The National Trails System is a congressionally designated network of public trails across the United States, established by the National Trails System Act of 1968 to promote outdoor recreation, preserve scenic and historic routes, and connect urban and rural areas for users of all ages, abilities, and interests.[1][2] The Act initially authorized two flagship national scenic trails—the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail—while directing studies for additional routes and creating categories for national recreation trails focused on local or regional significance.[3] Over time, the system expanded to include more than 60 national scenic and historic trails, spanning thousands of miles, managed cooperatively by federal agencies such as the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, and Bureau of Land Management, alongside state, local, and private partners.[4] These trails facilitate activities like hiking, biking, and historic interpretation, while emphasizing non-motorized use on scenic routes to protect natural and cultural resources.[5]Key achievements include fostering public access to diverse landscapes, from forested mountains to desert expanses, and enhancing national awareness of America's heritage through routes like the Lewis and Clark and Overland National Historic Trails.[6] The system's growth has supported conservation efforts and economic benefits from trail-related tourism, drawing millions of visitors annually to experience preserved paths that trace migration, exploration, and indigenous histories.[7] However, persistent challenges involve securing adequate federal funding for maintenance and completion, balancing recreational demands with environmental protection, and resolving disputes over land rights and motorized access prohibitions.[8][9] Despite these hurdles, the National Trails System remains a cornerstone of federal land policy, embodying a commitment to enduring public enjoyment of the nation's trails without compromising their integrity.[10]
History
Establishment and Early Development
The National Trails System originated from growing concerns in the mid-20th century over urbanization's encroachment on outdoor recreation opportunities, prompting federal studies to identify suitable long-distance trails for public use. In April 1965, the Secretary of the Interior directed the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation to conduct a nationwide inventory of potential trail routes, emphasizing scenic, historic, and recreational value while balancing preservation with accessibility.[11] This study informed congressional efforts, culminating in the introduction of bills to create a coordinated national framework rather than fragmented local initiatives.[10]The National Trails System Act (Public Law 90-543) was enacted on October 2, 1968, when President Lyndon B. Johnson signed it into law, establishing the foundational structure for a network of federally recognized trails across the United States.[12] The legislation designated the Appalachian National Scenic Trail—spanning approximately 2,190 miles from Georgia to Maine—and the Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail—extending about 2,650 miles from Mexico to Canada—as the system's inaugural national scenic trails, prioritizing routes that showcased natural beauty and provided extended hiking experiences.[1] It authorized the creation of national recreation trails on federal lands to promote urban-rural connectivity and local partnerships, while mandating comprehensive studies of 14 additional routes for potential inclusion, including paths like the Continental Divide and Potomac Heritage trails.[2]Early implementation focused on administrative coordination and initial designations, with the Department of the Interior's Bureau of Outdoor Recreation leading feasibility assessments and trail planning through 1972.[13] The first national recreation trail, the Potawatomi Trail in Michigan's Manistee National Forest, was designated in 1969, marking the system's expansion beyond scenic routes to include shorter, multi-use paths for diverse users.[8] By the early 1970s, interagency cooperation involving the National Park Service, Forest Service, and Bureau of Land Management began mapping and marking segments, though challenges such as land acquisition and right-of-way negotiations slowed full development; only limited funding—about $5 million annually initially—supported these efforts, reflecting congressional emphasis on voluntary easements over eminent domain.[14] These steps laid groundwork for subsequent amendments, but the 1968 framework prioritized empirical route evaluations over expansive designations to ensure sustainability.[3]
Key Legislative Amendments
The National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-625, enacted November 10, 1978) represented the first major amendment to the National Trails System Act, introducing the category of national historic trails to commemorate significant routes of exploration, migration, and commerce while protecting associated historic remnants and artifacts for public benefit.[15] This expansion authorized the Secretary of the Interior to designate such trails following congressional approval and feasibility studies, with initial designations including the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail (spanning approximately 3,700 miles across 11 states), the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail (1,300 miles), and six others like the Oregon, California, and Santa Fe Trails.[1] The amendment also authorized additional national scenic trails, such as the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail (3,028 miles through five states), and increased funding mechanisms for trail development and land acquisition.[15]The National Trails System Act Amendments of 1983 (P.L. 98-11, enacted March 28, 1983) further broadened the system's framework by designating five new national scenic trails—including the Florida Trail (1,500 miles), Natchez Trace Trail (1,700 miles through Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee), and Potomac Heritage Trail (multi-use segments totaling over 700 miles)—and three additional national historic trails, such as the El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro.[16] A pivotal provision enabled the interim public recreation use of abandoned railroad rights-of-way under "railbanking," preserving corridors for potential future rail reactivation while converting them to trails, subject to notice and agreement with rail owners; this has facilitated over 25,000 miles of rail-trails nationwide without extinguishing reversionary property interests.[16][17] The amendments also refined administration processes, authorizing comprehensive management plans within two years of designation and allocating specific appropriations, such as up to $1 million annually per trail for development (adjusted for inflation).[16]Subsequent amendments have refined categories and processes, notably the Omnibus Parks and Public Lands Management Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-432, Title II, enacted December 20, 2006), which added national geologic trails to highlight trails with exceptional geological features and sites of scientific interest, such as the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route (initially designated under this framework but reclassified). This category requires congressional designation after studies demonstrating national significance, with the first such trail, the Trail of Geologic Wonders, authorized in 2020.[1] Other updates, including those in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 (P.L. 109-163), have addressed trail certifications, volunteer coordination, and interstate cooperation, ensuring adaptive management amid evolving land use pressures.[13] These changes have collectively expanded the system to over 60 congressionally designated long-distance trails encompassing more than 90,000 miles as of 2023.
