Appropriations

Congressional Appropriations Committee Allocates Federal Funding Based on Washington Monument's Shadow 'Time-Use Zones'—First Report Shows 47% of Americans Live in 'Unauthorized Shadow Territory'

The appropriations subcommittee on national monuments has formally adopted the first in a series of landmark studies determining exactly when citizens may lawfully occupy the space beneath the Washington Monument’s shadow. The bill, titled the “Monumental Shading Equity Act of 2026,” was introduced by Representative Halloway (R-VI) after discovering that 47% of the American public regularly inhabits what he termed “Unauthorized Shadow Territory.”

According to a 98-page report from the Office of Monumental Oversight, the study determined that 345,000 square feet of federal land currently exists in a state of what the committee chairman described as “regulatory purgatory.” The report found that during solar hour 14:32-14:47, the monument’s shadow falls across a district that “legally belongs to three different zoning departments, a private landscaping trust, and the National Park Service’s lost-and-found department.”