Posts Tagged ‘Americas Great Outdoors’

Washington Watch – January, 2012

January 18, 2012

U.S. Capitol, ca. 1920 - Theodor Horydczak/Library of Congress

Periodically, the folks in The Trust for Public Land’s Federal Affairs department prepare a summary of conservation news from the nation’s capitol.

Story Summaries
(Details on all stories here)

FY 2012 Budget Complete; Many Conservation Programs Survive Difficult Budget Year
On December 23, President Obama signed into law the Fiscal Year 2012 Omnibus Appropriations bill, thus completing the annual budget and appropriations process. This Omnibus bill covers 9 of the 12 individual appropriations bills; the other 3 were included in a “minibus” approved by Congress in late November. Despite the significant focus in Washington on cutting spending, many conservation programs survived the FY 2012 budget process in relatively good standing

LWCF Full Funding Bill Now Stands at 27 Co-Sponsors
On April 15, 2011, Conrad Anker, world-renowned alpine climber—who discovered lost explorer George Mallory’s body on Mt. Everest—testified before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, the Environment and Related Agencies in support of the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). The fund was reduced by 33% in the Fiscal Year 2011 budget and could face further cuts. Supported by offshore oil and gas leasing revenues—not taxpayers’ dollars—the LWCF ensures all Americans have access to local community parks and playgrounds and the vast expanses of federal public lands.

Attention Congress: Investing in Land Conservation Helps Our Economy
Over the past year, the annual budget and appropriations process has cut conservation funding disproportionately to its benefits. Key programs such as the Land and Water Conservation Fund, State and Tribal Wildlife Grants and EPA programs have been slashed by more than 30 percent, in contrast to overall non-defense discretionary spending, which has been cut by just 7 percent.

America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) Initiative
In 2010, President Obama launched the America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) initiative to bring in outside conservation partners to help create his 21st century conservation and recreation agenda. During the summer of 2010, the leadership of the Department of Interior, the Department of Agriculture, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Council on Environmental Quality, and the Army Corps of Engineers conducted approximately 51 listening sessions in various areas across the country to engage adults and youth alike on their conservation vision and how to make the Federal Government a better partner with states, tribes, and local communities.

Transportation Reauthorization Bill Update
When Congress last passed a multiyear transportation bill (SAFETEA-LU) in 2005, it was set to expire on September 30, 2009. Because the current gas tax does not produce enough revenue to support existing transportation programs, Congress has been struggling to pass another multi-year bill and has only succeeded to date in passing 7 short-term extensions. The current one expires March 31, 2012.

Conservation Tax Incentive Extension Must Wait for 2012
Congress adjourned for the year without extending the conservation tax incentive that encourages landowners to donate conservation easements. While Congress agreed after much wrangling to extend temporarily the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits, no action was taken on a multitude of other tax provisions that expire December 31, 2011 or during 2012. This is disappointmenting news for landowners and those in the land trust community who recognize the importance of this conservation tool. If history is any guide, however, it is likely that the incentive will be extended sometime next year and made retroactive.

Farm Bill Set to Expire at the End of FY 2012
Congress adjourned for the year without extending the conservation tax incentive that encourages landowners to donate conservation easements. While Congress agreed after much wrangling to extend temporarily the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits, no action was taken on a multitude of other tax provisions that expire December 31, 2011 or during 2012. This is disappointmenting news for landowners and those in the land trust community who recognize the importance of this conservation tool. If history is any guide, however, it is likely that the incentive will be extended sometime next year and made retroactive.

Details on all stories here

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Washington Watch, Sept. 21

September 21, 2010

U.S. Capitol, ca. 1920 - Theodor Horydczak/Library of Congress

Periodically, the folks in TPL’s Federal Affairs department prepare a summary of conservation news from the nation’s capitol. The Washington Watch newsletter is available on the Web or by free email subscription.

To read the entire issue here.

