ANS contains some key differences and updates, um, including changing the name, uh, of the bill and some other things. But these updates are more than just, um, name change. Uh, the ANS includes important transparency and accountability measures, improving congressional oversight and allaying concerns that an administration might decide to use some of the funding for vanity projects or for other misaligned priorities. For example, new language adopted by the Appropriations Committee requires project lists and detailed data sheets to be submitted to Congress 2 fiscal years in advance.

34:30
Huffman

This ensures these investments are being used in the right way and toward the right types of projects envisioned under this bill. Congress is, uh, an equal branch of government after all. The ANS also includes a provision permitting the Interior Department to license and monetize certain intellectual property such as the NPS Arrowhead logo, which, uh, with proceeds going into the Legacy Restoration Fund. I remain skeptical that this authority will generate much revenue. I'm not completely sold that it's a great idea, but I understand this is a priority for the department, and this is a negotiated bill that has required some compromises.

35:10
Huffman

Finally, there are significant improvements to the International Visitors Fee proposal. The new language applies only to National Park Service sites and gives the Department of Interior flexibility to tailor these fees to individual sites, much like other fees are set under existing law. This language also encourages local stakeholder engagement in setting the fees, ensuring that tourism-dependent communities have a seat at the table in the decision-making process. Perhaps most important, The proposal makes sure that our park rangers focus on their actual jobs and, uh, it prevents turning them into immigration enforcement agents. We specifically allow tourists to self-identify at the gates rather than mandating ID checks in this legislation.

35:59
Huffman

There are also critical changes that reflect the bipartisan nature of this bill, something that the committee and the whole country needs as we get ready to celebrate our 250th birthday. I'm glad Chairman Westerman and I could work together not only on the underlying proposal and the idea of continuing to care for our parks and public lands, but also to work with our Senate counterparts to do the same. This has been a complicated journey, but our parks will be better off for these efforts. And I yield back. Gentleman yields back.

36:31
Bruce Westerman

Is there further discussion on the ANS? If there's no further discussion on the amendment, it is now in order to consider amendments to the ANS to H.R. 9250. We will now consider the amendment designated Magaziner No. 1 Offered by the gentleman from Rhode Island, Mr. Magaziner.

36:48
Magaziner

Without objection, the amendment is considered read. Mr. Magaziner, you're now recognized. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And I want to thank Chairman Westerman, Ranking Member Huffman, and all the members of the committee for this good product that's in front of us. It's a good bipartisan bill that I look forward to supporting for final passage.

37:07
Magaziner

I do plan to vote for it. America's national parks are our best idea. They are among our most important national treasures, and this bill I recognize is the product of good faith bipartisan negotiation to ensure that that legacy of our national parks continue for generations to come. My amendment, however, will strike the unnecessary an arbitrary fee on international visitors to national park sites. National parks are among our greatest treasures, and they are also tremendous economic engines for our country that create countless public and private sector jobs.

37:44
Magaziner

But last year, the Trump administration announced significant new fees on international visitors at national parks. Uh, non-citizens without an annual pass now must pay an additional $100 per person to enter the most popular national parks. So for a family of 4, that's an additional $400 just to visit one park, and an additional $680 if they want annual passes. These are significant increases. And understand, when the administration introduced these new fees on foreign tourists, they did not use that revenue to lower fees for Americans.

38:22
Magaziner

The fees for Americans stayed the same. Nor is this about funding maintenance. Certainly when we as a Congress have found trillions of dollars for tax cuts for the very rich, tens of billions of dollars for war in the Middle East, hundreds of millions of dollars for the president's ballroom, we can find other ways to fund deferred maintenance than an arbitrary fee increase. Um, I'm introducing this amendment though just to raise the larger point. That these visitor fees are introduced in a context where the administration is working actively to dissuade tourism from other countries.

38:59
Magaziner

They increased visa fees significantly. They increased bond requirements as much as $10,000 or $15,000 for dozens of countries, making it virtually impossible for people to come here to visit, even for short tourist stays. And this is a massive loss for the American tourism and hospitality industry. This isn't just about trying to do right by foreign visitors. This is about supporting American jobs and supporting American businesses.

39:30
Magaziner

Visitors don't just go to the parks. They stay in hotels. They eat at restaurants. They visit small businesses. They enjoy the towns around them.

39:37
Magaziner

There are countless tour companies and bus operators that help tourists access national parks. In 2024, more than 300 million park visitors spent an estimated $29 billion supporting more than 300,000 jobs. These foreign tourist fees that the administration has unilaterally imposed are bad for American businesses, bad for American workers whose livelihoods depend on the tourism and hospitality industry. Colleagues, this month the United States is hosting the World Cup, reminding us that foreign tourism is good. Good for business, good for American jobs, good to promote the American brand to the world.

