Bill
Bill > HF2531
IA HF2531
IA HF2531A bill for an act relating to interests in minerals owned by counties and cities.(Formerly HF 2213.)
summary
Introduced
02/16/2026
02/16/2026
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill requires a county or city to divest any interest in minerals that the county or city owns or controls. The county or city shall convey any interest in minerals it owns or controls to the surface owner of the land to which the interest in minerals pertains. Counties and cities shall complete all conveyances required under the bill no later than five years after the effective date of the bill. Any interest in minerals acquired by a county or city after the effective date of the bill shall be conveyed within 90 days. The bill provides that if taxes on any mineral rights or interests not owned by the owner of the land are delinquent, then the county shall send a statement of the delinquent taxes along with a notice that the mineral rights or interests will be conveyed to the owner of the land unless the owner of those mineral rights or interests pays the total amount due within 90 days after the notice is served. The notice shall be served through first class mail. If the owner of the mineral rights and interests does not pay the total amount due, the county shall convey the mineral rights and interests to the owner of the land, terminating any right of redemption of the owner of the mineral rights or interests. The bill authorizes the county to collect the total amount due by converting the amount to a personal judgment. If the treasurer finds that it is impractical to collect the amount due through tax sale and personal judgment, the treasurer shall make a written recommendation to the board of supervisors to abate the total amount due. The board of supervisors shall abate, by resolution, the amount due and direct the treasurer to strike the amount due from the county system. Under current law, a mineral interest in coal is automatically extinguished 20 years after its creation, transfer, or preservation and the ownership is reverted back to the owner of the land, unless a statement of claim is filed. The bill provides that any mineral interest is abandoned if it has not been active for a period of 20 years after its creation, transfer, or preservation, unless a statement of claim is filed. The bill specifies that a mineral interest is active when one of several certain conditions exist. Title to the abandoned mineral interest vests in the owner of the surface estate in the land in, or under, which the mineral interest is located on the date of abandonment. The bill provides that the statement of claim shall not be required of an owner if the mineral interest was separately taxed for real estate tax purposes, the tax was paid, the mineral interest has not been subject to a tax sale, and the mineral interest has not been conveyed to the owner of the surface estate.
AI Summary
This bill mandates that counties and cities must transfer any ownership or control they have over mineral interests, which are defined as rights to minerals like coal, oil, gas, and metals underlying land, to the person who owns the surface of that land, unless the county or city is itself the surface owner. These transfers must be completed within five years of the bill's enactment, with any new mineral interests acquired by local governments needing to be transferred within 90 days. If taxes on these separately owned mineral interests become delinquent, the county will notify the mineral owner of the overdue amount and inform them that the interest will be transferred to the surface owner if the taxes are not paid within 90 days; if payment is not made, the county will convey the interest to the surface owner, ending the original owner's right to reclaim it, though the county can pursue personal judgment for the debt or, if impractical, abate the amount. Furthermore, the bill expands the concept of "abandoned" mineral interests, meaning those that have been inactive for 20 years, to include more than just coal, and states that title to such abandoned interests automatically transfers to the surface owner unless a statement of claim is filed to preserve the interest, with exceptions for interests that have been separately taxed and paid, not subject to tax sale, and not already conveyed to the surface owner.
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Natural Resources (House)
Last Action
Introduced, placed on calendar. H.J. 304. (on 02/16/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HF2531 |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/HF2531.html |
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