Some Alaska Native Village Corporations can get land back from the State of Alaska. This applies when the land was held for a future city or town that never came into being. Existing access rights, leases, and use agreements still continue.
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Alaska Native Village Municipal Lands Restoration Act of 2025 is a House bill signed into law. The latest recorded action: Became Public Law No: 119-23.
Latest action on H.R. 43: Became Public Law No: 119-23.
Who this affects: This law mainly affects Alaska Native Village Corporations and Native village residents whose land was placed in State trust for a possible future city or town. It also affects the State of Alaska, current leaseholders, people with legal access rights, and communities that may think about forming a local government later.
Why this matters: This law matters because some Native village land has stayed in State trust for future city or town governments that never formed. The law gives those communities a way to bring the land back under Village Corporation ownership. That can shift who makes choices about land use, leases, and development. At the same time, the law protects existing access and contract rights, so current users may keep legally valid rights they already had.
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