Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill will boost conservati­on, parks

- BY MATTHEW DALY Staff writer Ben Benton contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — A bipartisan bill that would spend nearly $3 billion on conservati­on projects, outdoor recreation and maintenanc­e of national parks and other public lands is on its way to the president’s desk after winning final legislativ­e approval.

Supporters say the measure, known as the Great American Outdoors Act, would be the most significan­t conservati­on legislatio­n enacted in nearly half a century.

The House approved the bill 310-107 Wednesday, weeks after it won overwhelmi­ng approval in the Senate. The bill now goes to President Donald Trump, who is expected to sign it.

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, R-Tenn., said the legislatio­n funds needed federal park upkeep and will create jobs in Tennessee.

“I am proud to have co-sponsored the Great American Outdoors Act. This is a major piece of conservati­on legislatio­n that will help to preserve America’s beauty and Tennessee’s beauty for generation­s to come,” Fleischman­n said in a statement. “Tennessee’s national parks will finally have funding to complete deferred maintenanc­e projects that are currently backlogged, creating much-needed jobs for communitie­s across the state.”

Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, urged passage of the bill in a tweet. The younger Trump, a senior adviser to her father, is expected to celebrate the bill’s passage at events in Colorado this week with Interior Secretary David Bernhardt and Sen. Cory Gardner, one of the bill’s sponsors.

The bill would spend about $900 million a year — double current spending — on the popular Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, and another $1.9 billion per year on improvemen­ts at national parks, forests, wildlife refuges and rangelands.

Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva, chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, called the bill “one of the biggest wins for conservati­on in decades.”

“We have a generation­al opportunit­y to ensure America’s crown jewels are protected,” he said, adding that the bill would ensure all tools available are used to help the nation respond to the climate crisis and protect landscapes, clean water and clean air.

At a time of intense partisan disagreeme­nts, “it is perhaps more necessary that ever to demonstrat­e we can still bridge the divide … and work together to find common ground,” said Grijalva, a Democrat. “This bill goes beyond politics. It’s about ensuring that we pass along a legacy of public lands.”

Supporters say the bill will create at least 100,000 jobs, while restoring national parks and repairing trails and forest systems.

Members of the Charlottes­ville, Virginia-based Southern Environmen­tal Law Center, the largest nonprofit environmen­tal organizati­on in the Southeast and an active conservati­on group in the Chattanoog­a region, applauded the act.

Law Center federal legislativ­e director Anders Reynolds on Wednesday said it was a “tremendous victory for anyone who supports access to these special places” across the nation and the national parks and federal lands in the Chattanoog­a region. “It’s past time we devoted the appropriat­e resources to their upkeep. From Clingmans Dome in Great Smoky Mountains National Park to Skyline Drive in Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park, unique places in the South have suffered for years from maintenanc­e issues stemming from a lack of dedicated funding,” Reynolds said.

“There couldn’t be a more important time than now to improve parks, protect birds and wildlife, and create jobs in every state across the country,” said Sarah Greenberge­r, senior vice president for conservati­on policy of the National Audubon Society.

While bipartisan, the bill was led in the Senate by Gardner and fellow GOP Sen. Steve Daines of Montana. Gardner and Daines are among the Senate’s most vulnerable incumbents, and each represents a state where the outdoor economy and tourism at sites such as Rocky Mountain and Yellowston­e national parks play an outsize role.

Daines and Gardner persuaded the president to support the bill at a White House meeting this year, even though Trump has repeatedly tried to slash spending for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund in his budget proposals. Trump soon tweeted his support for the bill, saying it “will be HISTORIC for our beautiful public lands.”

Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., said permanentl­y and fully funding the conservati­on program “will be a monumental victory for conservati­on and the places where we all get outside.″ He cited studies showing that each dollar spent by the fund creates an additional four dollars in economic value.

Visitors cannot enjoy national parks such as Yellowston­e and Yosemite “if the bathrooms don’t work, if the trails and campground­s aren’t open, or if the roads are in disrepair,” Heinrich said. “These places that we all cherish deserve better.”

The bill’s opponents, mostly Republican­s, complained that it would not eliminate an estimated $20 billion maintenanc­e backlog on 640 million acres of federally owned lands. The bill authorizes $9.5 billion for maintenanc­e over five years.

“The Great American Outdoors Act is a perfect example of Washington playing political games,” said Utah Rep. Rob Bishop, the top Republican on the natural resources panel. He accused the bill’s supporters of taking “a bipartisan and popular idea to fix our parks and spur job creation” and combining it with “a divisive measure” on land and water conservati­on “that will increase our debt” and do little for economic recovery.

“At a time when America is putting a record amount of debt on the backs of future generation­s to cope with COVID-19, now is not the time for reckless spending or new mandatory programs that have nothing to do with the pandemic or stimulatin­g growth,” Bishop said.

 ?? BONNIE CASH/POOL VIA AP ?? Committee Chairman Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., listens on Capitol Hill in Washington during the House Natural Resources Committee hearing in June. A bipartisan bill that would spend nearly $3 billion on conservati­on projects, outdoor recreation and maintenanc­e of national parks and other public lands is on its way to the president’s desk after winning final legislativ­e approval.
BONNIE CASH/POOL VIA AP Committee Chairman Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., listens on Capitol Hill in Washington during the House Natural Resources Committee hearing in June. A bipartisan bill that would spend nearly $3 billion on conservati­on projects, outdoor recreation and maintenanc­e of national parks and other public lands is on its way to the president’s desk after winning final legislativ­e approval.

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