House committee approves FY26 Interior & Environment subcommittee bill

House committee approves FY26 Interior & Environment subcommittee bill
Tom Cole, Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee — Official U.S. House headshot
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Today, the House Appropriations Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Subcommittee convened to deliberate on its Fiscal Year 2026 bill. The proposal was approved by the Subcommittee.

Interior and Environment Subcommittee Chairman Mike Simpson (R-ID) remarked, “In terms of policy, the bill echoes this Administration’s efforts to roll back costly regulatory overreach from the prior Administration and promote domestic energy production by: halting heavy-handed, job killing EPA Biden-era regulations; limiting the prior Administration’s attempts to abuse the Endangered Species Act and ensuring continued access to our public lands; and expanding access to hardrock and critical minerals. In closing, I am pleased that this bill focuses spending where it is needed most and makes great strides to address critical needs across Indian Country. The bill doubles down on rolling back burdensome and costly regulations from the prior Administration, and it helps unleash American energy and domestic mineral development.”

Chairman Tom Cole (R-OK) stated, “The measure covers several agencies, including the Department of the Interior, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Environmental Protection Agency, that work to conserve and protect our nation’s natural, cultural, and environmental resources. Importantly, it advances the federal commitment to honor our trust and treaty responsibilities to American Indians and Alaska Natives through Indian Affairs and the Indian Health Service. I’m proud that the legislation prioritizes funding across Tribal accounts—ensuring the delivery of critical services in Indian Country. Funding for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Indian Education, Bureau of Trust Funds Administration, and the Indian Health Service is held at FY2025 House levels allowing for targeted increases to vital Tribal programs. Overall Chairman Simpson has demonstrated the importance of targeting resources where they are needed most. Funding has been reduced for lower-priority programs and strategically reallocated to urgent needs including wildland fire management.”

A summary of the bill is available here.
Bill text is available here.
A table of included Community Project Funding requests is available here.



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