Let’s go on a short adventure into one of America’s greatest success stories. We’ll start with something easy, like a short hike to the waterfalls in Ohio’s Cuyahoga Valley National Park or a 20 mile stroll on the park’s Towpath Trail through some of the most beautiful scenery – sandwiched in amongst some of America’s most urbanized landscapes – on earth. We’ll ponder Civil War history at Harper’s Ferry, in West Virginia, while walking through a forest that once was slated for full suburban sprawl and where development would have meant dumping 70,000 gallons of treated sewage into the Shenandoah River every day. Going further into the wild, we’ll hit the rivers and streams of Montana at any one of a hundred public fishing access sites, ride horses in the high country of Wyoming, or head down to Bayou Sauvage, the largest urban wildlife refuge in the world, a teeming space of nature, fishing and natural flood control in the heart of New Orleans.
There are about 40,000 places (and counting!) we can choose from, from humble but crucial ballfields in hardscrabble urban neighborhoods to high-altitude Western elk hunting and skiing on public lands. We’ll end the adventure, though, in the tiny town of Mullen, Nebraska (population 509), on a hot summer day in the Sandhills at the local swimming pool. At some point Americans figured out that to thrive and be healthy and strong in our country required having public places to learn to swim and to roam and enjoy our lands and waters, no matter whether you are wealthy or poor, whether you live in a booming city or the tiniest town on the Great Plains. We envisioned a society that was worthy of the dreams of our citizenry, and we went to work and built it.
How? Through the Land and Water Conservation Fund – or LWCF.
In 1964, Congress enacted bipartisan legislation to dedicate a portion of the royalties received by the federal government from offshore oil and gas development to conservation and wildlife habitat projects across the U.S. The concept remains simple: utilize revenues from the depletion of one resource offshore to enhance land and water resources onshore. It remains one of the most successful programs in the history of our nation and thanks to members of Congress who stepped up again in 2019, the program will endure permanently.
One of the initial goals of LWCF was to protect critical drinking water sources by buffering rivers and streams from development. It has done this extremely well. But since 1964, the fund also has been used to preserve wildlife habitat and open lands for recreation and to help create everything from hiking trails and skateboard parks to swimming pools and public campsites. Additionally, it’s become a powerful tool for consolidating inholdings, eliminating checkerboarded land ownership and creating important management efficiencies. The cumulative impact of all LWCF projects has helped fuel a powerful economic engine generating over $887 billion annually in outdoor recreation spending, creating the kind of communities that Americans want to live in, raise their families in, invest in and protect.
LWCF is also one of the least known or understood programs in our nation. The vast majority of citizens who benefit every day from LWCF has no idea that it exists. One consequence of our ignorance? Every year, Congress is emboldened to divert millions in LWCF monies to projects that have nothing to do with the goals of the fund. Some in Congress, their eyes on LWCF money and knowing that too many Americans are uninformed about what is at stake, want to get rid of LWCF altogether.
To ensure the future of this critical program, we need our leaders in Congress to step up once again and dedicate full funding to LWCF in perpetuity so that politically charged appropriations processes can never compromise LWCF projects again.