Legal and Administrative Framework
Primary Legislation
The National Trails System Act (Public Law 90-543; 82 Stat. 919), enacted on October 2, 1968, established the foundational framework for a coordinated national network of trails to address growing public demand for outdoor recreation while preserving routes of scenic, historic, and recreational significance.[18][12] Signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, the Act responded to post-World War II increases in leisure time and mobility, emphasizing trails accessible to urban populations and capable of supporting diverse uses such as hiking, riding, and walking.[8][12]Under the Act's provisions, the system comprises three primary categories: National Recreation Trails, intended for shorter routes providing varied outdoor experiences near population centers; National Scenic Trails, designated for long-distance paths traversing areas of exceptional natural beauty and minimal development; and National Historic Trails, focused on routes that illustrate significant aspects of American history and prehistory.[12][1] The legislation initially designated the Appalachian Trail (spanning approximately 2,190 miles from Georgia to Maine) and the Pacific Crest Trail (about 2,650 miles from Mexico to Canada) as the first National Scenic Trails, directing federal agencies to protect and develop them.[8][1]Administration falls to the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture, who coordinate with state and local governments, private landowners, and nonprofit organizations to acquire lands, develop trails, and enforce standards without mandating federal ownership of all segments.[12][13] The Act authorizes comprehensive studies of 14 potential additional trails and outlines designation criteria, including public interest, resource protection, and feasibility, while prohibiting motorized use on scenic and historic trails except where necessary for administration or emergencies.[12][1] Funding mechanisms include appropriations and grants, with emphasis on voluntary easements over compulsory takings to minimize federal expenditure.[8]
Federal Agencies and Oversight
The National Trails System is administered primarily by the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture, who delegate responsibilities to their respective land management agencies, including the National Park Service (NPS), Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and U.S. Forest Service (USFS).[10] Under the National Trails System Act of 1968, as amended, these secretaries are authorized to establish trails, develop comprehensive management plans, and coordinate with state, local, and private entities for protection, maintenance, and public use.[1] The NPS, within the Department of the Interior, holds primary responsibility for the majority of designated trails, administering 21 of the 32 national scenic and historic trails as of 2023.[8]The USFS, under the Department of Agriculture, manages six national scenic and historic trails, often those traversing national forests, and shares joint administration with the NPS for the National Recreation Trails program, which encompasses over 1,200 trails across federal, state, and local lands.[8][13] The BLM, also under the Department of the Interior, administers one national scenic or historic trail and collaborates on segments crossing public lands, emphasizing preservation of historic routes and scenic values while balancing multiple land uses such as grazing and energy development.[19] Joint efforts among these agencies are formalized through interagency memoranda of understanding, including the 2017-2027 National Trails System MOU, which establishes coordination mechanisms like the NTS Council comprising program leaders from NPS, USFS, and BLM to align policies on planning, standards, and funding.[20]Oversight begins with congressional designation of trails through specific legislation, requiring the administering secretary to submit a comprehensive plan to Congress within two years, detailing resource protection, development, and administration strategies.[4] The secretaries exercise executive oversight by approving plans, allocating budgets—such as the $25 million appropriated for trails administration in fiscal year 2023—and enforcing standards for trail marking, signage, and user safety.[8] Federal agencies monitor compliance via annual reports to Congress on trail conditions, visitor use (exceeding 100 million annually across the system), and threats like encroachment or natural degradation, with authority to acquire lands or easements only through donation or purchase with willing sellers to minimize eminent domain.[4][8] This framework ensures decentralized management tailored to agency expertise while maintaining national consistency, though challenges persist in funding shortfalls and interagency coordination on shared segments.[13]
Designation and Management Processes
National scenic trails and national historic trails within the National Trails System are designated exclusively by acts of Congress, following feasibility studies conducted by the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture.[21] These studies, required to be submitted to Congress within three fiscal years of a request, evaluate the trail's route, estimated costs, potential public use, and compliance with statutory criteria, such as for scenic trails being extended routes of at least 100 miles offering outstanding recreation or scenic value, and for historic trails commemorating nationally significant routes with feasible public tracing.[21] National recreation trails, by contrast, are designated administratively by the Secretaries of the Interior or Agriculture upon application from managing entities, provided the trails are existing, publicly accessible, and meet criteria like proximity to urban areas or provision of diverse recreational opportunities.[21][2] National geologic trails, added by the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009, follow a congressional designation process emphasizing routes that illustrate significant geologic features and history.[21]Upon designation, an administering federal agency—typically the National Park Service for 21 trails, the Forest Service for others, or shared among agencies like the Bureau of Land Management—is assigned overall responsibility, distinct from segment-specific management by multiple landholders.[2][4] The administering agency must prepare a comprehensive management plan within two fiscal years, outlining rights-of-way, resource protection, development standards, and coordination mechanisms, subject to public review and integration with adjacent land uses.[21][4] Advisory councils, comprising up to 35 members including public and agency representatives, are established within one year to provide input on planning and operations.[21]Management emphasizes voluntary partnerships with states, local governments, Tribes, nonprofits, and private landowners, avoiding eminent domain except in limited cases like the Appalachian Trail.[2] Federal agencies maintain trail segments on their lands, while cooperative agreements facilitate marking with uniform signage, resource preservation, and volunteer-led maintenance, with over 600,000 volunteer hours contributed annually as of early 2000s data.[21][2] Trail relocations require agency concurrence or congressional approval for major changes, ensuring alignment with original designation purposes.[21] Funding derives from congressional appropriations and partnerships, prioritizing local initiatives over centralized control.[2]
Categories of Designated Trails
National Scenic Trails
National Scenic Trails constitute a category within the National Trails System comprising extended, continuous routes designated by Congress to highlight regions of exceptional natural beauty and to furnish superior opportunities for non-motorized outdoor recreation, such as hiking and backpacking.[22] These trails are intended to conserve nationally significant scenic, cultural, and natural attributes while linking communities, landmarks, and public lands across diverse terrains.[22] Established under the National Trails System Act of 1968, the inaugural designations included the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail, reflecting an early emphasis on transcontinental footpaths that traverse varied ecosystems from forests to deserts.[8]Designation as a National Scenic Trail requires a trail to span at least 100 miles, maintain continuity primarily for pedestrian or equestrian use, and demonstrate outstanding recreational potential without substantial reliance on motorized access.[22] Congress authorizes studies to assess feasibility, followed by legislative designation, after which federal agencies like the National Park Service (NPS) or U.S. Forest Service (USFS) assume lead administration, often in partnership with states, local entities, and nonprofits.[2] Management prioritizes trail development, protection of adjacent resources, and public access, though completion varies due to land acquisition challenges and voluntary easements.[23]As of 2025, eleven National Scenic Trails have been designated, encompassing roughly 24,600 miles in aggregate, though not all segments are fully developed.[24] These trails span multiple states and biomes, from the eastern deciduous forests to western alpine ranges, promoting physical activity and environmental stewardship.[22] Administration is distributed among federal agencies, with NPS overseeing several northern and eastern routes and USFS managing prominent western trails.
