H.R. 3925 (Rep. Obernolte), “Yuhaaviatam of San Manuel Nation Land Exchange Act”
H.R. 7882 (Rep. Stauber), To provide for the leasing of certain deposits of minerals located within the City of Carlsbad, New Mexico.
H.R. 8686 (Rep. Gosar), To amend the Military Land Withdrawals Act of 2013 to withdraw and reserve certain public land in the vicinity of Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona.
The purpose of the business meeting is to consider the following legislation:
S. 140, to address the forest health crisis on the National Forest System and public lands, and for other purposes. (Mr. Barrasso).
S. 332, to require a study on Holocaust education efforts of States, local educational agencies, and public elementary and secondary schools, and for other purposes. (Ms. Rosen).
S. 365/H.R. 1729, to amend the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act to allow for additional entities to be eligible to complete the maintenance work on Bolts Ditch and the Bolts Ditch Headgate within the Holy Cross Wilderness, Colorado. (Mr. Bennet/Rep. Neguse).
S. 764, to provide for the designation of certain wilderness areas, recreation management areas, and conservation areas in the State of Colorado, and for other purposes. (Mr. Bennet).
S. 789, to require reports on critical mineral and rare earth element resources around the world and a strategy for the development of advanced mining, refining, separation, and processing technologies, and for other purposes. (Mr. Cornyn).
S. 791, to establish the Justice Thurgood Marshall National Historic Site in the State of Maryland as an affiliated area of the National Park System, and for other purposes. (Mr. Van Hollen).
S. 888, to designate certain land administered by the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service in the State of Oregon as wilderness and national recreation areas, to withdraw certain land located in Curry County and Josephine County, Oregon, from all forms of entry, appropriation, or disposal under the public land laws, location, entry, and patent under the mining laws, and operation under the mineral leasing and geothermal leasing laws, and for other purposes. (Mr. Wyden).
S. 945, to amend the Smith River National Recreation Area Act to include certain additions to the Smith River National Recreation Area, to amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to designate certain wild rivers in the State of Oregon, and for other purposes. (Mr. Merkley).
S. 1088/H.R. 2290, to provide that the memorial to commemorate the sacrifice and service of the women who worked on the home front to support the efforts of the United States military during World War II may be located on the National Mall, and for other purposes. (Ms. Shaheen/Rep. Dingell).
S. 1288, to amend the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act to designate as a component of the National Heritage Area System the Finger Lakes National Heritage Area in the State of New York, and for other purposes. (Mrs. Gillibrand).
S. 1341, to amend the Colorado Wilderness Act of 1993 to add certain land to the Sarvis Creek Wilderness, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper).
S. 1349, to withdraw the National Forest System land in the Ruby Mountains subdistrict of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest and the National Wildlife Refuge System land in Ruby Lake National Wildlife Refuge, Elko and White Pine Counties, Nevada, from operation under the mineral leasing laws. (Ms. Cortez Masto).
S. 1413, to authorize additional funding for the San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement Act. (Mr. Padilla).
S. 1476, to amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to designate certain segments of the Gila River system in the State of New Mexico as components of the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System, to provide for the transfer of administrative jurisdiction over certain Federal land in the State of New Mexico, and for other purposes. (Mr. Heinrich).
S. 1547, to amend title 54, United States Code, to reauthorize the National Parks and Public Land Legacy Restoration Fund, and for other purposes. (Mr. Daines).
S. 1737, to designate and expand wilderness areas in Olympic National Forest in the State of Washington, and to designate certain rivers in Olympic National Forest and Olympic National Park as wild and scenic rivers, and for other purposes. (Ms. Murray).
S. 1870, to adjust the boundary of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area to include the Rim of the Valley Corridor, and for other purposes. (Mr. Schiff).
S. 2437/H.R. 3857, to amend the Snow Water Supply Forecasting Program Authorization Act to reauthorize the Snow Water Supply Forecasting Program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper/Rep. Hurd).
S. 2753, to amend the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009 to authorize certain extraordinary operation and maintenance work for urban canals of concern. (Mr. Risch).
S. 3500/H.R. 3657, to amend the Federal Power Act to require the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to annually submit to Congress a report on the status of ongoing hydropower relicensing applications. (Ms. Cortez Masto/Rep. Schrier) .
