Chances are good that the last time you spent time in your
favorite outdoor setting, you spent it on land purchased by the Land and Water
Conservation Fund (LWCF), which is set to expire in 30 days.
Photo by Matt Reilly |
Created in 1965 in a bipartisan Congressional agreement, the
LWCF is a motor that carries with it the mission of protecting America’s
natural areas, natural resources, and historical and cultural sites. The initiative called for $900 million—a
small fraction—of fees paid by offshore oil and gas mining companies to be
appropriated into the fund annually. The
fund, then, was to be used to protect wilderness areas, national parks, working
ranches, greenways, wildlife corridors, and riparian lands, and to assist in
the building of parks, recreational sport fields, and trail systems in all 50
states.
Around the financial and legislative power of the LWCF
formed the LWCF Coalition, a grouping of over 1000 conservation groups across
the country united for a common cause. “My
land trust, Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy, is a member because we
realize that in order to protect fragile lands along the Appalachian Trail and
the Blue Ridge Parkway we need a steady investment to meet our goals,” said Jay
Leutze, a trustee of the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy who enjoys hiking
on and around the Appalachian Trail near his home in Asheville, North
Carolina. “Collectively we hope to raise
our voices to tell the story that land conservation is a bipartisan
no-brainer. Everybody loves clean water
and places to hike and camp. But not
everybody knows how much work goes into securing even a single acre of
protection for future generations.”
Virginia, specifically, has received about $283 million over
the past 50 years from the fund, protecting such cherished natural environments
as the James River and Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuges, the Blue Ridge
Parkway, and the Jefferson/Washington National Forest.
However, the LWCF is much broader in its efforts than these
nationally-recognized settings. “A lot
of the funding flows directly to Virginia so that local communities can create
bike trails and greenways, and even soccer fields,” said Jay Leutze, a trustee
for the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy who enjoys hiking on and
around the Appalachian Trail. “In
Virginia there is a real challenge to create wildlife corridors and buffer
historical sites from suburban sprawl.
LWCF is the best tool for protecting the places we all cherish.”
Unfortunately, that tool has been underutilized over the
course of its five-decade life.
“Dishonest budgeting” has been rampant—over $19 billion has been wrongly
diverted from the LWCF account and utilized elsewhere over the last 50
years. “That money would have gone a
long way to fixing some of our half-finished national forests and state parks,”
said Leutze. “When landowners inside our
national forests and along the routes of the Appalachian Trail are willing to
sell for a fair price, we really need the funds to be available as intended.”
Now, the LWCF is facing expiration on September 30, 2015,
leaving only 30 days of Congressional work periods for action to take place.
What’s more, Congress will not consider reauthorization of
the LWCF as a stand-alone bill, only as an amendment to a more substantial
piece of legislature. In February 2015, Republican
Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina introduced Senate Bill 338, which is
getting the most attention as a reauthorization vehicle. The bill requires a minimum of 1.5 percent of
the annual funding amount allocated to the LWCF to be used for improving public
access to federally-owned public lands, while calling for the original LWCF Act
of 1965 to be amended, making the fund a permanent program.
The corresponding bill in the House, House Bill 1814,
currently has over 100 co-sponsors—primarily Democrats. Republican Representatives are hearing
grievances from the dogged, right-wing, Cliven Bundy-type constituents who
believe that the federal government has overgrown its borders and acquired too
much land already. Considering the
Republican majority in both houses of Congress, there is still a lot of work to
be done to ensure the reauthorization of the LWCF which is the sportsman’s most
valuable asset.
From the Blue Ridge Parkway and the Mount Rogers National
Recreation Area in Virginia, to Rocky Mountain National Park and the Grand
Canyon in the West, the LWCF is responsible for the protection of the special
places that outdoor recreationists form strong ties with. Economically, those lands support 9.4 million
jobs and $730 billion of revenue annually nationwide, according to the Outdoor
Industry Association. The beauty of the
program is that the funds are acquired from offshore drilling fees, not
taxpayer dollars.
Reauthorizing the LWCF is truly a “bipartisan no-brainer.” Contact your representatives to let them know
your wishes, and act fast. Let’s
preserve this conservation superpower while we still can.
*Originally published in the Rural Virginian
1 comment :
Great blog, thanks for posting this.
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