To establish the Shenandoah Mountain National Scenic Area in the State of Virginia, and for other purposes.
Summary
What This Bill Does
Establishes the Shenandoah Mountain National Scenic Area across about 92,562 acres in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, protects scenic, water, wildlife, old-growth, and Cow Knob salamander habitat values, preserves existing access and nonmotorized recreation, creates a trail-planning requirement, withdraws the area from mining and new energy development, and designates several new wilderness areas.
Who Benefits and How
Hikers, cyclists, hunters, anglers, and other nonmotorized recreation users benefit from a designated National Scenic Area with a required trail plan, sustainable trail management, and a Tillman Road corridor trail connection outside the Little River Wilderness. Conservation groups benefit from protection for 92,562 acres, wilderness additions, old-growth development potential, Cow Knob salamander habitat, water quality, and wildlife habitat. Municipal water users benefit because existing dams, reservoirs, and water infrastructure are preserved while the area must be managed to maintain and enhance water quality. Private landowners within the boundary benefit from explicit access protections and a no-buffer-zone rule for nearby land outside the scenic area.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Forest Service managers must develop a National Forest System trail plan within two years, report to Congress, amend the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests management plan, administer recreation, preserve water quality, and manage new wilderness areas under the Wilderness Act. Timber, mining, geothermal, renewable-energy, utility-corridor, and new-road development interests bear new limits because the bill bars most timber harvest, withdraws federal land from mineral and energy laws, prohibits new roads, and restricts motorized travel to existing roads outside wilderness. Some recreation users bear limits where use must remain consistent with scenic-area purposes and wilderness rules.
Key Provisions
- Establishes the Shenandoah Mountain National Scenic Area on about 92,562 acres of National Forest System land.
- Protects scenic quality, water resources, wildlife habitat, Cow Knob salamander habitat, old-growth forest potential, and designated wilderness areas.
- Requires a National Forest System trail plan and a report to Congress within two years.
- Preserves existing public-road access, private-property access, existing dams and reservoirs, and municipal water infrastructure.
- Prohibits new roads, most timber harvest, mining-law entry, mineral leasing, geothermal leasing, renewable-energy development, new utility corridors, and new communications sites.
- Adds new wilderness areas to the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Establishes the Shenandoah Mountain National Scenic Area across about 92,562 acres in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, protects scenic, water, wildlife, old-growth, and Cow Knob salamander habitat values, preserves existing access and nonmotorized recreation, creates a trail-planning requirement, withdraws the area from mining and new energy development, and designates several new wilderness areas.
Key Policy Areas
Public Lands, Wilderness, Outdoor Recreation, Virginia
Primary Purpose
Establishes the Shenandoah Mountain National Scenic Area across about 92,562 acres in the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, protects scenic, water, wildlife, old-growth, and Cow Knob salamander habitat values, preserves existing access and nonmotorized recreation, creates a trail-planning requirement, withdraws the area from mining and new energy development, and designates several new wilderness areas.
Policy Domains
House resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Nonmotorized recreation users
- Conservation groups
- Municipal water users
- Private landowners
- Cow Knob salamander habitat
Identified Costs
- Forest Service managers
- Timber development interests
- Mining interests
- Renewable-energy developers
- Motorized recreation users
Sponsors
Tim Kaine
D-VA | Primary Sponsor
Legislative Progress
ReportedReported by Mr. Boozman, without amendment
Mr. Kaine (for himself and Mr. Warner) introduced the following …
Mr. Kaine (for himself and Mr. Warner) introduced the following …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Backcountry hikers, Motorized recreation users, Nonmotorized recreation users
Positive-direction: Backcountry hikers, Nonmotorized recreation users
Negative-direction: Motorized recreation users
Forest Service managers, Forest Service wilderness managers, Timber development interests
Conservation groups, Wilderness conservation groups
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "secretary"
- → Secretary of Agriculture acting through the Forest Service
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology