
- 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 »
Many of these places were protected for us from a little known federal program called the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). It was created by Congress in 1965 and is supposed to get $900 million every year, paid for by money spent by oil companies to drill off our shores for oil and gas. None of the money in the fund comes from taxpayers.
Unfortunately, rather than expand the system of parks and wilderness Americans can access and enjoy, Congress has often diverted much of the LWCF for other purposes.
When President Obama released his budget this week, it contained good news for people who care about conserving land. He proposed to provide the full $900 million for LWCF. And he also proposed to provide more open space and parks in our cities, where 80 percent of the population lives.
While that budget proposal is for the fiscal year which begins October 1, Congress still hasn't agreed on a budget for the current fiscal year. The House, where Republicans have the majority, is considering a plan which would effectively eliminate LWCF funding this year, which could also doom the program for the future. In a few weeks, the Democratic-controlled Senate will also set its LWCF funding targets as part of a larger budget package and then the two measures will have to be reconciled.
The LWCF program has protected some of America's most special places, from Yellowstone National Park and the Grand Canyon, to historic places like battlefields from the Revolutionary War and Civil War, to places which honor more latter-day heroes, such as the people aboard Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania on Sept. 11, 2001.
We certainly understand the need to scrutinize and trim the federal budget, just like families all across the country are doing with their own finances, but it is unfortunate the House is considering such deep cuts in a program like the LWCF, which receives no taxpayer money.





