Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. Congress approves $900M-a-year conservati­on bill

- By Lynda V. Mapes

SEATTLE — Congress has passed sweeping legislatio­n allocating $900 million a year for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, and an additional $9.5 billion over five years to address an urgent backlog of maintenanc­e projects at the nation’s parks and other public lands.

The legislatio­n, S.3422, is a once-in-a-generation gift to the future, expected to more than double the money available under the program every year for parks and outdoor recreation of all sorts in Washington state. The work of many hands on both sides of the aisle in both houses of Congress, the legislatio­n would for the first time guarantee the full $900 million originally authorized for the fund be allocated every year.

The legislatio­n was passed on Wednesday by the House in a 310107 vote and has already passed the Senate. It now goes to President Donald Trump, who has said he will sign it.

‘The program had been chronicall­y underfunde­d, even though it is paid for entirely by revenues from offshore oil and gas leases.

Since its creation in 1964 — led by U.S. Sen. Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson of Washington — the program has funded a conservati­on, recreation or access project in every county in the country. The program has benefited every type of outdoor enthusiast seeking access to public lands for hunting, fishing, recreation­al shooting, hiking, biking, birding, wildlife watching and other pleasures of the outdoors.

In Washington state alone, the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund has paid for more than 700 state projects, investing more than $725 million in everything from urban parks, such as Gas Works Park in Seattle, and recent upgrades to the boat house at Green Lake Park, to trails all over the state and more.

The $900 million includes both spending for the federal LWCF program (which mainly purchases land from willing sellers to add to the nation’s public lands) and the state LWCF programs (mainly cost-shared dollars that go to states and municipali­ties to invest in urban green spaces). The grants are selected by a competitiv­e process.

The $900 million a year Congressio­nal allocation mandated under S.3422 will raise by two to three times how much was typically spent on the program in the past, ending the nearly annual underfundi­ng that has since the program’s inception diverted an estimated $22 billion from the fund to other purposes.

In Washington state, the bill is expected to raise the annual allocation from the fund from about $15 million to about $35 million.

The legislatio­n also is a boost to small towns all over Washington and the rest of the country that depend heavily on outdoor recreation for their economy. People are turning to the outdoors more than ever for recreation, respite and rejuvenati­on as the COVID-19 pandemic closes off many other options for vacations, recreation and family fun.

Addressing daunting deferred maintenanc­e needs in the na

 ?? BETTINA HANSEN/ SEATTLE TIMES ?? Wildflower­s bloom at Mount Rainier National Park in Washington on July 28, 2018. On Thursday, Congress passed legislatio­n allocating $900 million per year for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, created in 1964 by Sen. Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson of Washington.
BETTINA HANSEN/ SEATTLE TIMES Wildflower­s bloom at Mount Rainier National Park in Washington on July 28, 2018. On Thursday, Congress passed legislatio­n allocating $900 million per year for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, created in 1964 by Sen. Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson of Washington.

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