Note: Lengths represent authorized or current developed mileage; full realization often requires ongoing efforts.[2] Recent administrative elevations, such as the 2023 designation of Ice Age, New England, and North Country as NPS units, enhance protection and funding for these trails.[25]
National Historic Trails
National Historic Trails constitute a category of long-distance trails within the National Trails System that commemorate routes of national historical significance, including paths used for exploration, migration, commerce, military operations, and cultural exchanges, often incorporating Native American history.[26] These trails facilitate public access to historical sites, preserved segments, and interpretive resources to support education and recreation tied to past events.[26] Unlike National Scenic Trails, which prioritize outstanding natural landscapes, historic trails focus on associative and cultural values, though they may traverse scenic areas.[6]Designation as a National Historic Trail requires meeting three statutory criteria outlined in the National Trails System Act: the route must have been established through historic use and possess national significance in physical, cultural, or associative terms; it must demonstrate national importance by influencing broad aspects of American history, such as westward expansion or indigenoustrade networks; and it must offer substantial potential for public recreational use or scholarly interest, particularly along intact segments or key sites.[21] The route need not remain physically discernible in its entirety, but its location must be verifiable for evaluation, and modern alignments may incorporate minor deviations for safety or accessibility while preserving historical integrity.[21]Congress alone holds authority to designate trails, typically following a feasibility and suitability study conducted by the Department of the Interior or Agriculture to confirm eligibility.[21] The category was established by the National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978, which amended the original 1968 legislation.[8]As of 2024, 19 National Historic Trails have been designated, encompassing roughly 37,000 miles across multiple states.[27][14] Prominent examples include the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, designated on October 5, 1978, tracing the Corps of Discovery's 1804–1806 expedition over 5,043 miles through 16 states from Illinois to Oregon; the Oregon National Historic Trail, also designated in 1978, following the 19th-century emigrant route spanning 2,170 miles across seven states; and the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail, designated the same year, marking the 1846–1869 migration path of over 70,000 settlers along 1,300 miles from Illinois to Utah.[26] Other trails, such as the Iditarod National Historic Trail (designated 1978, 2,000 miles in Alaska) and the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail (designated 1996, 54 miles in Alabama), highlight diverse themes from Arctic transportation to civil rights marches.[26]Administration falls primarily under the National Park Service within the Department of the Interior, though segments on Forest Service or Bureau of Land Management lands are managed by the Department of Agriculture.[4] Each trail requires a comprehensive management plan developed within two years of designation, outlining preservation, development, operation, and interpretation strategies in coordination with federal, state, local, tribal, and private partners.[4] Management emphasizes protection of resources without mandating continuous trail construction; instead, it promotes auto tours, marked routes, and certified high-potential sites for visitor access.[21] Funding derives from congressional appropriations, grants, and partnerships, with federal agencies responsible for acquiring and maintaining key segments while encouraging non-federal contributions.[4] This cooperative approach balances historical authenticity with public use, ensuring trails serve educational purposes without compromising evidentiary integrity.[4]
National Recreation Trails
National Recreation Trails form a category within the National Trails System consisting of existing land-based and water-based trails that offer recreation opportunities proximate to population centers on federal, state, local, or private lands.[28][8] These trails emphasize accessibility for urban and suburban users, supporting activities such as hiking, biking, and paddling while varying in length from less than one mile to nearly 500 miles.[29] Unlike National Scenic or Historic Trails, which require congressional designation, National Recreation Trails receive administrative approval, enabling broader inclusion of local paths that meet federal standards.[2]Authorized under Section 4 of the National Trails System Act of 1968 (Public Law 90-543), the program enables the Secretaries of the Interior and Agriculture to designate trails upon application from state or local governments, municipalities, or private organizations acting as trail sponsors.[12][30] Designations began in the early 1970s, with trails required to be at least five years old, open to public use without gaps, and constructed to minimize environmental impact and user conflicts.[30] Applicants must demonstrate the trail's suitability for diverse recreational uses and ongoing maintenance commitments, after which successful nominees receive official signage, recognition, and limited federal promotion support.[30][31]As of recent counts, nearly 900 National Recreation Trails exist across all 50 states, providing thousands of miles for public access and contributing to local recreation infrastructure without federal acquisition of land or full management responsibility.[2][32] Trail sponsors retain primary management duties, including maintenance and enforcement of use standards, while federal agencies offer technical assistance and coordinate with the National Trails System Interagency Council for visibility.[28] This decentralized approach has facilitated growth in urban-proximate trails, addressing recreation needs in densely populated areas amid increasing demand for outdoor activities.[13]
National Geologic Trails
National Geologic Trails represent a specialized category within the National Trails System, authorized to designate routes that trace and interpret major geologic phenomena, processes, or features illustrative of Earth's history.[33] Unlike scenic or historic trails, these emphasize scientific understanding of geomorphic events, such as ancient floods or volcanic activity, through networks of auto touring routes, interpretive sites, and educational markers rather than continuous footpaths. The category prioritizes public access to tangible evidence of geologic forces, fostering awareness of phenomena like massive Pleistocene-era inundations that reshaped landscapes.The provision for National Geologic Trails was added to the National Trails System Act by Title V, Subtitle J of the Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009, enacted on March 30, 2009. This legislation empowers Congress to designate trails that "follow the paths or routes of major geologic events" and promote coordination among federal, state, and private entities for their development and interpretation.[33] Designation requires congressional approval, with management assigned to the Secretary of the Interior, typically through the National Park Service (NPS), though partnerships with other agencies like the Bureau of Land Management or state geological surveys are encouraged for site-specific oversight. Criteria for selection include national significance in demonstrating geologic history, the presence of accessible features for study, and potential for educational programming without mandating federal acquisition of lands.As of 2023, only one National Geologic Trail has been congressionally designated: the Ice Age Floods National Geologic Trail, established under the same 2009 act. Spanning approximately 16,000 square miles (41,440 km²) across eastern Washington, northern Oregon, western Idaho, and western Montana, it interprets the cataclysmic outbursts from Glacial Lake Missoula between 15,000 and 13,000 years ago, which unleashed floods exceeding 500 cubic miles (2,100 km³) of water at speeds over 60 mph (97 km/h). [34] Key features include the Channeled Scablands with dry falls up to 360 feet (110 m) high, giant current ripples up to 30 feet (9 m) tall and 400 feet (120 m) long, and erratics weighing thousands of tons transported from Canada.[35] The trail comprises over 150 partner sites, including state parks, museums, and roadside pullouts, managed collaboratively by NPS and the Ice Age Floods Institute, with no single continuous path but rather a web of routes totaling thousands of miles for vehicular and interpretive access.[36][34]Management emphasizes non-intrusive preservation, with federal funding supporting signage, virtual tours, and research rather than trail construction, as most lands remain in private or state ownership. Challenges include coordinating across jurisdictions and countering erosion at fragile sites, but the trail has enhanced geologic literacy, drawing visitors to evidence of megafloods that once filled the Channeled Scablands to depths of 1,000 feet (300 m). No additional designations have occurred, reflecting the high bar for congressional action and the niche focus on verifiable, large-scale geologic narratives.
