Senate OKs land swap

WASHINGTON -- The Senate passed the Walnut Grove Land Exchange Act Wednesday, and the bill was sent to President Donald J. Trump for his signature, a news release said.

U.S. Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-District 4, introduced H.R. 5923 on May 23 of this year. The bill facilitates an exchange of land between Walnut Grove Church, located on Highway 298 in Jessieville, and the U.S. Forest Service.

The church and an adjacent cemetery currently sit on 4 acres of Forest Service land. The bill will transfer the ownership of that land to the church, and in return, gives the Forest Service 6.3 acres of land adjacent to the Ouachita National Forest owned by the congregation.

"This is a good day for the people of Walnut Grove Church and the community of Jessieville," Westerman said in the release. "The church has been a longtime tenant of the Forest Service and has sought a resolution to this issue for more than 20 years. The fact that it takes an act of Congress to exchange such small parcels of land simply illustrates how broken the federal government is. I thank Sen. Cotton for his cosponsorship and I thank Sen. Boozman for his tireless efforts to see this passed in the Senate before the end of 2018."

"This is a great day for the Walnut Grove Church," Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark, said. "The church has vigorously pursued an equitable land exchange between itself and the U.S. Forest Service that makes perfect sense given the location of the facility it worships in. With the passage of this bill, the president's signature is all that is left to achieve this fair, reasonable outcome. I'm pleased to have led the effort in the Senate in support of Jessieville and this congregation."

"Walnut Grove Church's congregation shouldn't have to deal with the federal government in order to simply worship and bury their loved ones," Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark, said. "I'm pleased that the Senate has approved this land exchange, ending a decades-old problem for the church and Jessieville community."

The bill was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on Sept. 12 by a vote of 379 to 3. Westerman had argued during his speech to the House prior to passage of the measure that the act "should not need to exist."

He noted then the church and cemetery were established decades before the Forest Service. Boozman had introduced a companion bill to the Senate on July 17.

Local on 12/21/2018

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