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Bill

LC 3398

Generally revise land resource and use laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 3398 aims to comprehensively revise land resource and use laws, reshaping planning, development, and state lands policy; the draft stalled and died in process.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 3398

Summary of LC 3398: Generally revise land resource and use laws

Overview

LC 3398 is a draft bill titled “Generally revise land resource and use laws,” categorized under planning and development and state lands. The bill appears to seek broad revisions to existing land resource and use statutes. At present, no specific text or section-by-section provisions are provided in the available materials.

Purpose and scope (inferred from title)

  • The title suggests a comprehensive revision of the laws governing land resources and land use.
  • The subject matter points to areas such as planning and development, and state lands management, potentially affecting how land is planned, zoned, developed, conserved, and administered by state agencies.
  • Without the bill’s text, exact policy goals, new standards, or procedural changes cannot be specified.

Status and timeline

  • Introduced: December 14, 2024
  • Drafter assigned: December 14, 2024
  • Draft On Hold: December 14, 2024
  • Draft Died in Process: May 27, 2025

Notes:
- The designation “LC” indicates the Legislative Counsel prepared an initial draft.
- “Draft On Hold” suggests the draft was paused or not advanced at that time.
- “Draft Died in Process” indicates the bill did not progress toward enactment and is not expected to become law in its current form.

Key provisions (availability)

  • The actual text of LC 3398 is not provided here. Consequently, specific provisions, amendments, new authorities, funding changes, or regulatory adjustments cannot be enumerated.
  • Readers should expect that, if released or reintroduced, the bill could include changes to planning processes, development approvals, environmental/compliance requirements, and state lands administration, given its stated focus.

Affected parties and potential impact

  • Local governments, planning departments, and zoning bodies (subject to any changes in land-use procedures).
  • Developers, property owners, and land developers affected by revised development standards or permitting processes.
  • State agencies responsible for land management, conservation, and resource use.
  • Communities and environmental stakeholders who may be impacted by changes to land-use regulation and state land policy.

Next steps and considerations

  • Monitor for any reintroduction, revised text, or committee hearings to understand the actual provisions.
  • If reintroduced, evaluate how the changes would interact with existing planning frameworks, environmental reviews, and state lands policies.
  • Seek official summaries or the bill text to assess fiscal impact, implementation timelines, and any transitional provisions.

Note: This summary reflects only the information provided. For a complete understanding, the actual bill text and official analyses would be necessary.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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