Connecting and Side Trails
Connecting or side trails, established under Section 6 of the National Trails System Act of 1968 (16 U.S.C. § 1245), serve to supplement the primary components of the system by providing public access to national scenic trails, national historic trails, or national recreation trails.[37] These trails are designated to link points within the same trail, connect separate segments, or offer entry from adjacent federal recreation lands such as national parks, forests, or other managed areas.[1] Unlike national scenic or historic trails, which require congressional approval and extensive feasibility studies, connecting or side trails can be established solely by the Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary of Agriculture, provided the trails fall under their jurisdictional lands and align with system objectives.[8]Designation criteria emphasize utility for access rather than intrinsic scenic, historic, or recreational value, with trails typically shorter and integrated into existing federal holdings to minimize new land acquisition.[4] The Secretaries must ensure markings and development standards conform to those of the connected primary trails, including signage for orientation and safety, though funding and maintenance remain limited compared to congressionally designated routes.[12] As of 2023, only seven such trails have been designated, reflecting their supplementary role and the administrative hurdles in justifying additions beyond core network needs.[8][1]These trails enhance system cohesion by addressing gaps in connectivity, such as bridging remote segments or facilitating entry from urban-adjacent lands, but their limited number underscores a focus on primary designations amid federal resource constraints.[2] Administration falls to the relevant federal agency—typically the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, or Bureau of Land Management—coordinating with state and local partners where trails intersect non-federal lands, though primary responsibility lies with federal entities for development and marking.[4] No comprehensive public inventory details all seven trails' lengths or specific linkages, as they lack the prominence of scenic or historic routes, but they collectively span modest distances relative to the system's over 60,000 miles of primary trails.[2]
Operational Management
Planning and Development Standards
The National Trails System Act of 1968, as amended, mandates the preparation of comprehensive management plans for national scenic, historic, and geologic trails within two fiscal years of congressional designation, outlining strategies for route identification, land protection, infrastructure development, resource stewardship, and public interpretation.[21] These plans, developed by the administering federal agency—such as the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, or Bureau of Land Management—prioritize cooperative mechanisms over direct federal acquisition, including scenic easements, voluntary landowner agreements, and partnerships with state and local entities to secure trail corridors while respecting private property rights.[23] For instance, plans specify acquisition of only those lands or interests necessary for public use, with federal purchases limited to willing sellers and supplemented by donations or exchanges, as evidenced in the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail's 2009 comprehensive plan, which allocated approximately 20% of its 3,100-mile route to federal easements rather than outright ownership.[38]Development standards emphasize minimal environmental disturbance and alignment with first-designated purposes: scenic trails focus on non-motorized foot, horse, or bicycle paths through outstanding landscapes, with facilities like trailheads, signage, and low-impact shelters designed to handle specified visitor capacities without degrading natural features.[39] Historic trails incorporate auto tour routes, interpretive markers at verifiable historic sites, and preservation of remnant pathways, as required under 16 U.S.C. § 1244, ensuring developments such as visitor centers or overlooks do not alter authenticated routes— for example, the OregonNational Historic Trail's plan identifies over 125 historic sites for marking while avoiding reconstruction that could fabricate non-original elements.[21] All developments must comply with the National Environmental Policy Act, undergo public scoping for at least 90 days, and integrate carrying capacity assessments to prevent overuse, with monitoring protocols for trail conditions like erosion or vegetation impacts.[23]For national recreation trails, planning standards are more decentralized, involving state-designated coordinators who align local trail projects with federal guidelines under the Recreational Trails Program, focusing on accessibility, safety (e.g., ADA-compliant features where terrain allows), and multi-use compatibility without the full comprehensive plan mandate.[39] Coordination across agencies is formalized through interagency memoranda, such as the 2006 National Trails System MOU, which standardizes data sharing for GIS-based route mapping and joint environmental reviews to streamline development while addressing fragmented land ownership—over 60% of trails cross non-federal lands.[40] These standards have enabled incremental progress, with designated trails averaging 50-70% completion of planned routes as of 2019, though delays often stem from negotiation challenges with private stakeholders rather than regulatory hurdles.[39]
Maintenance Obligations
Under the National Trails System Act of 1968, as amended, administering federal agencies bear primary responsibility for maintaining designated trails on lands under their jurisdiction, including routine tasks such as clearing vegetation, repairing surfaces, managing drainage, and ensuring safety compliance.[21] For national scenic trails (NSTs) and national historic trails (NHTs), the Secretary of the Interior or Agriculture—depending on the administering agency like the National Park Service (NPS) or U.S. Forest Service (USFS)—must develop comprehensive management plans that incorporate maintenance standards to preserve trail integrity, historical features, and environmental conditions.[41] These plans require coordination with non-federal entities for segments crossing state, local, or private lands, where federal obligations are limited to technical assistance and financial grants rather than direct upkeep.[42]Maintenance duties emphasize protection of natural and cultural resources, with agencies required to minimize habitat disruption and adhere to laws like the Endangered Species Act during operations.[43] For instance, USFS trails on National Forest System lands prioritize backlog reduction in designated priority areas, addressing erosion, overgrowth, and access barriers through scheduled inspections and repairs.[44] Volunteer organizations, such as the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, often perform substantial fieldwork under cooperative agreements, conducting over 200,000 hours annually on the Appalachian Trail alone, as federal staffing and budgets constrain agency-led efforts.[42]Federal agencies must also facilitate public-private partnerships for maintenance, as outlined in Executive Order 13195 (2001), which directs cooperation to sustain trail conditions without imposing uniform mandates across all land types.[45] On non-federal segments, landowners retain primary obligations under right-of-way agreements, with federal support conditional on voluntary participation; failure to maintain can lead to segment de-designation if it compromises overall trail usability.[41] This decentralized approach, while promoting local stewardship, has resulted in persistent deferred maintenance estimated at billions across federal trail networks, highlighting reliance on supplemental funding and partners rather than enforceable federal mandates.[44]
