Sweeping public lands bill clears Senate
Hodgepodge runs gamut of conservation programs
WASHINGTON — The Senate on Tuesday approved a major public lands bill that would revive a popular conservation program, expand several national parks, add 1.3 million acres of new wilderness and create four new national monuments.
The measure, the largest public lands bill considered by Congress in a decade, combines more than 100 separate bills that would designate more than 350 miles of river as wild and scenic, add 2,600 miles of new federal trails and create nearly 700,000 acres of new recreation and conservation areas. The bill also would withdraw 370,000 acres in Montana and Washington state from mineral development.
The Senate approved the bill 92-8, sending it to the House.
Lawmakers from both parties said the bill’s most important provision is the one to permanently reauthorize the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, which supports conservation and outdoor recreation projects across the country. The program expired last fall after Congress could not agree on language to extend it.
“The Land and Water Conservation Fund has been a pre-eminent program for access to public lands” for more than 50 years, said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-wash. The program has supported more than 42,000 state and local projects throughout the U.S. since its creation in 1964.
The hodgepodge bill offered something for nearly everyone, with projects stretching across the country.
Even so, the bill was derailed last year after Republican Sen. Mike
Lee objected, saying he wanted to exempt his home state of Utah from a law that allows the president to designate federal lands as a national monument protected from development.
Lee’s objection during a heated Senate debate in December forced lawmakers to start over in the new Congress, culminating in Tuesday’s Senate vote.
The bill would create three new national monuments to be administered by the National Park Service, including the Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument in Mississippi, and a fourth monument overseen by the Forest Service.