The Grand Canyon's North Rim has welcomed visitors back for the summer, a hopeful sign of resilience after one of Arizona's most heartbreaking wildfires in recent memory. However, for Representative Eli Crane (R-AZ), reopening the gates is only half the battle.
Rep. Crane has spent months fighting to ensure that recovery at one of America's most beloved landmarks doesn't get tangled in federal red tape.
His North Rim Restoration Act of 2025, introduced in October of that year, was written with urgency in mind, giving the National Park Service emergency contracting authority and cutting through the slow machinery of federal procurement so that rebuilding can happen at the pace the moment demands.
The Dragon Bravo Fire left a painful mark on the region, with roughly 150,000 acres burned, more than 100 structures destroyed, and the historic Grand Canyon Lodge was lost in the flames.
For many Arizonans, it wasn't just a natural disaster. It felt like losing a piece of home.
Bills to Further Help Restoration
"It's critical that we get this important legislation through the Senate and signed into law so that we can ensure a timely recovery from the Dragon Bravo Fire," he wrote on X following the opening of the north rim announcement, his message carrying the same determination that has defined his push on this issue for months.
The bill's journey through the House offered rare moments of bipartisan unity. The House Committee on Natural Resources advanced it unanimously in January 2026, and the full House followed without a single dissenting vote in March.
The legislation covers forest management, infrastructure rebuilding, and routine maintenance, while requiring the Park Service to report progress to Congress every 180 days, a measure Crane's office says is designed to keep recovery efforts honest and accountable.
Arizona Senators Mark Kelly (D-AZ) and Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) have introduced the North Rim and Kaibab National Forest Restoration Act of 2026, which the senators introduced to speed up recovery from the fires at the Grand Canyon’s North Rim and nearby Kaibab National Forest.
It uses the same basic idea as Crane’s House bill, but expands it to cover both park and forest land.
The goal was to cut through federal red tape so restoration, cleanup, and rebuilding could move faster for the affected agencies and communities.
Now, all eyes turn to the Senate.