Funding Sources and Shortfalls
The National Trails System receives primary funding through federal appropriations administered by the National Park Service (NPS) under the Department of the Interior, with allocations drawn from the broader Operation of the National Park System (ONPS) account. For fiscal year 2025, the ONPS request totaled $3.09 billion, encompassing resource stewardship, visitor services, and maintenance activities that support designated trails, though specific trail-related line items are not always distinctly broken out and often integrate with park operations.[46] Additional federal support comes from programs like the Connect Trails to Parks (CTTP) initiative, a competitive NPS funding mechanism established to enhance connectivity between trails and parks, prioritizing projects that improve access and infrastructure for national scenic and historic trails.[47]Land acquisition for trails draws from the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), a mandatory spending account that provides resources for purchasing rights-of-way and protecting trail corridors, with appropriations varying annually based on congressional directives and offsetting receipts from offshore oil and gas leasing.[8] Complementary funding arises from state, local governments, private organizations, and individual landowners through grants authorized under the National Trails System Act, enabling development, operation, and maintenance of trail segments, often via formula or competitive allocations from agencies like the U.S. Forest Service for trails on federal lands it administers.[48] Nonprofit partners and philanthropy further amplify resources; for instance, since 1995, national trail organizations have leveraged federal investments to secure over $800 million in non-federal matching funds for projects.[49] Other streams include the Transportation Alternatives Program (TAP) under federal highway funding for multiuse trail enhancements and occasional grants from entities like the National ParkFoundation, which awarded over $1 million in 2024 for trail protection efforts.[50][51]Despite these mechanisms, the system faces persistent funding shortfalls, exacerbated by budgets dispersed across multiple accounts that obscure precise trail allocations and limit dedicated oversight.[8] Proposed fiscal year 2026 appropriations include a $900 million reduction to NPS operations, alongside 60% cuts to U.S. Forest Service trail maintenance and elimination of $6 million in legacy roads and trails funding, potentially straining infrastructure on federally managed segments.[49][52] These gaps contribute to deferred maintenance backlogs, with agencies reporting insufficient resources for routine repairs amid rising visitation, leading to increased reliance on volunteers and partnerships that cannot fully offset federal reductions.[53] Historical analyses indicate that such underfunding has compounded over decades, with trail-specific needs often competing against broader park priorities, resulting in uneven development and vulnerability to erosion or encroachment on under-resourced routes.[2]
Impacts and Benefits
Recreational and Public Health Outcomes
The National Trails System facilitates recreational activities such as hiking, backpacking, trail running, and cycling along its designated routes, particularly National Scenic and Recreation Trails, which span thousands of miles across diverse landscapes. These trails enable sustained aerobic exercise, with users often engaging in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity during outings; for instance, hiking on uneven terrain improves cardiovascular fitness by elevating heart rate and enhancing endurance, as evidenced by physiological studies on trail-based exertion.[54][55] Trail users report higher weekly physical activity levels compared to non-users, with 24.3% utilizing trails at least once weekly, correlating with increased overall exercise participation.[56]Public health benefits arise primarily from elevated physical activity and nature immersion, which empirical data link to reduced risks of chronic conditions. Access to trails promotes adherence to physical activity guidelines, with natural experiments demonstrating that proximity to new trails boosts local physical activity by standardized mean differences of 0.20-0.30, particularly among previously sedentary populations where 98% reported increased activity post-construction.[57][58] Hiking and walking on these trails lower cortisol levels by up to 15% during green space activity, mitigating stress and attention fatigue, while 30-minute sessions improve circulation, reduce blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood glucose, supporting metabolic and heart health.[59] Longitudinal trail use also enhances musculoskeletal strength, balance, and coordination, decreasing fall risks and osteoporosis incidence.[55]Mentally, trail recreation fosters psychological resilience, with studies attributing reduced anxiety, depression risk, and improved mood to nature exposure during hikes; for example, even brief walks in park-like trail settings calm physiological stress responses and enhance self-esteem.[60] These outcomes contribute to broader population health by addressing inactivity—prevalent in 60% of U.S. adults—through accessible, low-cost venues that yield healthcare savings via fewer cardiovascular events and chronic disease burdens.[61][62] However, benefits accrue most to frequent users, underscoring the need for equitable access to maximize system-wide impacts.[63]
Economic Contributions from Tourism and Use
The National Trails System attracts millions of visitors annually, whose expenditures on lodging, food, transportation, equipment, and services generate substantial economic activity in rural and gateway communities along trail routes. These contributions stem primarily from recreational hiking, biking, and historic site tourism, with users supporting sectors like hospitality and retail that might otherwise lack demand in low-population areas. A 2023 U.S. Department of the Interior overview notes that designated trails often lead to new businesses and increased real estate values due to heightened visitation.[2]Prominent National Scenic Trails exemplify this impact. The Appalachian Trail, spanning 14 states, supported $4.9 billion in economic output as of 2024 estimates from Appalachian State University, equivalent to 48,000 full-time jobs and yielding $197.5 million in county-level tax revenue from hiker spending.[64] Similarly, the Ice Age Trail in Wisconsin generates approximately $355 million yearly in statewide and local economic benefits through user expenditures, a figure tripled since 2011 surveys by trail managers.[65]National Historic Trails also drive tourism revenue via interpretive sites and auto routes. For instance, visitors to segments of the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail in the Carolinas spent $5.4 million directly, amplifying to a $7.6 million total economic effect when accounting for multiplier spending in 2023 data.[2] Such patterns hold across the system, where trail-related tourism bolsters seasonal employment and infrastructure investments, though benefits concentrate near access points rather than uniformly along remote sections. Overall, these activities integrate into the broader $730 billion annual U.S. outdoor recreation economy, with trails providing a targeted draw for sustained, low-impact visitation.[66]
Criticisms and Challenges
Fiscal Burdens and Taxpayer Costs
