
- April 10th, 2013, President’s Budget Returns Oil and Gas Revenues to Land and Water Conservation, Boosting Tourism and Outdoor Recreation
- April 1, 2013, Local Elementary Students to Hand Deliver Thank You Notes for U.S. Senator’s Work to Protect Table Rocks, Oregon
- March 23, 2013, Senate Passes Budget that Returns Oil & Gas Revenues to Land and Water Conservation Fund
- March 13, 2013, LWCF Coalition Lauds Senate Budget for Commitment to Outdoor Economy, Ending Chronic Diversion of Conservation Funds
- March 7, 2013, LWCF Coalition Lauds Jewell for Commitment to Outdoor Economy
- February 14, 2013, Senators Introduce Bipartisian Bill to Renew and Improve Landmark Conservation Program
- February 6, 2013, LWCF Coalition Praises Nomination of Sally Jewell for Interior Secretary
- January 22, 2013, Statement from the Land and Water Conservation Fund Coalitionon the Retirement of U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar
- September 26, 2012, Coalition Praises Senate Subcommittee for Proposal to Increase LWCF Conservation Funding
- July 3, 2012, Americans Support Land Conservation as Patriotic, Even as Congress Moves to Cut Funding
- June 28, 2012, LWCF Coalition Decries Efforts to Strip Conservation Funding From Final Transportation Bill
- June 25, 2012, Over 1,000 Groups Urge Congress to Fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund
- June 20, 2012, LWCF Coalition Applauds Senate for Resounding Defeat of Proposal to Strip Forest Conservation Funding
- June 20, 2012, House Appropriations Panel Slashes Land Conservation and Forest Programs
- March 8, 2012 Coalition Applauds Senate for Dedicated Conservation Funding
- February 13, 2012 Coalition Applauds President's Continued Support for Conservation Funding
- December 17, 2011 Conservation, Business and Sportsmen Groups Applaud Congressional Efforts to Protect LWCF Funding in FY12 Budget
- July 25, 2011- New Bipartisan Poll Shows Overwhelming Support Across America for Land and Water Conservation Fund
- July 13, 2011- National Bipartisan Poll Memo
- May 31, 2011- Over One-Third of the U.S. House of Representatives Sign Letter Supporting Funding for LWCF
- April 14, 2011- Conrad Anchor Testimony Release
- December 20, 2010 - Senate Urged to Join House and Pass Bill with Full Funding for Conservation Program »
- August 3, 2010 - Senate Urged to Join House and Pass Bill with Full Funding for Conservation Program »
- July 15, 2010 - House Committee Passes Bill Securing Funding for Conservation and Recreation Program »
- April 16, 2010 - America's Great Outdoors Conference Focuses on Need for Vital Land, Recreation Funding »
- February 1, 2010 - Obama's Budget Includes Key Funding for Land & Water »
- November 6, 2009 - Senate Bill Would Fulfill Longstanding Promise for Conservation and Recreation Program »
- September 17 , 2009 - Coalition Supports Conservation at House Hearing »
Disaster Averted in Zion National Park—Are Other Parks at Risk?
Posted by Avery Stonich of Outdoor Industry Association on October 23, 2012
Picture this: You’re exploring a pristine backcountry area in a national park. You’ve been huffing up a ridge for some time and are eagerly anticipating the view. When you reach the top, you scan the sweeping valley below you … and see a cluster of houses. At first, you think you must have wandered outside the park boundaries. But after double-checking your map, you realize these houses are firmly inside the park.
Is this a futuristic worst-case scenario, or a very real possibility? Believe or not, private houses—and, in fact, large tracts of private land—exist within our national parks. Usually it’s the result of a park expanding its boundaries and encountering a landowner who isn’t ready to sell. So the park engulfs the private land, with the intention of buying it later.
Zion National Park includes a whopping 3,400 privately owned acres, which is a bit scary considering that this is one of our nation’s gems. This park preserves a stunning slice of southwestern Utah and offers outstanding outdoor adventures. You can wander for hours through the park’s seemingly endless slot canyons that carve the landscape into tiny veins amid towering rock walls. Massive sandstone cliffs rise thousands of feet from the desert floor, juxtaposing bright red rock against perfect blue sky.
Recently Zion faced a crisis when a private landowner was considering developing property within the park. The land in question happens to be a particularly choice parcel—a 30-acre chunk located at the base of Tabernacle Dome. And the park had no money to buy it.
Fortunately, supporters rallied around the cause. The Trust for Public Land and the National Parks Conservation Association banded together to find a private anonymous donor who forked over $825,000 to buy the land. Just last week they announced that the land will be gifted to the National Park Service.
Phew! Disaster averted. For now. But this threat will replay itself in other treasured places throughout the country as long as our national parks are strapped for cash. To make matters worse, a major source of funding for buying up private park land is dwindling.
I’m talking about the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), which Congress created in 1965 to provide money to protect natural areas, waters and cultural resources. LWCF funding comes from royalties from offshore drilling, to the tune of $900 million annually—just a small percentage of the roughly $6 billion that comes from these royalties each year. Sounds like a nice chunk of change and a reasonable approach for protecting our nation’s irreplaceable resources, doesn’t it?
The problem is, the government routinely taps this money for other unspecified uses. In fact, this year Congress gave away almost two-thirds of it and allocated just $322 million to the LWCF (at one point they tried to shrink it to a mere $66 million). The National Park Service got a mere $57 million to buy private land within park boundaries across the country.
Of course, not every piece of private land in national parks is critical. But there are some—like the one in Zion—that are too precious to lose to development. The National Park Service has identified $2 billion worth of private land priorities. We need funding sources like the LWCF to protect our national treasures for their natural, recreation and economic benefits.
This is where partners like the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) and The Trust for Public Land are so important. NPCA is dedicated to protecting and enhancing America’s national parks. The Trust for Public Land helps agencies and communities preserve land for public use. Both of these groups can step in when a park is threatened and quick action is needed. They saved Zion this time around.
You can help, too. Urge your elected officials to fully fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund. Donate money to nonprofit organizations like NPCA and The Trust for Public Land that are working to protect our nation’s parks. And help promote the value of these lands to our national economy. These irreplaceable resources are an invaluable part of our nation’s heritage and should be protected for the benefit of all Americans.
Avery Stonich is communications manager for Outdoor Industry Association. Follow us on twitter:@OIA and @averystonich






