Daily Southtown

US can’t afford to neglect land, water conservati­on

- By Charles S. Potter Jr. Charles S. Potter Jr. is president and CEO of the Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation in Dundee Township and host of “The Great Outdoors” on WGN-AM.

In a rare spasm of bipartisan­ship and common sense, the House in July passed the most significan­t conservati­on-related legislatio­n in decades, the Great American Outdoors Act. President Donald Trump has just signed it into law.

Conservati­onists rightly are overjoyed by the measure, which mandates full funding of $900 million a year for the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund — the single most important vehicle to answer Americans’ need for outdoor recreation. Establishe­d 55 years ago, the fund has protected key areas from developmen­t, allowing wildlife and fish to flourish while bolstering the rural economies that profit from hunting and fishing. The fund’s dollars bought significan­t portions of our national parks, protecting them for all Americans.

What’s more, not one penny came out of the taxpayers’ pocket. The fund relies on royalties paid on offshore oil and gas.

Despite these noble intentions and achievemen­ts, the fund went astray. Though the royalties generate billions each year, Congress only twice allocated the full, authorized amount to the fund, choosing instead to steer the money toward other priorities and untold numbers of porkbarrel projects. Since the fund’s establishm­ent in 1965, more than $20 billion that should have gone to conservati­on went elsewhere, a broken promise to the American people.

Last year, Congress permanentl­y authorized the fund, which had been subject to agonizing cycles of expiration and renewal. Last week’s vote now ensures a consistent flow of money that is badly needed to fix the infrastruc­ture of our decaying parks, to improve our overused and undermanag­ed public hunting and fishing areas, and above all, to improve access to millions of acres for millions of Americans. It may even help revive our economy.

Yet we still have work to do. Congress now should enact critical reforms that will ensure greater economic efficienci­es and broader opportunit­ies for the millions of Americans who have an abiding interest in outdoor recreation, fish and wildlife conservati­on, and the protection of critical habitats.

The path forward is not complicate­d. Five years ago, a distinguis­hed team of retired conservati­on profession­als led by former Illinois natural resources chief

Brent Manning wrote a position paper detailing ways to make the fund cost-efficient, foster accountabi­lity and gain grassroots support of historic proportion­s. Written for the Max McGraw Wildlife Foundation’s Center for Conservati­on Leadership, the paper’s recommenda­tions are especially relevant today.

Here are some of them:

1.

Leaders in some Western

states argue that they already have enough federally controlled land within their borders. By expanding the program to allow easements, critical habitats will be protected while keeping them in private ownership — a more cost-efficient model for conservati­on.

2.

This can be done through the purchase of rights of ways and easements as well as the leasing of lands. Large-scale land acquisitio­n is not necessary to ensure conservati­on.

3.

In the 55 years since the fund was enacted, hundreds of efficient, capable nonprofits have emerged to offer innovative, practical ideas for conservati­on. They pride themselves on quality work and low overhead. They should be embraced — and put to work — through a grant-applicatio­n process in which dollars they dedicate to habitat will be matched by fund dollars.

4.

This commission would be chaired by the secretary of the interior and staffed through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Additional members should include the secretary of agricultur­e, the administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and two members each of the U.S. House of Representa­tives and the U.S. Senate — appointed from each chamber by the majority and the minority leader. Once approved, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service should monitor the grant project for full and successful completion.

Fifty-five years ago, the federal government was the only entity that could administer the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund. In 2020, this is no longer the case. We should give private-sector interests the responsibi­lity to drive sound recreation and conservati­on initiative­s, working in conjunctio­n with state and local government­s and their elected representa­tives. We can create competitio­n for funding, bring about enormous economic efficienci­es and drive accountabi­lity.

The oil and gas companies that pay the bill deserve to know that the levy imposed on them is well spent. More important, the hundreds of millions of Americans who benefit from the fund deserve a greater voice in the process.

Let’s not waste this opportunit­y to ensure fiscal responsibi­lity as well as a remarkable future for outdoor recreation, fish and wildlife management, and land and water conservati­on.

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