The administration and maintenance of the National Trails System impose ongoing fiscal obligations on U.S. taxpayers through federal appropriations to administering agencies such as the National Park Service (NPS), U.S. Forest Service (USFS), and Bureau of Land Management (BLM). These agencies draw from discretionary budgets to fund trail planning, development, operations, and repairs, with no centralized tracking of total expenditures across the system. For fiscal year 2025, the NPS—justification included approximately $14.6 million for the National Trails System program, supporting 25 administered national scenic and historic trails spanning over 58,000 miles, including $2.145 million for the Appalachian National Scenic Trail and $2.649 million for the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail.[46] Additional NPS allocations, such as $13.8 million for the Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance program, indirectly bolster trail-related activities like local partnerships and planning.[46]Deferred maintenance represents a significant escalating burden, as postponed repairs compound costs and necessitate larger taxpayer-funded interventions over time. The USFS, which manages segments of multiple national trails, estimated its overall trail maintenance backlog at $314 million in fiscal year 2012, with an additional $210 million required for upgrades to meet basic standards—a figure that underscores systemic underinvestment leading to deterioration.[67] While specific backlog data for the National Trails System remains fragmented, NPS projects under the Great American Outdoors Act Legacy Restoration Fund, such as $15 million for rehabilitating Appalachian Trail sections to address $12.3 million in deferred needs, illustrate how accumulated shortfalls demand targeted appropriations that could otherwise support broader federal priorities.[46]Agency budget constraints and the absence of a unified funding mechanism amplify taxpayer costs by fostering inefficiencies, as each entity allocates resources through separate line items without comprehensive oversight. A Congressional Research Service analysis notes that operational challenges, including land acquisition via the Land and Water Conservation Fund and cooperative agreements, strain limited federal dollars, with no aggregate appropriation figure available due to dispersed budgeting. This structure contributes to persistent funding shortfalls, where annual appropriations—supplemented modestly by user fees, donations, and state/local contributions—fail to cover full lifecycle costs, effectively transferring deferred fiscal liabilities to future taxpayers.
Property Rights and Land Access Issues
The National Trails System Act authorizes federal agencies to acquire rights-of-way or interests in private lands for designated trails primarily through voluntary means such as donations, purchases, exchanges, or cooperative agreements, with eminent domain permitted only as a last resort for national scenic trails, limited to a corridor not exceeding one-quarter mile in width.[12][8] For national historic trails, acquisition authority is more restricted, focusing on discrete "high potential historic sites" rather than continuous corridors, and federal funding for land purchases outside federal boundaries is prohibited for several trails including the Continental Divide and Oregon Trails.[68] Despite these provisions emphasizing landowner consent—explicitly stating that trail designation does not authorize entry onto private property without permission—practical implementation has generated disputes over involuntary burdens and federal coercion.[69]Property owners frequently cite diminished privacy, increased liability for trail-related injuries, and reduced land values as key impacts, arguing that even voluntary easements impose uncompensated costs for signage, maintenance, and enforcement against misuse such as off-trail trespass or vandalism.[70] In the case of the Appalachian Trail, federal agencies employed eminent domain approximately 400 times between 1986 and 1997 to secure over 15,000 acres, illustrating how completion priorities can override initial voluntary preferences.[71] Additional concerns include opaque planning processes, where the National Park Service has initiated trail segments without notifying affected landowners, sometimes leveraging local governments or nonprofit "friends" groups as intermediaries to obscure federal involvement, as documented in the development of the Saratoga County Canalway Trail starting in 2002.[70] Instances of threatened or actual condemnation, such as in Rosendale, New York (2003) and at the Graymoor monastery (2000), have fueled calls for reforms requiring congressional approval for each eminent domain action and mandatory public hearings along full proposed routes.[70]Rails-to-trails conversions under Section 8(d) of the Act exemplify acute property rights tensions, as the railbanking mechanism preserves abandoned railroad easements for potential future rail use while permitting interim trail operations, thereby blocking reversion to adjacent private owners and prompting hundreds of inverse condemnation claims in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.[72] Courts have recognized these as takings requiring just compensation when government actions eliminate reversionary interests, as affirmed in cases like Preseault v. United States (1990) and subsequent rulings, yet landowners often face protracted litigation and uneven outcomes due to varying state property law interpretations of original rail easements.[73] Proposals to expand eminent domain for completing scenic trails, such as the Pacific Crest or Florida Trails—which remain incomplete due to private land gaps exceeding 4,000 miles—have met resistance from owners and even some trail advocates, who prioritize funding mechanisms like the Land and Water Conservation Fund over coercive acquisitions that risk political backlash and erode trust in voluntary partnerships.[71]
Environmental Considerations
Preservation Aims and Achievements
The National Trails System Act of October 2, 1968, established the system to promote the preservation of outdoor recreation resources, emphasizing protection of trailside environments for public appreciation and use. For national scenic trails, the legislation specifies routes designed to maximize potential for enjoying natural, scenic, historic, ecological, and cultural features while minimizing adverse impacts on adjacent lands. National historic trails focus on identifying and safeguarding the original routes, artifacts, and remnants associated with significant events in American history, such as westward expansion or Native American paths. These aims prioritize long-term conservation through federal coordination with states, local governments, and private landowners, often via voluntary easements rather than outright acquisition to respect property rights.[21][5]Achievements in preservation include the designation of 11 national scenic trails and 19 national historic trails, encompassing over 60,000 miles of routes where federal agencies have implemented management plans to protect key segments. These efforts have involved partnerships leading to the restoration of native vegetation, removal of invasive species, and securing conservation easements on private lands adjacent to trails, thereby preventing development encroachment. For instance, along historic trails, federal protection components—such as registered historic sites and high-potential route segments—have been inventoried and maintained, preserving tangible links to events like the Lewis and Clark expedition or the Pony Express. The system's framework has also facilitated volunteer-driven initiatives and grants, including over $1 million awarded by the National Park Foundation in 2024 for trail resource protection projects.[2][39][51]Overall, the National Trails System has contributed to conserving diverse ecosystems and cultural heritage by integrating preservation into recreation planning, though success depends on cooperative stewardship rather than uniform federal ownership. Empirical outcomes include certified trail miles exceeding 50,000 across designated paths, with ongoing landprotection metrics tracked via acres under easement or management, demonstrating causal links between designation and reduced habitat fragmentation in trail corridors. While not all routes are fully protected—much relies on non-federalcooperation—the system's longevity since 1968 underscores its role in sustaining irreplaceable natural and historic assets against urban expansion pressures.[42][19]