40:24
Magaziner

And while some in the administration are dead set on making it as hard as possible for foreign tourists to come to the United States, they are only hurting American businesses and American workers. We don't need the arbitrary and unnecessary fees, nor should we encourage it. So my amendment simply would strike the language having to do with the foreign visitor fee. I ask my colleagues to support the amendment, and I look forward to supporting the overall bill later today. With that, I yield back.

40:52
Bruce Westerman

Gentleman yields back. Mr. McClintock, you're recognized. Mr. Chairman, I strongly support this amendment. As Mr. Magaziner has said, the foreign fees are considerable. It's $400 for a family of 4.

41:03
Bruce Westerman

4, Which can often make the difference between their choosing to spend their tourism dollars in the United States as opposed to all of the other countries competing for their dollar. When you tax something, you get less of it. When you tax foreign tourism, you get less foreign tourism. It's true, foreign tourists don't pay American taxes, but their tourism supports all of the gateway community businesses that do pay those taxes and provide provide the jobs for everyone working in the hotel industry, the restaurants, all of the other tourist activities that foreign tourism supports.

41:46
Bruce Westerman

This is simply economic self-sabotage, and Mr. Magazine's amendment is absolutely correct, and I strongly support it. Gentleman yields back.

41:59
Dexter

Mr. Huffman, you're recognized. Go ahead. Ms. Dexter. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Congressman Magazine, for offering this amendment today.

42:07
Dexter

I want to start by saying first that I am incredibly supportive of the work that you all have done in the bipartisan nature of this bill. The Legacy Restoration Fund is something Oregonians have benefited from enormously. We've seen iconic projects like the Trillium Lake Boardwalk, which has already received Legacy Restoration Fund dollars. It's visible proof that this program delivers. But there's more to be done, and communities surrounding Mount Hood are continuing or counting on reauthorizing this work.

42:38
Dexter

The economic benefits are documented and measurable. In 2024, Oregon, Oregon's recreational sites generated $131 million in economic output, including through visitor spending at hotels, restaurants, small businesses in gateway communities. And that directly supports Oregon jobs, which is exactly why I support the amendment to strike Section 3 of this bill, which would implement a new surcharge on foreign tourists visiting our national parks. At a time when Oregon's tourism industry is already facing headwinds, I'm concerned about the signal that this sends to foreign tourists who bolster our local economies in our gateway communities. I'm also, frankly, concerned about something else.

43:21
Dexter

At a time when families in my district are living with real and considerable fear about being detained, I worry that this provision gives the administration yet another window into people's citizenship status. One of, um, the things that I am concerned about— I know the language has been softened, but that people will be racially profiled as they're coming in. Our Canadian tourists are less likely than our Mexican tourists to be asked about their citizenship status, and that absolutely is counter to everything that I believe about America and our ability to welcome everyone into our borders, to visit, to stay, and to have a promise of a new future. So I will deter— I will defer to the group on this. I absolutely will support the underlying bill.

44:11
Dexter

I'm very grateful for the work that's been done, but I think this is a mistake. I want to make, you know, a flag for our members who are not sitting on this committee and paying close attention to the discussions here that there are concerns about what we're doing here despite the bipartisan and excellent work that's happened. Our national parks are a true treasure, and in this committee, we all believe, I think, it's the best idea that our country has had. So if we truly believe that, we should save our safe spaces for everyone to visit without fear. And thank you again to Congressman Magaziner for offering this amendment.

44:50
Huffman

And I yield back. Gentlelady yields back. Mr. Huffman, you're recognized. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I want to thank my colleagues on both sides of the aisle for their comments on this amendment.

45:02
Huffman

And I do believe the gentleman from Rhode Island is raising some important issues and is coming from a very legitimate place of concern. Foreign visitors are an important revenue stream in park communities all over the country. I represent some of those communities. They're not something we want to disparage. This is not something we want to punish or penalize.

45:26
Huffman

And there are competing equities that have to be weighed when we talk about the subject of a foreign visitor fee. The reason I cannot support this amendment, with all due respect, is that I think that we have worked things out in the ANS in a way that allows us to weigh those equities and to strike the right balance and make sure that we do get it right. And I also want to make the point that international visitor or foreign tourist fees are common practice in other countries. This is not a radical concept. This is consistent with what happens around the world.

46:01
Huffman

The revenues are used to help protect treasured public places for future generations, as they should be. So doing the same here, if we get it right, is a way to invest in the future of our national parks for both future generations of Americans and visitors from around the world who we want to continue to enjoy these places. But like most things associated with the Trump administration, the rollout of foreign tourist fees at select sites earlier this year did not come without controversy. We're touching on some of that in this discussion. The decision-making process behind the fee structure was opaque.

