- Record: Senate Floor
- Section type: Amendments
- Chamber: Senate
- Date: June 24, 2026
- Congress: 119th Congress
- Why this source matters: This section came from the Senate floor portion of the record.
SA 6415. Mr. WYDEN (for himself and Mr. Merkley) submitted an amendment intended to be proposed by him to the bill S. 4784, to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2027 for military activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes; which was ordered to lie on the table; as follows:
At the end of subtitle G of title X, add the following:
SEC. 1094. OREGON RECREATION ENHANCEMENT.
(a) Definitions.—In this section:
(1) Secretary.—The term “Secretary” means—
(A) the Secretary of the Interior, with respect to public
land administered by the Secretary of the Interior; or
(B) the Secretary of Agriculture, with respect to National
Forest System land.
(2) State.—The term “State” means the State of Oregon.
(b) Rogue Canyon and Molalla Recreation Areas, Oregon.—
(1) Designation.—For the purposes of protecting,
conserving, and enhancing the unique and nationally important
recreational, ecological, scenic, cultural, watershed, and
fish and wildlife values of the areas, the following areas in
the State are designated as recreation areas for management
by the Secretary in accordance with paragraph (3):
(A) Rogue canyon recreation area.—The approximately 98,150
acres of Bureau of Land Management land within the boundary
generally depicted as the “Rogue Canyon Recreation Area” on
the map entitled “Rogue Canyon Recreation Area Wild Rogue
Wilderness Additions” and dated November 19, 2019, which is
designated as the “Rogue Canyon Recreation Area”.
(B) Molalla recreation area.—The approximately 29,884
acres of Bureau of Land Management land within the boundary
generally depicted on the map entitled “Molalla Recreation
Area” and dated September 26, 2018, which is designated as
the “Molalla Recreation Area”.
(2) Maps and legal descriptions.—
(A) In general.—As soon as practicable after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall prepare a map and
legal description of each recreation area designated by
paragraph (1).
(B) Effect.—The maps and legal descriptions prepared under
subparagraph (A) shall have the same force and effect as if
included in this Act, except that the Secretary may correct
any minor errors in the maps and legal descriptions.
(C) Public availability.—The maps and legal descriptions
prepared under subparagraph (A) shall be available for public
inspection in the appropriate offices of the Bureau of Land
Management.
(3) Administration.—
(A) Applicable law.—The Secretary shall administer each
recreation area designated by paragraph (1)—
(i) in a manner that conserves, protects, and enhances the
purposes for which the recreation area is established; and
(ii) in accordance with—
(I) this subsection;
(II) the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (43
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.); and
(III) other applicable laws.
(B) Uses.—The Secretary shall only allow those uses of a
recreation area designated by paragraph (1) that are
consistent with the purposes for which the recreation area is
established.
(C) Wildfire risk assessment.—Not later than 280 days
after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in
consultation with the Oregon Governor's Council on Wildfire
Response, shall conduct a wildfire risk assessment that
covers—
(i) the recreation areas designated by paragraph (1);
(ii) the Wild Rogue Wilderness; and
(iii) any Federal land adjacent to an area described in
clause (i) or (ii).
(D) Wildfire mitigation plan.—
(i) In general.—Not later than 1 year after the date on
which the wildfire risk assessment is conducted under
subparagraph (C), the Secretary shall develop a wildfire
mitigation plan, based on the wildfire risk assessment, that
identifies, evaluates, and prioritizes treatments and other
management activities that can be implemented on the Federal
land covered by the wildfire risk assessment (other than
Federal land designated as a unit of the National Wilderness
Preservation System) to mitigate wildfire risk to communities
located near the applicable Federal land.
(ii) Plan components.—The wildfire mitigation plan
developed under clause (i) shall include—
(I) vegetation management projects (including mechanical
treatments to reduce hazardous fuels and improve forest
health and resiliency);
(II) evacuation routes for communities located near the
applicable Federal land, which shall be developed in
consultation with State and local fire agencies; and
(III) strategies for public dissemination of emergency
evacuation plans and routes.
(iii) Applicable law.—The wildfire mitigation plan under
clause (i) shall be developed in accordance with—
(I) this subsection; and
(II) any other applicable law.
(E) Road construction.—
(i) In general.—Except as provided in clause (ii) or as
the Secretary determines necessary for public safety, no new
permanent or temporary roads shall be constructed (other than
the repair and maintenance of existing roads) within a
recreation area designated by paragraph (1).
(ii) Temporary roads.—Consistent with the purposes of this
section, the Secretary may construct temporary roads within a
recreation area designated by paragraph (1) to implement the
wildfire mitigation plan developed under subparagraph (D),
unless the temporary road would be within an area designated
as a unit of the National Wilderness Preservation System.
(iii) Effect.—Nothing in this subparagraph affects the
administration by the Secretary of the Molalla Forest Road in
accordance with applicable resource management plans.
