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Wilderness Act of 1964
The Wilderness Act was signed by President Lyndon Johnson on September
3, 1964. The measure, which was originally introduced in 1956, went
through 18 congressional hearings and 66 revisions before finally
becoming law. The act created our National Wilderness Preservation
System and the legal means by which Congress could add individual
areas of public land to that system. The NWPS currently includes over
105 million acres of public land.
Wilderness Act of 1964
Public Law 88-577 (16 U.S. C. 1131-1136)
88th Congress, Second Session
September 3, 1964
AN ACT
To establish a National Wilderness
Preservation System for the permanent good of the whole people,
and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the
Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled,
SHORT TITLE
SEC. 1. This Act may be cited as the
"Wilderness Act".
WILDERNESS SYSTEM ESTABLISHED STATEMENT
OF POLICY
SEC. 2. (a) In order to assure that
an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement
and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all
areas within the United States and its possessions, leaving
no lands designated for preservation and protection in their
natural condition, it is hereby declared to be the policy
of the Congress to secure for the American people of present
and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource
of wilderness. For this purpose there is hereby established
a National Wilderness Preservation System to be composed of
federally owned areas designated by Congress as "wilderness
areas", and these shall be administered for the use and
enjoyment of the American people in such manner as will leave
them unimpaired for future use and enjoyment as wilderness,
and so as to provide for the protection of these areas, the
preservation of their wilderness character, and for the gathering
and dissemination of information regarding their use and enjoyment
as wilderness; and no Federal lands shall be designated as
"wilderness areas" except as provided for in this
Act or by a subsequent Act.
(b) The inclusion of an area in the National
Wilderness Preservation System notwithstanding, the area shall
continue to be managed by the Department and agency having
jurisdiction thereover immediately before its inclusion in
the National Wilderness Preservation System unless otherwise
provided by Act of Congress. No appropriation shall be available
for the payment of expenses or salaries for the administration
of the National Wilderness Preservation System as a separate
unit nor shall any appropriations be available for additional
personnel stated as being required solely for the purpose
of managing or administering areas solely because they are
included within the National Wilderness Preservation System.
DEFINITION OF WILDERNESS
(c) A wilderness, in contrast with those areas
where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby
recognized as an area where the earth and its community of
life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor
who does not remain. An area of wilderness is further defined
to mean in this Act an area of undeveloped Federal land retaining
its primeval character and influence, without permanent improvements
or human habitation, which is protected and managed so as
to preserve its natural conditions and which (1) generally
appears to have been affected primarily by the forces of nature,
with the imprint of man's work substantially unnoticeable;
(2) has outstanding opportunities for solitude or a primitive
and unconfined type of recreation; (3) has at least five thousand
acres of land or is of sufficient size as to make practicable
its preservation and use in an unimpaired condition; and (4)
may also contain ecological, geological, or other features
of scientific, educational, scenic, or historical value.
NATIONAL WILDERNESS PRESERVATION
SYSTEM--EXTENT OF SYSTEM
SEC. 3. (a) All areas within the national
forests classified at least 30 days before the effective date
of this Act by the Secretary of Agriculture or the Chief of
the Forest Service as "wilderness", "wild",
or "canoe" are hereby designated as wilderness areas.
The Secretary of Agriculture shall-
(1) Within one year after the effective date
of this Act, file a map and legal description of each wilderness
area with the Interior and Insular Affairs Committees of the
United States Senate and the House of Representatives, and
such descriptions shall have the same force and effect as
if included in this Act: Provided, however, That correction
of clerical and typographical errors in such legal descriptions
and maps may be made.
(2) Maintain, available to the public, records
pertaining to said wilderness areas, including maps and legal
descriptions, copies of regulations governing them, copies
of public notices of, and reports submitted to Congress regarding
pending additions, eliminations, or modifications. Maps, legal
descriptions, and regulations pertaining to wilderness areas
within their respective jurisdictions also shall be available
to the public in the offices of regional foresters, national
forest supervisors, and forest rangers.
(b) The Secretary of Agriculture shall, within
ten years after the enactment of this Act, review, as to its
suitability or nonsuitability for preservation as wilderness,
each area in the national forests classified on the effective
date of this Act by the Secretary of Agriculture or the Chief
of the Forest Service as "primitive" and report
his findings to the President. The President shall advise
the United States Senate and House of Representatives of his
recommendations with respect to the designation as "wilderness"
or other reclassification of each area on which review has
been completed, together with maps and a definition of boundaries.
Such advice shall be given with respect to not less than one-third
of all the areas now classified as "primitive" within
three years after the enactment of this Act, not less than
two-thirds within seven years after the enactment of this
Act, and the remaining areas within ten years after the enactment
of this Act. Each recommendation of the President for designation
as "wilderness" shall become effective only if so
provided by an Act of Congress. Areas classified as "primitive"
on the effective date of this Act shall continue to be administered
under the rules and regulations affecting such areas on the
effective date of this Act until Congress has determined otherwise.
