This concurrent resolution doesn't change state law—instead, it's a formal statement recognizing the value of conservation and restoration work in the Black Hills, particularly for addressing water shortages and reducing wildfire risk. The resolution commends local conservation districts, watershed groups, nonprofits, and government partners for their collaborative efforts to restore streams, wetlands, and riparian areas using practices like native vegetation restoration and beaver dam analogues.
AI-generated summary
This bill does not directly amend codified state law.
This amendment converted HCR6003 from an introduced bill to its enrolled (final passed) version by removing formatting markers and line numbers, and adding official enactment language and signature blocks showing it was adopted by the House on January 22, 2026 and concurred by the Senate on January 26, 2026—no substantive changes were made to the resolution's content recognizing conservation practices in the Black Hills.
Senate Concurred in Resolution Passed, YEAS 33, NAYS 0. S.J. 110
First read in Senate and referral to committee waived pursuant to JR 6D-1 S.J. 90
House of Representatives Adopt Resolution Passed, YEAS 68, NAYS 0. H.J. 111
House of Representatives Committee referral waived pursuant to JR 6D-1 H.J. 105
First Reading House H.J. 34
Prime sponsor · Rep.
D
Prime sponsor · Sen.
R
Cosponsors
Concurred in Resolution
Adopt Resolution