
- 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 »
Local View: Herrera Beutler’s stance on fund is wrong
Sunday, March 13, 2011
There wouldn’t be an anniversary to celebrate, however, if it weren’t for the Land and Water Conservation Fund which helped make it all possible.
For nearly half a century, the Land and Water Conservation Fund has benefited states and local communities with conservation and outdoor-recreation needs. The LWCF is a dedicated fund and not a tax, paid for using a portion of the receipts from offshore oil and gas leases. It was conceived and launched in a bipartisan spirit to preserve and enhance parks, habitat and wildlands.
One of the fund’s original champions was the refuge’s namesake, U.S. Rep. Julia Butler Hansen of Cathlamet, who represented what is today’s 3rd Congressional District from 1960 to 1974. Recently, freshman U.S. Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler, R-Camas, who occupies Hansen’s seat, voted in favor of an amendment to zero-out funding for the LWCF. The amendment was defeated.
In an age of fiscal austerity, cutting fat from the federal budget is critical. It’s here where Rep. Herrera Beutler may have had a misunderstanding: The LWCF is neither fat nor a tax, but a dedicated funding source. Today, ironically, the LWCF’s very survival is at risk by a let-no-fund-go-diverted mindset. It’s an attitude that runs counter to the budget-hawk and fiscal-integrity approach that’s so clearly required.
Good for economy
Over the decades, LWCF projects have added up to half-a-billion dollars for Washington state and supported an outdoor-recreation industry that draws $11.7 billion to our region’s economy. In addition to the Hansen refuge, projects in the 3rd Congressional District have included the Cedar Forest on Long Island in Willapa Bay as well as additions to the Willapa National Wildlife Refuge. The LWCF is also critical to protecting Tukes Mountain outside of Battle Ground, the Salmon Creek watershed, the Lewis River, and dozens of other threatened places that are part of our natural heritage.
Not only does the fund help preserve the natural beauty of our state, but it also contributes to Washington’s economy. According to a study by the Trust for Public Land, every $1 dollar invested returns $4 in the form of natural resource goods and services. In addition, 77 percent of Americans support the LWCF, according to the LWCF Coalition.
The late Julia Butler Hansen was by nature an optimist. Let’s hope that once Rep. Herrera Beutler understands what’s at stake — from outdoor recreation to the environmental legacy we give to our children — she will reconsider her decision to support legislation that would gut the Land and Water Conservation Fund.
Gretchen Starke is conservation chair of the Vancouver Audubon Society (http://www.vancouveraudubon.org). Richard Dyrland is president of the Friends of the East Fork (http://www.eastforklewisriver.org).