Any such area may be increased in size by the President at
the time he submits his recommendations to the Congress by
not more than five thousand acres with no more than one thousand
two hundred and eighty acres of such increase in any one compact
unit; if it is proposed to increase the size of any such area
by more than five thousand acres or by more than one thousand
two hundred and eighty acres in any one compact unit the increase
in size shall not become effective until acted upon by Congress.
Nothing herein contained shall limit the President in proposing,
as part of his recommendations to Congress, the alteration
of existing boundaries of primitive areas or recommending
the addition of any contiguous area of national forest lands
predominantly of wilderness value. Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this Act, the Secretary of Agriculture may complete
his review and delete such area as may be necessary, but not
to exceed seven thousand acres, from the southern tip of the
Gore Range-Eagles Nest Primitive Area, Colorado, if the Secretary
determines that such action is in the public interest.
(c) Within ten years after the effective date
of this Act the Secretary of the Interior shall review every
roadless area of five thousand contiguous acres or more in
the national parks, monuments and other units of the national
park system and every such area of, and every roadless island
within, the national wildlife refuges and game ranges, under
his jurisdiction on the effective date of this Act and shall
report to the President his recommendation as to the suitability
or nonsuitability of each such area or island for preservation
as wilderness. The President shall advise the President of
the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
of his recommendation with respect to the designation as wilderness
of each such area or island on which review has been completed,
together with a map thereof and a definition of its boundaries.
Such advice shall be given with respect to not less than one-third
of the areas and islands to be reviewed under this subsection
within three years after enactment of this Act, not less than
two-thirds within seven years of enactment of this Act, and
the remainder within ten years of enactment of this Act. A
recommendation of the President for designation as wilderness
shall become effective only if so provided by an Act of Congress.
Nothing contained herein shall, by implication or otherwise,
be construed to lessen the present statutory authority of
the Secretary of the Interior with respect to the maintenance
of roadless areas within units of the national park system.
(d) (1) The Secretary of Agriculture and the
Secretary of the Interior shall, prior to submitting any recommendations
to the President with respect to the suitability of any area
for preservation as wilderness-
(A) give such public notice of the proposed
action as they deem appropriate, including publication in
the Federal Register and in a newspaper having general circulation
in the area or areas in the vicinity of the affected land;
(B) hold a public hearing or hearings at a
location or locations convenient to the area affected. The
hearings shall be announced through such means as the respective
Secretaries involved deem appropriate, including notices in
the Federal Register and in newspapers of general circulation
in the area: Provided, That if the lands involved are located
in more than one State, at least one hearing shall be held
in each State in which a portion of the land lies;
(C) at least thirty days before the date of
a hearing advise the Governor of each State and the governing
board of each county, or in Alaska the borough, in which the
lands are located, and Federal departments and agencies concerned,
and invite such officials and Federal agencies to submit their
views on the proposed action at the hearing or by no later
than thirty days following the date of the hearing.
(2) Any views submitted to the appropriate
Secretary under the provisions of (1) of this subsection with
respect to any area shall be included with any recommendations
to the President and to Congress with respect to such area.
(e) Any modification or adjustment of boundaries
of any wilderness area shall be recommended by the appropriate
Secretary after public notice of such proposal and public
hearing or hearings as provided in subsection (d) of this
section. The proposed modification or adjustment shall then
be recommended with map and description thereof to the President.
The President shall advise the United States Senate and the
House of Representatives of his recommendations with respect
to such modification or adjustment and such recommendations
shall become effective only in the same manner as provided
for in subsections (b) and (c) of this section.
USE OF WILDERNESS AREAS
SEC.4. (a) The purposes of this Act
are hereby declared to be within and supplemental to the purposes
for which national forests and units of the national park
and national wildlife refuge systems are established and administered
and-
(1) Nothing in this Act shall be deemed to
be in interference with the purpose for which national forests
are established as set forth in the Act of June 4, 1897 (30
Stat. 11), and the Multiple Use Sustained-Yield Act of June
12, 1960 (74 Stat. 215).
(2) Nothing in this Act shall modify the restrictions
and provisions of the Shipstead-Nolan Act (Public Law 539,
Seventy first Congress, July 10, 1930; 46 Stat. 1020), the
Thye-Blatnik Act (Public Law 733, Eightieth Congress, June
22, 1948; 62 Stat. 568), and the Humphrey-Thye-Blatnik-Andresen
Act (Public Law 607, Eighty-fourth Congress, June 22, 1956;
70 Stat. 326), as applying to the Superior National Forest
or the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture.
