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                                                                                            Updated June 28, 2019

Commercial Filming and Photography on Federal Lands


Commercial  filmmakers, videographers, and photographers
often seek to use federal lands as locations for their works.
Historically, the major federal land management agencies-
the Bureau of Land Management  (BLM), National Park
Service (NPS), and Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) in the
Department of the Interior (DOI) and the U.S. Forest
Service (FS) in the Department of Agriculture (USDA)-
did not share a consistent approach to regulating
commercial filming and photography on their lands. A 2000
law, P.L. 106-206 (codified at 16 U.S.C. 4601-6d and 54
U.S.C. § 100905), directed the Secretaries of the Interior and
Agriculture to require permits and develop a consistent fee
structure for commercial filming and some photography on
federal lands. Pursuant to the law, the agencies have
established permitting procedures and are currently in the
process of setting fees. Legislation in the 116th Congress
would alter requirements for the agencies' fee schedules
and permits.


DOI  and USDA  are in the process of standardizing fees
for commercial filmmaking and photography on federal
lands, which have served as locations for many well-
known  films such as Star Wars, Planet of the Apes, and The
Hunger Games.


Statutory  Requirements for   Permits   and Fees
Under P.L. 106-206, the Secretaries of the Interior and
Agriculture must require permits and establish reasonable
fees for commercial filming on federal lands. The fees must
take into account (1) the number of days of filming, (2) the
size of the film crew, (3) the amount and type of equipment,
and (4) other factors that the Secretaries deem appropriate.
The fees must provide a fair return (undefined in the law)
to the nation for the activity. In addition to fees, the
Secretaries must recover any administrative, personnel, or
other costs incurred by the agencies during filming. Permits
are not to be issued if the activity would damage resources,
unreasonably disrupt public use and enjoyment of a site, or
pose health and safety risks.

Still photography requires a permit or fee only if it is in an
area that is not ordinarily open to the public, if additional
administrative costs are likely, or if models or props other
than the site's own resources are used.

Fees and costs collected under P.L. 106-206 are to be
available for use by the collecting agencies without further
appropriation. The majority of funds are retained at the site
at which they were collected, and the fees may be used for
purposes such as backlogged repair and maintenance
projects, interpretation, signage, facility enhancement,
resource preservation, fee collection, and law enforcement.


Agency   Regulations
Department  of the Interior. In August 2013, DOI issued a
final rule to bring three agencies-NPS, BLM, and FWS-
into compliance with P.L. 106-206 (78 Federal Register
52087, modifying regulations at 36 C.F.R. Part 5, 43 C.F.R.
Part 5, and 50 C.F.R. Part 27, respectively). In subsequent
years-most  recently in January 2018 (83 Federal Register
1664)-the  Bureau of Reclamation announced its intent to
amend  its regulations to accord with those of the other DOI
agencies. Special filming and photography restrictions for
Indian lands administered by DOI's Bureau of Indian
Affairs (43 C.F.R. Part 5, Subpart B) remain unchanged.

The DOI  regulations define commercial filming and still
photography consistently for BLM, NPS, and FWS  and
clarify which activities require a permit, in accordance with
P.L. 106-206. The regulations state conditions under which
a filming or photography permit may be denied, such as if
the activity would cause resource damage, unreasonably
disrupt public use, pose health or safety risks, or violate the
Wilderness Act (16 U.S.C. 1131-1136) or other applicable
laws or regulations. Permit applications are to be processed
in a timely manner, and permit denials may be appealed
to higher levels of DOI management. The regulations also
discuss the more limited circumstances in which a permit is
required for news-gathering activities (defined as filming,
videography, and still photography carried out by a
representative of the news media). Among other conditions,
such a permit is required only if obtaining it will not
interfere with the ability to gather the news.

Permit holders are responsible for two types of payments: a
location fee that provides a fair return to the nation for the
use of federal land and repayment of costs incurred by the
government  in processing the request and administering the
permit. The permit holder also has liability and bonding
requirements.

Forest Service. FS follows its existing regulations for
commercial  filming and photography permits (36 C.F.R.
251), which were in place prior to passage of P.L. 106-206.
FS collaborated with DOI on a new fee schedule proposed
in 2013 (see below). Also, in 2014, FS proposed but did not
finalize a directive to establish additional criteria for
commercial  filming and photography in congressionally
designated wilderness areas (79 Federal Register 52626).
For example, such activity would have to be focused
primarily on disseminating information about wilderness,
would have to preserve the area's wilderness character as
defined in the Wilderness Act (16 U.S.C. 1131 ff.), and
would have to be wilderness-dependent (unable to be
carried out elsewhere). Some Members of Congress and
other stakeholders objected to the proposed FS directive,
especially questioning whether it would infringe on the
First Amendment  rights of news reporters. FS stated that


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