Drawbacks from Overuse and Encroachment
Overuse of trails within the National Trails System has resulted in measurable environmental degradation, including soil compaction, accelerated erosion, vegetation trampling, and trail widening. On the Appalachian Trail, a designated National Scenic Trail spanning 2,175 miles, assessments reveal erosion depths ranging from low (1–2 feet) to severe (>3 feet), alongside vegetation loss and compositional shifts from repeated foot traffic. Trail widths often exceed sustainable averages of 24 inches, reaching 3–6 feet or more in heavily impacted areas, with 26% of assessed sections rated as poor condition in 2005 evaluations.[74]Surging visitor numbers amplify these effects; northbound thru-hikers on the Appalachian Trail rose 155% from 2010 to 2017, while Pacific Crest Trail thru-hikers increased from 156 in 2011 to 719 in 2016, both National Scenic Trails experiencing heightened pressure from concentrated use. Such overuse alters hydrology, increases muddiness, and proliferates unauthorized "bootleg" campsites—402 identified across a 131.7-mile segment, encompassing 107,887 square feet of disturbed area—exacerbating soil loss and human waste accumulation managed via 265 privies. Wildlife faces displacement and behavioral changes, with 93% of reviewed studies (1981–2015) documenting negative recreational impacts.[75][74]Encroachment from external development further compromises trail integrity by fragmenting habitats and eroding protective buffers. Urban expansion and commercial growth threaten wilderness corridors, as noted by the American Hiking Society, reducing solitude and altering ecosystems along National Trails routes. Proliferating infrastructure, including roads, power lines, and communication towers, necessitates tree removal and landscape division, diminishing backcountry qualities and wildlife connectivity. These pressures, compounded by off-trail misuse, challenge the system's preservation mandate, necessitating hardened trail designs and concentrated use strategies to mitigate long-term damage.[76][75]
Controversies
Eminent Domain and Federal Overreach
The National Trails System Act of 1968 empowers federal agencies, primarily the Departments of the Interior and Agriculture, to acquire lands or interests in lands necessary for the protection and development of designated national scenic and historic trails, with eminent domain available as a mechanism of last resort after negotiations fail.[12] This authority, codified in Section 7(g) of the Act (16 U.S.C. § 1246(g)), permits condemnation proceedings without owner consent to secure trail corridors, though acquisitions outside existing federal boundaries are restricted to willing sellers, donations, exchanges, or cases deemed essential for public use following documented negotiation attempts.[77] In practice, the Act prioritizes cooperative agreements with states, localities, and private landowners, but the eminent domain provision has enabled federal intervention where voluntary measures stall, raising persistent concerns over property rights erosion.Historical application of eminent domain is most pronounced in completing the Appalachian Trail, designated in 1968 as the system's inaugural national scenic trail spanning approximately 2,190 miles across 14 states. The National Park Service, tasked with management, invoked eminent domain to acquire roughly 700 miles of fragmented private land holdings between the late 1960s and 1980s, often after protracted disputes with reluctant owners who contested valuations or trail routing impacts on their properties.[78] This effort, funded through federal appropriations under the Land and Water Conservation Fund, succeeded in establishing a continuous protected corridor by 1993, but at the cost of legal challenges alleging inadequate compensation and undue federal pressure on small landowners, including farmers and timber operators whose parcels bisected proposed routes.[39] Comparable, though less extensive, uses occurred for other trails like the Pacific Crest Trail, where gaps exceeding 100 miles remain privately held as of 2021, prompting ongoing debates over whether eminent domain should bridge them despite opposition from property advocates.Rails-to-trails conversions under the National Trails System Act, facilitated by the Surface Transportation Board's interim use provisions (16 U.S.C. § 1247(d)), have amplified eminent domain controversies by effectively halting the reversion of abandoned railroad rights-of-way to adjacent fee owners. When railroads abandon easements, property law traditionally mandates reversion to the underlying landowner unless a new public use supersedes it, but the Trails Act's rail-banking mechanism preserves the easement for potential future rail reactivation while allowing recreational trail development, often without initial compensation.[79] The U.S. Supreme Court in Marvin M. Brandt Revocable Trust v. United States (574 U.S. 114, 2014) ruled that such conversions constitute a Fifth Amendment taking when they extinguish reversionary interests, entitling owners to just compensation via inverse condemnation claims in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims; by 2023, these cases had yielded over $1 billion in awards across thousands of claims, underscoring the financial and legal burdens imposed on private parties.[80] Critics, including ranchers and developers in rural areas, contend this framework exemplifies federal overreach by retroactively encumbering private titles for non-essential recreational purposes, circumventing state property laws and expanding bureaucratic leverage over an estimated 25,000 miles of converted rail corridors nationwide.Broader allegations of federal overreach center on the Act's designation process, which imposes federal oversight on trails traversing private, state, and local lands without mandating local consent, potentially restricting adjacent land uses through scenic easements or corridor protections that diminish property values. For instance, trail designations have triggered regulatory reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, delaying private development and imposing compliance costs on non-federal landowners, as seen in disputes along the Continental Divide Trail where federal agencies asserted influence over grazing and mining rights on intermixed private parcels.[73] Property rights organizations argue that the system's growth—from 2 scenic trails in 1968 to 19 by 2023—amplifies these intrusions, particularly in western states where federal land already comprises over 50% of acreage, enabling incremental control expansions under the guise of preservation without proportional state veto power or fiscal accountability for maintenance burdens shifted to locals.[8] Recent legislative proposals, such as H.R. 5470 (2025) for Route 66, explicitly prohibit eminent domain to mitigate such concerns, reflecting bipartisan pushback against perceived mission creep in trail expansions.[81] Despite these safeguards, eminent domain's availability perpetuates tensions, as evidenced by advocacy groups pressing for its expanded use to "complete" trails like the North Country Trail, which opponents decry as prioritizing federal recreational mandates over individual sovereignty and market-driven land stewardship.[71]
Bureaucratic Inefficiencies and Local Control Debates
