Apache County and Navajo County Conveyance Act of 2025
Summary
HR 1829 is a narrowly targeted land conveyance bill directing the Forest Service to transfer ~5 acres in Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest to two Arizona counties for cemetery use at the counties' expense. The bill has passed the House, sits in the Senate Energy Committee, and involves no federal funding or market-affected activity.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.No market impact: no funding, no contracts, no regulatory changes affecting any public company.
- 2.Local land transfer to counties for cemeteries — no resource extraction, development, or commercial activity.
- 3.Final Senate floor vote is the only remaining step; legislation is narrow and non-commercial.
Market Implications
This bill has no implications for any public company or market sector. It is a purely administrative land transaction between the federal government and two local governments for a non-commercial purpose. Investors should not adjust any positions based on this legislation.
Full Analysis
What happened: On May 13, 2025, the House passed HR 1829 by voice vote; it was received in the Senate on May 14 and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. As of today (June 11, 2026), the bill was ordered reported favorably from that committee on March 4, 2026, awaiting floor action in the Senate. The bill is in a near-final procedural stage. Money trail: The bill does not authorize or appropriate any federal funds. It requires the counties to pay all costs (surveys, environmental analyses). There is no revenue stream, tax expenditure, or contract mechanism for any private company. Structural winners and losers: No public company is directly affected. The land parcels are small (2.5+2.5 acres), designated only for cemetery use, and involve no resource extraction, development, or commercial activity that would touch any traded sector. Timeline: The bill has cleared both House floor and Senate committee; one floor vote in the Senate remains. Given the bipartisan nature (non-controversial local land bill) and voice-vote House passage, final passage is likely but does not create any investable signal.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Executive Order: Removing Unnecessary and Counterproductive Restrictions on Access to Federal Lands
Executive Order: Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
Ensuring Better Interest Treatment and Deductibility Act (EBITDA)
Proportional Reviews for Broadband Deployment Act
Direct Seller and Real Estate Agent Harmonization Act
CLARK CONSTRUCTION GROUP LLC: $559M General Services Administration Contract
Veterans’ Assuring Critical Care Expansions to Support Servicemembers (ACCESS) Act of 2025
MURNANE BUILDING CONTRACTORS, INC.: $32.9M General Services Administration Contract
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
Removing Unnecessary and Counterproductive Restrictions on Access to Federal Lands
This executive order rescinds two 1970s-era executive orders (11644 and 11989) that required federal agencies to use vague environmental and social criteria when designating off-road vehicle use on federal lands. It directs the Secretaries of War, Interior, Agriculture, the TVA Board, and other relevant agency heads to initiate rulemakings to remove or revise regulations based on those criteria, aiming to increase access for energy, timber, utility maintenance, and recreation.
Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
This executive order directs the Treasury Department to issue an advisory to financial institutions on risks from non-work authorized populations and their employers, propose regulatory changes to strengthen Bank Secrecy Act customer due diligence and identification requirements, and consider risks from foreign consular IDs. It also directs the CFPB to clarify that deportation risk can affect ability-to-repay assessments for non-work authorized borrowers, and federal financial regulators to issue guidance on credit risks from this population.
Peace Officers Memorial Day and Police Week, 2026
This proclamation designates May 15, 2026, as Peace Officers Memorial Day and May 10-16, 2026, as Police Week, calling for ceremonies and flag-lowering. It highlights prior executive actions including the Working Families Tax Cuts Act (no tax on overtime for police) and an Executive Order ending cashless bail in the federal system, which may influence state-level policies and law enforcement spending.