Citizen Portal
Sign In

Subcommittee unanimously backs bill allowing federally recognized tribes to hold conservation easements

Senate of Virginia (Subcommittee, Committee Room C311) · January 28, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Senator Stewart’s SB 422 would allow federally recognized tribes to hold and enforce conservation easements, expanding the definition to include cultural aspects; the subcommittee voted 5–0 to report the bill to full committee after supportive testimony from conservation groups.

Senator Stewart introduced Senate Bill 422, a bipartisan measure stemming from a commission to modernize Virginia law on tribes. The bill would permit federally recognized tribes to hold conservation easements and expands the statutory definition of conservation easements for this purpose to include cultural aspects of property. Stewart noted legal assistance from a UVA law student in drafting and said the change would help tribes preserve ancestral and culturally significant lands.

Committee members asked about accreditation and enforcement requirements for easement holders; Stewart said tribes reported they have competent legal and administrative capacity to enforce restrictive covenants. Witnesses including Ian Blair of Wetlands Watch and Rebecca Malpass of the Virginia Conservation Network spoke in favor, noting the change would help move proposed wetland restoration projects on tribal land forward.

A motion to report the bill was made and seconded. The roll-call recorded unanimous support from senators present and the subcommittee voted 5–0 to report SB 422 favorably to full committee.

The bill is positioned to expand tribal tools for land preservation and may accelerate conservation projects with wetland restoration and cultural-protection aims.