The management of the National Trails System involves multiple federal agencies, including the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, and Bureau of Land Management, which often results in coordination challenges and delayed decision-making for trail maintenance and development.[8] A 2013 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that the Forest Service, responsible for significant portions of national scenic and historic trails, maintains fewer miles than planned due to insufficient resources and planning gaps, contributing to a persistent maintenance backlog estimated at $314 million at the time, with negative impacts such as trail erosion and user safety risks.[67][82]These inefficiencies are exacerbated by regulatory requirements like the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which mandates extensive environmental reviews for trail projects, often prolonging timelines and increasing costs without commensurate benefits in trail usability.[83]Federal shutdowns and funding uncertainties further halt planning and approvals, as seen in pauses to NEPA processes for public lands projects during fiscal impasses.[84] Deferred maintenance across agencies has ballooned, with the National Park Service reporting over $23 billion in backlog as of fiscal year 2023, including trail infrastructure strained by bureaucratic prioritization of non-essential administrative functions over fieldwork.[85]Debates over local control center on the tension between federal oversight—mandated by the National Trails System Act for comprehensive planning and interagency coordination—and state or private landowners' preferences for autonomy, particularly on nonfederal lands comprising up to 80% of many trails.[8] Critics argue that federal designations impose additional layers of compliance, such as trail corridor plans and advisory councils, which can conflict with local land uses and slow responsiveness to regional needs, as evidenced by management disputes where federal "unit" status proposals expand agency authority without transferring existing jurisdictional powers.[86][5] Proponents of devolution, including some congressional voices, contend that shifting more authority to states could reduce these frictions and costs, citing examples like wilderness-area trail segments where multi-agency rules hinder efficient upkeep compared to localized management.[87] While the Act emphasizes voluntary partnerships and limits federal land acquisition to willing sellers post-1983, practical implementation often prioritizes national standards over local priorities, fueling ongoing discussions in policy circles about balancing preservation with pragmatic governance.[2][88]
Recent Developments
New Designations and Studies
In June 2025, the Department of the Interior designated five new National Recreation Trails across six states, incorporating approximately 387 miles into the National Trails System; these include segments in California, Colorado, Michigan, New York, Ohio, and Washington, emphasizing recreational access and local partnerships.[89][90] Earlier, in 2020, five rail-trails were added as National Recreation Trails, such as the Flint Hills State Park Trail in Kansas and the Panhandle Pathway in Indiana, totaling over 100 miles focused on converted rail corridors for multi-use recreation.[91] These designations, authorized under the National Trails System Act, prioritize trails that enhance public health and outdoor opportunities without requiring federal land acquisition.[2]Legislative efforts have advanced toward designating Route 66 as a National Historic Trail, with H.R. 5470 and S. 2887 introduced in September 2025 to amend the Act, recognizing its role in 20th-century American migration and commerce spanning eight states.[81][92] Although not yet enacted, these bills build on prior corridor preservation programs and reflect ongoing congressional interest in historic routes.[93] No new National Scenic or Historic Trails have been fully designated since the 2019 extension of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, underscoring the higher thresholds of congressional approval and resource demands for these categories compared to Recreation Trails.[94][8]Feasibility studies for potential National Scenic Trail additions have progressed in several regions. The Buckeye National Scenic Trail study, mandated by H.R. 6142 and completed in draft form by January 2025, evaluates a proposed 1,200-mile route across Ohio, assessing alignment with Act criteria like natural beauty and public use feasibility.[95][96] Similarly, the Alaska Long National Scenic Trail feasibility study, ongoing through March 2025, examines a remote coastal route for scenic and recreational value under Bureau of Land Management oversight.[97][98] Other proposed studies include the Bonneville Shoreline Trail (S. 1135, March 2025) along Utah's Wasatch Front and a Southern Connective Trail advanced by Senator Warnock in October 2025, linking Appalachian and Florida trails to address regional connectivity gaps.[99][100][101] These studies, required within three fiscal years of authorization, inform congressional decisions by quantifying costs, environmental impacts, and landowner support, often revealing challenges like fragmented land ownership.[102]
Legislative and Budgetary Updates
In fiscal year 2023, Congress appropriated $3.475 billion for the National Park Service (NPS) overall, marking a 36% nominal increase from FY2014 levels, with trails administration funded as a subset of the Operation of the National Park System (ONPS) account.[103] Specific allocations for the 23 NPS-administered national scenic and historic trails totaled approximately $21 million within ONPS for administrative responsibilities, supporting planning, development, and maintenance amid growing visitation pressures.[104] Trail maintenance and construction received $24.25 million in the House recommendation for FY2023, $5.75 million above the prior year, reflecting congressional recognition of deferred upkeep needs estimated in the billions across federal trail networks.[105]For FY2025, the enacted ONPS appropriation stood at $2.894 billion, below the Biden Administration's $3.090 billion request but sustaining core operations for the National Trails System without dedicated line-item cuts reported.[106] The President's FY2025 budget proposed $3.57 billion total for NPS, prioritizing resource stewardship at $431 million within ONPS, which encompasses trail corridor management, though exact trails-specific figures remained embedded rather than itemized, highlighting ongoing challenges in isolating funding amid broader agency priorities.[107] Advocacy groups noted that such appropriations have historically underfunded trail-specific needs, with federal partners contributing variably to the system's 60,000+ miles, often relying on nonprofit collaborations to bridge gaps.[108]Legislatively, the 119th Congress (2025-2026) saw introductions of bills amending the National Trails System Act for feasibility studies on potential additions, including H.R. 4566 (introduced October 11, 2025) directing the Secretary of the Interior to assess Washington's Trail 1753 as a national historic trail, emphasizing its role in early American exploration routes.[109] Similarly, S. 2887 and companion H.R. 5470 (both September 18, 2025) proposed expansions or reaffirmations for the Route 66 National Historic Trail, building on its 2006 designation to enhance preservation amid tourism demands.[110] In October 2025, Senator Warnock advanced bipartisan legislation for a study on designating the Southern National Scenic Trail, a nearly 300-mile path linking Appalachian states, as a first step toward full integration into the system.[101] No major amendments to the core Act passed between 2023 and 2025, with activity focused on incremental studies rather than overhauls, amid debates over federal expansion versus local resource strains.[111]Looking to FY2026 proposals, the President's budget outlined severe reductions, including a $900 million cut to NPS operations and slashes to Forest Service trails funding, potentially jeopardizing maintenance for congressionally designated routes co-managed across agencies.[49][52] These shifts underscore fiscal pressures from competing priorities, with trails advocates warning of increased erosion, overuse, and lost historical connectivity without sustained appropriations.[112]