(3) Nothing in this Act shall modify the statutory
authority under which units of the national park system are
created. Further, the designation of any area of any park,
monument, or other unit of the national park system as a wilderness
area pursuant to this Act shall in no manner lower the standards
evolved for the use and preservation of such park, monument,
or other unit of the national park system in accordance with
the Act of August 25, 1916, the statutory authority under
which the area was created, or any other Act of Congress which
might pertain to or affect such area, including, but not limited
to, the Act of June 8, 1906 (34 Stat. 225; 16 U.S.C. 432 et
seq.); section 3(2) of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 796(2)):
and the Act of August 21, 1935 (49 Stat. 666; 16 U.S.C. 461
et seq.).
(b) Except as otherwise provided in this Act,
each agency administering any area designated as wilderness
shall be responsible for preserving the wilderness character
of the area and shall so administer such area for such other
purposes for which it may have been established as also to
preserve its wilderness character. Except as otherwise provided
in this Act, wilderness areas shall be devoted to the public
purposes of recreational, scenic, scientific, educational,
conservation, and historical use.
PROHIBITION OF CERTAIN USES
(c) Except as specifically provided for in
this Act, and subject to existing private rights, there shall
be no commercial enterprise and no permanent road within any
wilderness area designated by this Act and, except as necessary
to meet minimum requirements for the administration of the
area for the purpose of this Act (including measures required
in emergencies involving the health and safety of persons
within the area), there shall be no temporary road, no use
of motor vehicles, motorized equipment or motorboats, no landing
of aircraft, no other form of mechanical transport, and no
structure or installation within any such area.
SPECIAL PROVISIONS
(d) The following special provisions are hereby
made:
(1) Within wilderness areas designated by
this Act the use of aircraft or motorboats, where these uses
have already become established, may be permitted to continue
subject to such restrictions as the Secretary of Agriculture
deems desirable. In addition, such measures may be taken as
may be necessary in the control of fire, insects, and diseases,
subject to such conditions as the Secretary deems desirable.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall prevent within
national forest wilderness areas any activity, including prospecting,
for the purpose of gathering information about mineral or
other resources, if such activity is carried on in a manner
compatible with the preservation of the wilderness environment.
Furthermore, in accordance with such program as the Secretary
of the Interior shall develop and conduct in consultation
with the Secretary of Agriculture, such areas shall be surveyed
on a planned, recurring basis consistent with the concept
of wilderness preservation by the Geological Survey and the
Bureau of Mines to determine the mineral values, if any, that
may be present; and the results of such surveys shall be made
available to the public and submitted to the President and
Congress.
(3) Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this Act, until midnight December 31, 1983, the United States
mining laws and all laws pertaining to mineral leasing shall,
to the same extent as applicable prior to the effective date
of this Act, extend to those national forest lands designated
by this Act as "wilderness areas"; subject, however,
to such reasonable regulations governing ingress and egress
as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Agriculture consistent
with the use of the land for mineral location and development
and exploration, drilling, and production, and use of land
for transmission lines, waterlines, telephone lines, or facilities
necessary in exploring, drilling, producing, mining, and processing
operations, including where essential, the use of mechanized
ground or air equipment and restoration as near as practicable
of the surface of the land disturbed in performing prospecting,
location, and, in oil and gas leasing, discovery work, exploration,
drilling, and production, as soon as they have served their
purpose. Mining locations lying within the boundaries of said
wilderness areas shall be held and used solely for mining
or processing operations and uses reasonably incident thereto;
and hereafter, subject to valid existing rights, all patents
issued under the mining laws of the United States affecting
national forest lands designated by this Act as wilderness
areas shall convey title to the mineral deposits within the
claim, together with the right to cut and use so much of the
mature timber therefrom as may be needed in the extraction,
removal, and beneficiation of the mineral deposits, if needed
timber is not otherwise reasonably available, and if the timber
is cut under sound principles of forest management as defined
by the national forest rules and regulations, but each such
patent shall reserve to the United States all title in or
to the surface of the lands and products thereof, and no use
of the surface of the claim or the resources therefrom not
reasonably required for carrying on mining or prospecting
shall be allowed except as otherwise expressly provided in
this Act: Provided, That, unless hereafter specifically authorized,
no patent within wilderness areas designated by this Act shall
issue after December 31, 1983, except for the valid claims
existing on or before December 31, 1983. Mining claims located
after the effective date of this Act within the boundaries
of wilderness areas designated by this Act shall create no
rights in excess of those rights which may be patented under
the provisions of this subsection. Mineral leases, permits,
and licenses covering lands within national forest wilderness
areas designated by this Act shall contain such reasonable
stipulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Agriculture
for the protection of the wilderness character of the land
consistent with the use of the land for the purposes for which
they are leased, permitted, or licensed. Subject to valid
rights then existing, effective January 1, 1984, the minerals
in lands designated by this Act as wilderness areas are withdrawn
from all forms of appropriation under the mining laws and
from disposition under all laws pertaining to mineral leasing
and all amendments thereto.