(F) Effect on wildfire management.—Nothing in this
subsection alters the authority of the Secretary (in
cooperation with other Federal, State, and local agencies, as
appropriate) to conduct wildland fire operations within a
recreation area designated by paragraph (1), consistent with
the purposes of this section.
(G) Withdrawal.—Subject to valid existing rights, all
Federal surface and subsurface land within a recreation area
designated by paragraph (1) is withdrawn from all forms of—
(i) entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land
laws;
(ii) location, entry, and patent under the mining laws; and
(iii) disposition under all laws pertaining to mineral
leasing, geothermal leasing, or mineral materials.
(H) No effect on wilderness areas.—Any wilderness area
located within a recreation area designated by paragraph (1)
shall be administered in accordance with the Wilderness Act
(16 U.S.C. 1131 et seq.).
(4) Adjacent management.—Nothing in this subsection
creates any protective perimeter or buffer zone around a
recreation area designated by paragraph (1).
(c) Expansion of Wild Rogue Wilderness Area.—
(1) Definitions.—In this subsection:
(A) Map.—The term “map” means the map entitled “Rogue
Canyon Recreation Area Wild Rogue Wilderness Additions” and
dated November 19, 2019.
(B) Wilderness additions.—The term “Wilderness
additions” means the land added to the Wild Rogue Wilderness
under paragraph (2)(A).
(2) Expansion of wild rogue wilderness area.—
(A) Expansion.—The approximately 59,512 acres of Federal
land in the State generally depicted on the map as “Proposed
Wilderness” shall be added to and administered as part of
the Wild Rogue Wilderness in accordance with the Endangered
American Wilderness Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 1132 note; Public
Law 95-237), except that—
(i) the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of
Agriculture shall administer the Federal land under their
respective jurisdiction; and
(ii) any reference in that Act to the Secretary of
Agriculture shall be considered to be a reference to the
Secretary of Agriculture or the Secretary of the Interior, as
applicable.
(B) Map; legal description.—
(i) In general.—As soon as practicable after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall prepare a map and
legal description of the wilderness area designated by
subparagraph (A).
(ii) Force of law.—The map and legal description filed
under clause (i) shall have the same force and effect as if
included in this subsection, except that the Secretary may
correct typographical errors in the map and legal
description.
(iii) Public availability.—The map and legal description
filed under clause (i) shall be on file and available for
public inspection in the appropriate offices of the Bureau of
Land Management and Forest Service.
(C) Fire, insects, and disease.—The Secretary may take
such measures within the Wilderness additions as the
Secretary determines to be necessary for the control of fire,
insects, and disease, in accordance with section 4(d)(1) of
the Wilderness Act (16 U.S.C. 1133(d)(1)).
(D) Withdrawal.—Subject to valid existing rights, the
Wilderness additions are withdrawn from all forms of—
(i) entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land
laws;
(ii) location, entry, and patent under the mining laws; and
(iii) disposition under all laws pertaining to mineral
leasing, geothermal leasing, or mineral materials.
(E) Tribal rights.—Nothing in this paragraph alters,
modifies, enlarges, diminishes, or abrogates the treaty
rights of any Indian Tribe.
(d) Withdrawal of Federal Land, Curry County and Josephine
County, Oregon.—
(1) Definitions.—In this subsection:
(A) Eligible federal land.—The term “eligible Federal
land” means—
(i) any federally owned land or interest in land depicted
on the Maps as within the Hunter Creek and Pistol River
Headwaters Withdrawal Proposal or the Rough and Ready and
Baldface Creeks Mineral Withdrawal Proposal; or
(ii) any land or interest in land located within such
withdrawal proposals that is acquired by the Federal
Government after the date of enactment of this Act.
(B) Maps.—The term “Maps” means—
(i) the Bureau of Land Management map entitled “Hunter
Creek and Pistol River Headwaters Withdrawal Proposal” and
dated January 12, 2015; and
(ii) the Bureau of Land Management map entitled “Rough and
Ready and Baldface Creeks Mineral Withdrawal Proposal” and
dated January 12, 2015.
(2) Withdrawal.—Subject to valid existing rights, the
eligible Federal land is withdrawn from all forms of—
(A) entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land
laws;
(B) location, entry, and patent under the mining laws; and
(C) operation under the mineral leasing and geothermal
leasing laws.
(3) Availability of maps.—Not later than 30 days after the
date of enactment of this Act, the Maps shall be made
available to the public at each appropriate office of the
Bureau of Land Management.
(4) Existing uses not affected.—Except with respect to the
withdrawal under paragraph (2), nothing in this subsection
restricts recreational uses, hunting, fishing, forest
management activities, or other authorized uses allowed on
the date of enactment of this Act on the eligible Federal
land in accordance with applicable law.