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        <dc:title>National Bison Legacy Act</dc:title>
        <citableAs>Public Law 114–152</citableAs>
        <citableAsShortTitle>National Bison Legacy Act</citableAsShortTitle>
        <docNumber>152</docNumber>
        <currentThroughPublicLaw>114–152</currentThroughPublicLaw>
        <dc:type>Statute Compilation</dc:type>
        <dc:creator>United States House of Representatives</dc:creator>
        <dc:creator>Office of the Legislative Counsel</dc:creator>
        <dc:format>text/xml</dc:format>
        <dc:language>EN</dc:language>
        <dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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        <processedDate>2021-10-15</processedDate>
        <containsShortTitle>National Bison Legacy Act</containsShortTitle>
        <property role="fileId">12021</property>
        <congress>114</congress>
        <approvedDate>2016-05-09</approvedDate>
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    <preface style="-uslm-dtd:compilation-act-form">
        <property style="-uslm-dtd:comp-short-title" role="compShortTitle">National Bison Legacy Act</property>
        <citationNote style="-uslm-dtd:public-law">[(<citableAs>Public Law 114–152</citableAs>)]</citationNote>
        <editionNote style="-uslm-dtd:updated-through-note">[This law has not been amended]</editionNote>
        <explanationNote style="-uslm-dtd:explanatory-note"><b>[</b>Currency: This publication is a compilation of the text of Public Law 114-152. It was last amended by the public law listed in the As Amended Through note above and below at the bottom of each page of the pdf version and reflects current law through the date of the enactment of the public law listed at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/comps/<b>]</b></explanationNote>
        <explanationNote style="-uslm-dtd:explanatory-note"><b>[</b>Note: While this publication does  not represent an official version of any Federal statute, substantial efforts have been made to ensure the accuracy of its contents. The official version of Federal law is found in the United States Statutes at Large and in the United States Code. The legal effect to be given to the Statutes at Large and the United States Code is established by statute (1 U.S.C. 112, 204).<b>]</b></explanationNote>
    </preface>
    <main style="-uslm-dtd:legis-body"><longTitle><docTitle style="-uslm-dtd:legis-type">AN ACT</docTitle><officialTitle style="-uslm-dtd:official-title">To adopt the bison as the national mammal of the United States.</officialTitle></longTitle><enactingFormula style="-uslm-dtd:enacting-clause">Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,</enactingFormula>
        <section style="-uslm-dtd:section" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s1" styleType="OLC">
            <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="1">SECTION 1. </num><editorialNote style="-uslm-dtd:usc-reference" role="uscRef"><b>[</b><ref href="/us/usc/t36/s301">36 U.S.C. 301 note</ref><b>]</b> </editorialNote><heading style="-uslm-dtd:header">SHORT TITLE. </heading>
            <content style="-uslm-dtd:text" class="block">This Act may be cited as the “<shortTitle style="-uslm-dtd:quote">National Bison Legacy Act</shortTitle>”.</content>
        </section>
        <section style="-uslm-dtd:section" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2" styleType="OLC">
            <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="2">SEC. 2. </num><heading style="-uslm-dtd:header">FINDINGS. </heading>
            <chapeau style="-uslm-dtd:text" class="block">Congress finds that—</chapeau>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/1" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="1">(1) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">bison are considered a historical symbol of the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/2" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="2">(2) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">bison were integrally linked with the economic and spiritual lives of many Indian tribes through trade and sacred ceremonies;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/3" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="3">(3) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">there are more than 60 Indian tribes participating in the Intertribal Buffalo Council;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/4" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="4">(4) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">numerous members of Indian tribes are involved in bison restoration on tribal land;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/5" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="5">(5) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">members of Indian tribes have a combined herd on more than 1,000,000 acres of tribal land;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/6" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="6">(6) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">the Intertribal Buffalo Council is a tribal organization incorporated pursuant to section 17 of the Act of June 18, 1934 (commonly known as the “<quotedText style="-uslm-dtd:quote">Indian Reorganization Act</quotedText>”) (25 U.S.C. 477);</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/7" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="7">(7) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">bison can play an important role in improving the types of grasses found in landscapes to the benefit of grasslands;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/8" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="8">(8) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">a small group of ranchers helped save bison from extinction in the late 1800s by gathering the remnants of the decimated herds;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/9" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="9">(9) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">bison hold significant economic value for private producers and rural communities;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/10" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="10">(10) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">according