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Conservation fund not funded

The Natural Resources Management Act, a public lands package that includes the Land and Water Conservation Fund, has passed the Senate 92-8, the House 363-62, and President Trump’s desk.

The act is the most significant public lands legislation enacted since the 1970s. It protects 1.3 million acres of federally designated wilderness area, wildlife habitat and hundreds of miles of rivers across the West.

The fund, which expired last September, has long been supported by Republicans and Democrats, but required renewal every few years. The act has permanently reauthorized the fund. However, the fund’s actual funding has not been guaranteed. Days before signing the act into law, the Trump Administration submitted its 2020 budget, which recommends slashing the fund’s account balance. Congress creates and passes the federal budget, so Congress will ultimately decide the fate of this program during annual budget allocations. Stay tuned.



The Land and Water Conservation Fund, created in 1964, directs funds generated by offshore oil and gas leasing to land and water conservation projects at the local, state, and federal levels. It has helped create national parks; protect wildlife habitat, rivers and lakes; designate national forests; construct trails, community parks and recreational amenities; and place conservation easements on private land.

The fund has provided over $17 billion for 41,000 projects in 99 percent of counties in the United States over the last half-century, which contributes $1.06 trillion annually to the national economy and helps sustain 9.4 million domestic jobs.

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Eight out of Colorado’s nine members of Congress voted in favor of the act. The fund has brought over $268 million to Colorado through projects.

If it receives money in the budget, the fund will continue to support conservation and outdoor recreation projects in Eagle County like Sylvan Lake Park, the Eagle County/Roaring Fork Valley Buffalo Valley Trail, and Vail’s Dowd Junction Park Trail.

The fund could help local governments purchase open space and critical wildlife habitat in the future.

“The Land and Water Conservation Fund is a vital piece of the land conservation equation, and the passage of the act is a bipartisan success worth celebrating. However, permanent funding is the next hurdle that will ultimately decide the fate of this popular program,” said Jim Daus, executive director of the Eagle Valley Land Trust.

To learn more about local conservation initiatives and to get involved in upcoming restoration projects, contact Jessica Foulis at jfoulis@evlt.org or visit http://www.evlt.org/volunteer/.

Bergen Tjossem is the communications and development manager at the Eagle Valley Land Trust. He can be reached at bergen@evlt.org. EVLT is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization. For more about the Eagle Valley Land Trust and how it is conserving land and benefiting the community, visit http://www.evlt.org.


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