|
Bush Seeks
Full Funding of the Land and Conservation Fund with over $107
million for
National Park Service Land Acquisition
Washington,
DC. April 9, 2001 - President Bush
has released his budget proposal, which includes $2.5 billion
for the National Park Service (NPS), and full funding for the
Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) at $900 million. The NPS is seeking $107 million LWCF money to acquire
over 30 thousand acres within 41 national parks.
The 30
thousand acres for which the park service has requested
funding represent some of the most threatened properties
within our national parks. “We are pleased to see the President’s commitment
to our national parks,” says Paul Pritchard, President,
National Park Trust”, but there is still much work to do.”
There are over
6 million acres within our national parks that are owned by
private citizens or organizations.
These privately owned lands are commonly called
inholdings. (To put this into perspective, one acre in
fourteen within our national parks is privately owned.)
As private developers gobble up these inholdings,
usually for development and other destructive purposes, a
grave danger faces our national parks, a danger which
threatens to dismantle our parks from the inside out.
The big winner
in this budget would have to be the states. Half of the LWCF money, $450 million, is for State
Conservation Grants to be administered by NPS. This will give the states the latitude they need to
increase their land acquisition, habitat protection and
recreation programs.
Please contact
NPT to find out which park in your state will receive funding
or what dangers threaten your favorite park.
Founded in
1983, the National Park Trust (NPT) is the only land
conservancy dedicated to preserving America’s national
system of parks, wildlife, and historic monuments. NPT was established to help combat one of the greatest
threats facing our national system of parklands and wildlife
refuges: inholdings.
LETTER FROM NPT PRESIDENT
Dear Friend of the
Parklands:
In the upcoming months, Congress will be considering the level of funding
for one of most important pieces of park legislation, the Land and
Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). In 1964, Congress established this
fund, which uses revenues from offshore oil and gas receipts to
purchase national parks, wildlife refuges, national forests and other public
lands; to support the creation of new national parks, forests, wildlife
refuges and open spaces; and to provide matching grants to states for
parklands.
LWCF has been
instrumental in preserving almost seven million acres of America’s park
and water resources in more than 37,000 national, state, and local parks,
refuges, recreation areas and other parkland projects.
However, since its
inception, Congress has approved only a fraction of the promised
funds for land acquisition, conservation, and recreation. The LWCF is authorized
to receive $900 million per year but over the life of the program has
only averaged around $100 million per year. From FY 1995 to FY 1999, LWCF
was not even funded! In FY 2000, only $40 million and in FY 2001
only $89 million of $900 million available was even appropriated.
Over six million acres within the boundaries of our National Parks
and nine million acres in our National Wildlife Refuges are still privately
owned. These privately owned lands, better known as "inholdings,"
represent time bombs which are waiting to explode. As Reader's
Digest, February 2001, reported, speculators and private developers gobble
up these inholdings, usually for development, bulldozing, clear cutting
and other destructive purposes. Our parklands are facing their greatest
threat in the history of our nation.
The explosion may take
form as a visitor’s tower in the middle of Gettysburg National
Battlefield; it may come as a Carnival Resort Hotel nestled in the pristine
wilderness of Denali National Park; or it may be a strip mall along the
river or lake you visited as a child with your family. Regardless, the bomb
is ticking and it is exploding in bombs across the nation.
The LWCF was conceived to preserve the heritage of our natural and
cultural resources and reduce the threat that inholdings pose to our
nation’s parklands. BUT, the failure to fully fund LWFC has
resulted in the loss of precious open spaces, which Americans will no
longer have to enjoy.
You can help prevent this
crisis from continuing. You can help stop this dismantling of our
parks from the inside out by writing, calling or e-mailing your representatives
in Congress LINK
TO CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY and urging them to fully fund both the
state and federal portions of the Land and Water Conservation Fund.
Please confirm to NPT at legacy@parktrust.org
after you have contacted your representatives sending us a copy.
America’s parklands
tell us a story about who we are, where we’ve been, and where we
are going. These precious resources stand as a reminder of the struggles
that we have faced as a nation. More importantly, our parklands
remind us that where there have been battles and struggles, conflict
and strife, America is, and always has been, a land of hope and
perseverance. We hope that you will take the time to help preserve this
American story as it is told in our national parklands.
Sincerely,
Paul Pritchard
President, National Park Trust
Founded in 1983, the National Park Trust (NPT) is the only land
conservancy dedicated exclusively to the preservation of America’s
national system of parks, wildlife, and historic monuments.
You can help by sending a
contribution to the NPT for LWCF, America's
Heritage Fund.
National
Park Trust
415-2nd
Street, N.E. Suite 210
Washington DC 20002
Phone: (202) 548-0500; Fax: (202) 548-0595
npt@parktrust.org
|