to the 2012 Census of Agriculture of the Department of Agriculture, as of 2012, 162,110 head of bison were under the stewardship of private producers, creating jobs and providing a sustainable and healthy meat source contributing to the food security of the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/11" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="11">(11) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">on December 8, 1905, William Hornaday, Theodore Roosevelt, and others formed the American Bison Society in response to the near extinction of bison in the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/12" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="12">(12) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">on October 11, 1907, the American Bison Society sent 15 captive-bred bison from the New York Zoological Park, now known as the “<quotedText style="-uslm-dtd:quote">Bronx Zoo</quotedText>”, to the first wildlife refuge in the United States, which was known as the “<quotedText style="-uslm-dtd:quote">Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge</quotedText>”, resulting in the first successful reintroduction  of a mammal species on the brink of extinction back into the natural habitat of the species;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/13" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="13">(13) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">in 2005, the American Bison Society was reestablished, bringing together bison ranchers, managers from Indian tribes, Federal and State agencies, conservation organizations, and natural and social scientists from the United States, Canada, and Mexico to create a vision for the North American bison in the 21st century;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/14" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="14">(14) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">there are bison herds in National Wildlife Refuges and National Parks;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/15" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="15">(15) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">there are bison in State-managed herds across 11 States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/16" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="16">(16) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">there is a growing effort to celebrate and officially recognize the historical, cultural, and economic significance of the North American bison to the heritage of the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/17" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="17">(17) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">a bison is portrayed on 2 State flags;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/18" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="18">(18) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">the bison has been adopted by 3 States as the official mammal or animal of those States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/19" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="19">(19) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">a bison has been depicted on the official seal of the Department of the Interior since 1912;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/20" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="20">(20) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">the buffalo nickel played an important role in modernizing the currency of the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/21" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="21">(21) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">several sports teams have the bison as a mascot, which highlights the iconic significance of bison in the United States;</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/22" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="22">(22) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">in the 2nd session of the 113th Congress, 22 Senators led a successful effort to enact a resolution to designate November 1, 2014, as the third annual National Bison Day; and</content>
            </paragraph>
            <paragraph style="-uslm-dtd:paragraph" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s2/23" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="23">(23) </num><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">members of Indian tribes, bison producers, conservationists, sportsmen, educators, and other public and private partners have participated in the annual National Bison Day celebration at several events across the United States and are committed to continuing this tradition annually on the first Saturday of November.</content>
            </paragraph>
        </section>
        <section style="-uslm-dtd:section" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s3" styleType="OLC">
            <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="3">SEC. 3. </num><heading style="-uslm-dtd:header">ESTABLISHMENT AND ADOPTION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN BISON AS THE NATIONAL MAMMAL. </heading>
            <subsection style="-uslm-dtd:subsection" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s3/a" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="a">(a) </num><heading style="-uslm-dtd:header">In General.—</heading><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">The mammal commonly known as the “<quotedText style="-uslm-dtd:quote">North American bison</quotedText>” is adopted as the national mammal of the United States.</content>
            </subsection>
            <subsection style="-uslm-dtd:subsection" identifier="/us/sComp/114/152/s3/b" styleType="OLC">
                <num style="-uslm-dtd:enum" value="b">(b) </num><heading style="-uslm-dtd:header">Rule of Construction.—</heading><content style="-uslm-dtd:text">Nothing in this Act or the adoption of the North American bison as the national mammal of the United States shall be construed or used as a reason to alter,    change, modify, or otherwise affect any plan, policy, management decision, regulation, or other action by the Federal Government.</content>
            </subsection>
        </section>
    </main>
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