46:40
Huffman

Implementation has been uneven, and we still haven't even seen any data on how these new fees have impacted visitation. So these are real concerns. This clearly needs improvement. I even signed a letter earlier this year asking for the program to be paused until we had that information. And that's why I am really glad that the language in the ANS helps us to move things forward in the right direction.

47:04
Huffman

The ANS first retains an important definition that limits the fee to people visiting the United States on a tourist visa, excluding permanent residents and other non-citizens who are in the country for longer periods. Language also provides more leeway to tailor the surcharge amount to individual sites and gives DOI the flexibility to suspend it or modify it. And unlike the underlying bill, uh, there is no set price in this legislation for the fee. Um, this is left to the agency's discretion based on feedback and outreach to gateway communities and other important stakeholders. And then finally, the ANS includes language on self-attestation.

47:49
Huffman

This is important so that we can avoid ID checks or anything that looks like immigration enforcement at our national parks. Again, important changes. I absolutely will not support doing anything to turn our parks into immigration enforcement zones, and we shouldn't discourage people from around the world from visiting our parks here in the United States. They are one of the best advertisements that our country has around the world for what we stand for. I also understand my colleague's concerns, as I've mentioned, but I think the negotiated language does strike the right balance and moves us in the right direction.

48:28
Huffman

It's a practice that many other countries already use, and we've now added some guardrails and standards that were missing from the administration's rollout over the past year. So I feel comfortable with the way we've struck this balance. I intend to oppose the amendment with due respect to my colleagues and to support the ANS. Yield back. Gentleman yields back.

48:52
Bruce Westerman

I recognize myself and also want to thank Representative Magaziner for his constructive work and being an original co-sponsor. I do oppose this amendment because I think it's a matter of fairness when you look at the big picture. If you look at the revenue streams that go to take care of our parks and public lands on the national parks, there's, there's two streams. Americans pay their taxes. Congress appropriates money to the Department of Interior, and that's one revenue stream.

49:24
Bruce Westerman

The other revenue stream are visitor fees to the parks. And right now there's no difference in— well, except for the pilot program this administration is running, there's been no difference in foreign visitors fees. And American citizen visitors' fees. As Ranking Member Huffman described so well, this is a practice that's done in many other countries to charge higher fees for foreign visitors. This is also something that we, we worked hard on to get to a bipartisan agreement that we think gives an opportunity to, to implement this program in a fair way.

50:05
Bruce Westerman

And it takes local communities' interests into account as well. You know, up until this year, when the administration initiated a pilot program, a busload of foreign visitors could visit a— one of our national parks for a week for less than an American family could visit the parks. So again, this is a matter of fairness. We We're committing a lot of funding to these parks over a 5-year period, and this will help offset some of the funding stream that we're working on to make sure that we can maintain and take care of these parks. Oppose the amendment.

50:46
Bruce Westerman

I encourage my colleagues to oppose it, and I yield back. Is there any further discussion on the amendment?

50:56
Bruce Westerman

If there's no further discussion, the question is on the amendment offered by Mr. Magaziner, designated Magaziner Number 1. All those in favor signify by saying aye. Those opposed, no. The opinion of the chair, the noes have it, and the amendment is not agreed to.

51:14
Bruce Westerman

Thanks. Thanks, sir. Are there any further amendments?

51:22
Bruce Westerman

Seeing none, the question now occurs on the amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 9250 Offered by the chair-designated Westerman, 81A and S. All those in favor signify by saying aye.

51:35
Bruce Westerman

Aye. Those opposed, no. In the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it. The amendment in the nature of a substitute is adopted.

51:44
Bruce Westerman

The question now occurs on reporting H.R. 9250 As amended to the House with the recommendation that the bill be favorably approved. All those in favor signify by saying aye.

51:54
Bruce Westerman

Those opposed, no. In the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it, and the bill is ordered reported. The bill as amended is ordered reported to the House with the recommendation that it be favorably approved. Without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table. Mr. Huffman, do you have an announcement?

52:14
Bruce Westerman

Mr. Chair, I give notice of my intention to file supplemental additional dissenting or minority views on the measure just considered under House Rule 11, Clause 2L. This notice extends to all members. Without objection, so ordered. I ask unanimous consent that the staff be allowed to make any technical and conforming changes to the documents the committee just adopted, subject to the approval of the minority.

52:36
Bruce Westerman

Without objection, so ordered. If there's no further business, the committee stands adjourned. Way to go!

Speakers in this transcript

BW

Bruce Westerman

Pending

Chairman of the full committee · House Committee on Natural Resources

KH

Kyle Huffman

Pending

Public Affairs / Military Liaison · JBER Public Affairs

RK

Randall Kawalki

Pending

Assemblymember · Matanuska-Susitna Borough Assembly