Contents
To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes
To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes
Act Details
To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes was a proposal (now, a piece of legislation) introduced on 2000-02-15 in the House of Commons and Senate respectively of the 106 United States Congress by Mack Bono in relation with: Antennas, California, Commerce, Corporations, Land transfers, Law, Liability (Law), National forests, Public lands and natural resources, Radio stations, Science, technology, communications.
To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes became law (1) in the United States on 2000-11-06. It was referred to the following Committee(s): (2)
House Resources (HSII)
sub Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health (sub 20)
Sponsor
Mack Bono, Representative from California, district 44
The proposal had the following cosponsors:
Don Young, Representative, from Alaska
Act Overview
- Number: 3657 (3)
- Official Title as Introduced: To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes (4)
- Date First Introduced: 2000-02-15
- Sponsor Name: Don Young
- Assignment Process: See Committe Assignments (5)
- Latest Major Activity/Action: Enacted
- Date Enacted (signed, in general (6), by President): 2000-11-06
- Type: hr (7)
- Main Topic: Public lands and natural resources
- Related Bills: (8)
s2111-106, Reason: related, Type: bill
- Summary of To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes: Govtrack. Authored by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) of the Library of Congress.
- Primary Source: Congress Website
Text of the To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes
Directs the Secretary of Agriculture to convey to KATY 101.3 F.M. a specified parcel of real property located within the San Bernardino National Forest in Riverside County California.Requires the Secretary upon the receipt of a specified payment by KATY to release KATY from any and all claims of the United States arising from the occupancy and use of the San Bernardino National Forest by KATY for communication site purposes. Declares that by acceptance of such conveyance KATY and its successors and assigns will indemnify and hold harmless the United States for any and all liability to General Telephone and Electronics Corporation (GTE) KATY and any third party that is associated with such parcel including liability for any buildings or personal property on it belonging to GTE and any other third parties. Requires all funds received pursuant to this Act to be deposited in the fund established under the Sisk Act and to remain available to the Secretary for the acquisition of lands waters and interests in land for inclusion in the San Bernardino National Forest.Amends a certain receipts Act to: (1) authorize the Secretary to acquire by purchase lands real property or interests in lands within the boundaries of the San Bernardino Cleveland and Los Angeles National Forests California; (2) require such lands real property or interests to be managed for National Forest System purposes; and (3) provide for a specified percentage of the monies otherwise payable to California for the benefit of San Bernardino County to be available to be appropriated for expenditure in furtherance of such Act.(Sec. 2) Amends the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument Act of 2000 to: (1) eliminate the requirement that the Secretary of the Interior submit legal descriptions of the boundaries of the National Monument to the Senate Committee on Agriculture Nutrition and Forestry; and (2) allow the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Interior to enter into certain cooperative agreements and shared management arrangements with the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians (currently with any person including such Indians).(Sec. 3) Amends the Santo Domingo Pueblo Claims Settlement Act of 2000 to direct the Secretary of the Interior to acquire by exchange specified New Mexico trust lands and interests including improvements mineral rights and water rights.Requires the Secretary to convey such lands to the Pueblo of Santo Domingo and grants the Pueblo the exclusive right to acquire such lands.Permits the Pueblo to enter into agreements to exchange restricted lands for lands title to which was at issue in Pueblo of Santo Domingo v. Rael and deems to be approved any land exchange agreements between the Pueblo and any of the parties to such action that are executed not later than December 31 2001.Approves all agreements transactions and conveyances authorized by specified boundary dispute resolutions as enacted by the Tribal Council of the Pueblo de Cochiti and the Tribal Council of the Pueblo.
Analysis
No analysis (criticism, advocacy, etc.) about To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes submitted yet.
Antennas
California
Commerce
Corporations
Land transfers
Law
Liability (Law)
National forests
Public lands and natural resources
Radio stations
Science, technology, communications
Bill Notes
- [Note 1] An Act (like To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes) or a resolution cannot become a law in the United States until it has been approved (passed) in identical form by both the House of Representatives and the Senate, as well as signed by the President (but see (5)). If the two bodys of the Congress versions of a bill are not identical, one of the bodies might decide to take a further vote to adopt the bill (see more about the Congress process here). An Act may be pass in identical form with or without amendments and with or without conference. (see more about Enrollment).
- [Note 2] Proposals are referred to committees for preliminary consideration, then debated, amended, and passed (or rejected) by the full House or Senate. To prevent endless shuttling of bills between the House and Senate, bills like To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes are referred to joint committees made up of members of both houses.
- [Note 3] For more information regarding this legislative proposal, go to THOMAS, select “Bill Number,” search on (To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes)
- [Note 4] To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes. The current official title of a bill is always present, assigned at introduction (for example, in this case, on 2000-02-15) and can be revised any time. This type of titles are sentences.
- [Note 5] The Act is referred to the appropriate committee by the Speaker of any of the two Houses. Bills are placed on the calendar of the committee to which they have been assigned. See Assignment Process.
- [Note 6] Regarding exceptions to President´s approval, a bill that is not signed (returned unsigned) by the President can still become law if at lest two thirds of each of the two bodys of the Congress votes to pass it, which is an infrequent case. See also Presidential Veto.
- [Note 7] Legislative Proposal types can be: hr, hres, hjres, hconres, s, sres, sjres, sconres. An Act originating in the Senate is designated by the letter “S”, and a bill originating from the House of Representatives begins with “H.R.”, followed, in both cases, by its individual number which it retains throughout all its parliamentary process.
- [Note 8] For information regarding related bill/s to To provide for the conveyance of a small parcel of public domain land in the San Bernardino National Forest in the State of California, and for other purposes, go to THOMAS.
Further Reading
- “How our laws are made”, Edward F Willett; Jack Brooks, Washington, U.S. G.P.O.
- “To make all laws : the Congress of the United States, 1789-1989”, James H Hutson- Washington, Library of Congress.
- “Bills introduced and laws enacted: selected legislative statistics, 1947-1990”, Rozanne M Barry; Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service.