Heritage area debate
The House Natural Resources Committee spent the bulk of the time discussing the creation of a national heritage area in Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia, as Republican members were split on how the bill could affect private property rights.
The "Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area Act," H.R. 319, from Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), would create a new national heritage area in the Route 15 corridor through Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. The area would include historically significant sites such as Gettysburg and Harpers Ferry, W.Va.
The committee approved a Democratic substitute measure replacing the property rights language in the bill with the "standard" property rights provisions in other heritage area bills by voice vote, but first rejected two GOP amendments on near party-line 15-22 votes.
One amendment would have prohibited the use of funds authorized in the bill for lobbying -- Democrats said the language was unnecessary. The second amendment would have required landowners in the heritage area to be notified of their inclusion via first-class mail.
The House Natural Resources Committee spent the bulk of the time discussing the creation of a national heritage area in Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia, as Republican members were split on how the bill could affect private property rights.
The "Journey Through Hallowed Ground National Heritage Area Act," H.R. 319, from Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), would create a new national heritage area in the Route 15 corridor through Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. The area would include historically significant sites such as Gettysburg and Harpers Ferry, W.Va.
The committee approved a Democratic substitute measure replacing the property rights language in the bill with the "standard" property rights provisions in other heritage area bills by voice vote, but first rejected two GOP amendments on near party-line 15-22 votes.
One amendment would have prohibited the use of funds authorized in the bill for lobbying -- Democrats said the language was unnecessary. The second amendment would have required landowners in the heritage area to be notified of their inclusion via first-class mail.
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