S. 3518, to amend the Federal Power Act to address certain alterations in, and the maintenance and repair of, project works, to provide for the licensing of micro hydrokinetic energy projects, and for other purposes. (Ms. Murkowski).
S. 3526, to provide for the protection of and investment in certain Federal land in the State of California, and for other purposes. (Mr. Padilla).
S. 3693, to extend the authorization for a large-scale water recycling and reuse grant program. (Ms. Cortez Masto).
S. 3723, to require the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of constructing a project to supply municipal, rural, and industrial water from the Missouri River to the Western Dakota Regional Water System, and for other purposes. (Mr. Thune).
S. 3732, to amend the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act to authorize assistance under the storage program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Gallego).
S. 3736, to require the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of constructing a project to supply municipal, rural, and industrial water to the Dakota Mainstem Regional Water System service area in the States of South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, and Minnesota, and for other purposes. (Mr. Rounds).
S. 3743, to direct the Secretary of the Interior to carry out a feasibility study on a selective water withdrawal system at Glen Canyon Dam, and for other purposes. (Mr. Lee).
S. 3792, to provide for the establishment of a Water Project Navigators Program, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hickenlooper).
S. 3878, to establish the Grand Village of the Natchez Indians and Jefferson College as affiliated areas of the National Park System, and for other purposes. (Mrs. Hyde-Smith).
S. 4040, to amend Public Law 89–108 to modify the authorization of appropriations for State and Tribal, municipal, rural, and industrial water supplies, and for other purposes. (Mr. Hoeven).
H.R. 249, to redesignate certain facilities at Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park in honor of Congressman Bill Pascrell, Jr. (Rep. Pallone).
H.R. 3872, to amend the Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands to make that Act applicable to hardrock minerals. (Rep. Fallon).
H.R. 3937, to provide for the conveyance of certain Federal land in Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, and for other purposes. (Rep. Tiffany).
Netroots Nation panel: Chester, Pennsylvania is a poster child for environmental justice in the U.S. State EJ legislation would require all toxic facilities to consider the cumulative impacts of their operations and allow citizens input as a factor in permitting decisions.
Speakers:
Maurice Sampson, Eastern Pennsylvania Director for Clean Water Action
Zulene Mayfield, Chester Residents Concerned for Quality Living
This panel brings together veteran organizers and strategists to name what’s actually broken in a political system designed to block majorities, insulate power, and make accountability structurally impossible. The crises we’re living through have a common source. For decades, organizers have won hearts, minds, and votes — only to watch those wins dissolved by the Supreme Court, buried in the Senate, or gutted by executive power grabs. This panel brings together veteran organizers and strategists to name what’s actually broken: the veto points, the malapportionment, the chokepoints that protect minority rule. They’ll discuss where the real openings for structural reform are in the next few years, what coalitions are forming around them, and what more democratic systems elsewhere have actually required to take hold.
Current political wisdom requires Democrats to stop talking about climate change and instead couch their campaign plans as “energy affordability” or even a return to the Obama-era “all of the above” rhetoric giving equal footing to fossil fuels and renewable energy. This session will flip the script by spotlighting Democrats who have won their races by talking about climate change. Yes, the Beltway pundits are wrong. Again.
Speakers:
RL Miller, Climate Hawks Vote
Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-AZ)
Michelle Deatrick, DNC Climate and Environmental Caucus
Ryan O’Donnell, Executive Director, Data For Progress
Join Hill Heat, Lead Locally, GrayPAC, Jane Fonda PAC, and more for a happy hour at City Tap House during Netroots Nation on Friday, June 5th to raise money for progressive climate champions running in critical elections in Pennsylvania. We’ll hear from State Rep Chris Rabb, running for PA-03, PA State Rep Izzy Smith-Wade-El and Fern Leard who’s running for PA HD120.
Every cycle pulls our movement back into the urgent. Rapid news shifts, electoral deadlines, and reactive messaging make it hard to stay anchored to long-term narrative goals — and the results are showing. Our messaging isn’t landing with enough working class voters to build a durable governing coalition. So how do we resist that gravity and build a narrative strategy designed to last beyond a single election or media moment and build a bigger coalition?
This panel will focus on working class voters and will bring together leaders from labor, climate, and movement research to unpack how they balance urgency with strategy. Panelists will share how they integrate field learning, message testing, and experimentation into a broader narrative framework, and how they navigate the real tradeoffs between saying what’s popular and building the narratives that shift public opinion for working class voters over time.