(4) Within wilderness areas in the national
forests designated by this Act, (1) the President may, within
a specific area and in accordance with such regulations as
he may deem desirable, authorize prospecting for water resources,
the establishment and maintenance of reservoirs, water-conservation
works, power projects, transmission lines, and other facilities
needed in the public interest, including the road construction
and maintenance essential to development and use thereof,
upon his determination that such use or uses in the specific
area will better serve the interests of the United States
and the people thereof than will its denial; and (2) the grazing
of livestock, where established prior to the effective date
of this Act, shall be permitted to continue subject to such
reasonable regulations as are deemed necessary by the secretary
of Agriculture.
(5) Other provisions of this Act to the contrary
notwithstanding, the management of the Boundary Waters Canoe
Area, formerly designated as the Superior, Little Indian Sioux,
and Caribou Roadless Areas, in the Superior National Forest.
Minnesota, shall be in accordance with regulations established
by the Secretary of Agriculture in accordance with the general
purpose of maintaining, without unnecessary restrictions on
other uses, including that of timber, the primitive character
of the area, particularly in the vicinity of lakes, streams,
and portages: Provided, That nothing in this Act shall preclude
the continuance within the area of any already established
use of motorboats.
(6) Commercial services may be performed within
the wilderness areas designated by this Act to the extent
necessary for activities which are proper for realizing the
recreational or other wilderness purposes of the areas.
(7) Nothing in this Act shall constitute an
express or implied claim or denial on the part of the Federal
Government as to exemption from State water laws.
(8) Nothing in this Act shall be construed
as affecting the jurisdiction or responsibilities of the several
States with respect to wildlife and fish in the national forests.
STATE AND PRIVATE LANDS WITHIN WILDERNESS
AREAS
SEC. 5. (a) In any case where State-owned
or privately owned land is completely surrounded by national
forest lands within areas designated by this act as wilderness,
such State or private owner shall be given such rights as
may be necessary to assure adequate access to such State-owned
or privately owned land by such State or private owner and
their successors in interest, or the State-owned land or privately
owned land shall be exchanged for federally owned land in
the same State of approximately equal value under authorities
available to the Secretary of Agriculture: Provided, however,
That the United States shall not transfer to a State or private
owner any mineral interests unless the State or private owner
relinquishes or causes to be relinquished to the United States
the mineral interest in the surrounded land.
(b) In any case where valid mining claims
or other valid occupancies are wholly within a designated
national forest wilderness area, the Secretary of Agriculture
shall, by reasonable regulations consistent with the preservation
of the area as wilderness, permit ingress and egress to such
surrounded areas by means which have been or are being customarily
enjoyed with respect to other such areas similarly situated.
(c) Subject to the appropriation of funds
by Congress, the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to
acquire privately owned land within the perimeter of any area
designated by this Act as wilderness if (1) the owner concurs
in such acquisition or (2) the acquisition is specifically
authorized by Congress.
GIFTS, BEQUESTS, AND CONTRIBUTIONS
SEC. 6. ( a ) The Secretary of Agriculture
may accept gifts or bequests of land within wilderness areas
designated by this Act for preservation as wilderness. The
Secretary of Agriculture may also accept gifts or bequests
of land adjacent to wilderness areas designated by this Act
for preservation as wilderness if he has given sixty days
advance notice thereof to the President of the Senate and
the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Land accepted
by the Secretary of Agriculture under this section shall become
part of the wilderness area involved. Regulations with regard
to any such land may be in accordance with such agreements,
consistent with the policy of this Act, as are made at the
time of such gift, or such conditions, consistent with such
policy, as may be included in, and accepted with, such bequest.
(b) The Secretary of Agriculture or the Secretary
of the Interior is authorized to accept private contributions
and gifts to be used to further the purposes of this Act.
ANNUAL REPORTS
SEC. 7. At the opening of each session
of Congress, the Secretaries of Agriculture and Interior shall
jointly report to the President for transmission to Congress
on the status of the wilderness system, including a list and
descriptions of the areas in the system, regulations in effect,
and other pertinent information, together with any recommendations
they may care to make.
Approved September 3, 1964.
Legislative History:
House Reports:
No. 1538 accompanying H.R. 9070 (Committee on Interior
& Insular Affairs)
No. 1829 (Committee of Conference).
Senate Report:
No. 109 (Committee on Interior & Insular Affairs).
Congressional Record:
Vol. 109 (1963):
April 4, 8, considered in Senate.
April 9, considered and passed Senate.
Vol. 110 (1964):
July 28, considered in House.
July 30, considered and passed House, amended, in lieu
of H.R. 9070.
August 20, House and Senate agreed to conference report.
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