Utah State Parks Adjustment Act
This act requires the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service to convey certain federal lands to Utah for inclusion in the following Utah State Parks: Antelope Island State Park, Wasatch Mountain State Park, and Fremont Indian State Park. Utah must use the lands for public purposes, including parks, campgrounds, recreation, and permitted livestock grazing. Utah must also cover any costs relating to the conveyances for the Antelope Island State Park and the Wasatch Mountain State Park, including costs for surveys and other administrative costs. As a condition of the conveyance to the Fremont Indian State Park, the Forest Service must (1) reserve easements to the conveyed land to be included in Fremont Indian State Park for all National Forest System roads and trails that originate at, terminate at, or traverse the conveyed land; and (2) convey to Utah only certain water rights that provide water to the Castle Rock Campground and the Belknap Historic Guard Station interpretive site. The act also authorizes the Forest Service to enter into an agreement with Utah with respect to additional terms and conditions applicable to the conveyance, such as maintenance of roads and trails.
Show change summaryHide change summary
The revised version makes three substantive changes: (1) it adds explicit language requiring Utah to pay all conveyance costs for the Antelope Island transfer, including surveys and administrative expenses; (2) it updates the map date for the Wasatch Mountain State Park conveyance from September 13, 2023 to May 3, 2024, and adds a similar cost-payment requirement for that transfer; and (3) it clarifies the structure of the Antelope Island section by dividing it into numbered subsections. The core conveyance terms and conditions remain unchanged.
Show change summaryHide change summary
There are no substantive policy changes between the two versions. The bills appear to be identical in all their provisions, including the conveyance terms for Antelope Island State Park, Wasatch Mountain State Park, and Fremont Indian State Park, as well as cost allocations, easement reservations, water rights, survey requirements, and reversionary interest conditions.
Show change summaryHide change summary
Summary
These two versions of the Utah State Parks Adjustment Act are identical. There are no substantive policy changes between the version placed on the calendar and the enrolled bill. Both versions contain the same provisions authorizing the transfer of federal land to Utah for three state parks (Antelope Island, Wasatch Mountain, and Fremont Indian), with the same timelines, cost-sharing arrangements, easement reservations, and reversionary conditions.
The President has signed this bill. It is now the law of the land.
What changed in the latest version · AI-generated
Summary
These two versions of the Utah State Parks Adjustment Act are identical. There are no substantive policy changes between the version placed on the calendar and the enrolled bill.…
Summary compares to previous version · Enrolled Bill on Apr 16, 2026
Who introduced this
Ask AI About This Bill
Get plain-language answers with direct quotes from the bill text.
Your Representatives
Enter your address to see how your representatives voted on this bill.
Your address is only used to find your district and is never saved. See how it works
Votes
Public Opinion
No votes yet — be the first to weigh in.
to cast your vote
Your voice matters — let representatives know where you stand.
Comments
No comments yet. to be the first to weigh in.