Congress Returns
Congress returned from a six-week recess on September 14, but the legislative calendar remains somewhat murky, particularly in the Senate. With crucial midterm elections looming, and many successful challenges to incumbents already in the record books, it is uncertain how long the House and Senate will stay in Washington, DC. They are currently scheduled to work until October 8, but rumors abound that timeline will be shortened as the days tick away.
Details here

House and Senate Support More Money for DOD Buffer Program
Legislation seeking an increase in the amount of money proposed by the Obama Administration for the Department of Defense Readiness and Environment Protection Initiative (REPI) has passed the House and has been approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee. The House version of the Defense Authorization for FY 2011, passed by the House on May 28, includes a $10 million increase over the spending level included in the President’s budget, while the Senate-committee-approved version includes an increase of $25 million.
Details here

AGO Listening Sessions Have Come to An End
The Administration’s America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) initiative to develop a conservation agenda for the 21st century has wrapped up its summer season of listening sessions across the country. The Obama Administration hosted nearly two dozen events nationwide to gather ideas on how to preserve the outdoors and get more Americans outside.
Details here

NOAA’s CELCP Program Posts FY2011 Priority List
The Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation Program (CELCP) provides state and local governments with matching grant funds to purchase conservation easements and fee acquisitions of important coastal and estuarine lands. Each year, coastal conservation projects applying for grant funding through CELCP are evaluated and ranked by an independent, competitive, merit-based panel. A priority list generated by the panel serves as a guide in selecting projects for funding once Congress completes its annual appropriations process.
Details here

FLTFA Extension Update
Just before Congress left Washington for its annual August Recess, it passed legislation that included a one-year extension of the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act. The Act expired on July 25 and the one-year extension went into effect when the law was signed on July 29. This gap of only a few days had an unfortunate consequence. While it was good news that FLTFA received a one-year extension, the funding that had been in the program’s accounts reverted to the Treasury under the terms of the original legislation.
Details here

Public Lands Bills of Interest
The 111th Congress has worked on dozens of public lands bills that still await further action before becoming enacted into law. These various bills may be addressed in an omnibus lands package, but given the complexities of the congressional calendar, it is uncertain when further action will be taken.
Details here

New Baucus Tax Legislation Includes Conservation Tax Incentive
On September 16, Senator Max Baucus, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, introduced the “Job Creation and Tax Cut Act of 2010.” This bill extends a variety of tax provisions that would otherwise expire. Among these is the conservation tax incentive, which encourages the donation of conservation easements. The Baucus bill would extend the provision through 2010.
Details here

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Washington Watch June 23, 2010

June 24, 2010
U.S. Capitol, 1917, by Robert Runyon

U.S. Capitol Building, 1917 - Photo: Robert Runyon / Library of Congress

Periodically, the folks in TPL’s Federal Affairs department prepare a summary of conservation news from the nation’s capitol. The Washington Watch newsletter is available on the Web or by free email subscription.

AGO Listening Sessions Begin in Montana
The Administrations’ America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) initiative – to develop a conservation agenda for the 21st century – kicked off an anticipated summer season of listening sessions June 1st and 2nd in Montana. The Obama Administration plans more than a dozen such events nationwide to gather ideas on how to preserve the outdoors and get more Americans outside. President Obama and Secretary of Interior, Kenneth Salazar, announced the America’s Great Outdoors initiative at a White House Conference on April 16, 2010 that will culminate in a report to the President with recommendations due next November.
Details here.

House and Senate Support More Money for DOD Buffer Program
Legislation seeking an increase in the amount of money proposed by the Obama Administration for the Department of Defense Readiness and Environment Protection Initiative (REPI) has passed the House and has been approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee. The House version of the Defense Authorization for FY 2011, passed by the House on May 28, includes a $10 million increase over the spending level included in the President’s budget, while the Senate-committee-approved version includes an increase of $25 million.
Details here

Senate Committee Approves Permanent FLTFA Reauthorization
On June 21, 2010, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee approved S. 1787, introduced by Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, to permanently authorize the Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act (FLTFA). This law, first enacted in 2000, is scheduled to expire on July 24, 2010. FLTFA provides a mechanism to use proceeds from the sales or exchanges of public lands to fund acquisitions of inholdings or important edge-holdings of America’s national parks, national forest, national wildlife refuges, and certain units of the Bureau of Land Management.
Details here

TPL Submits Comments on DOT’s Strategic Plan
On June 15, TPL submitted official comments in response to the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) FY2010-FY2015 strategic Plan. DOT is planning to use this Strategic Plan to develop and implement policies and programs that will transform our transportation infrastructure into a multimodal system that provides travelers and businesses with safe, convenient, affordable, and environmentally sustainable transportation choices.
Details here

Conservation Tax Incentive Extension Still Awaiting Final Action
The extension of the enhanced deduction for the donation of conservation easements is caught up in the wrangling over the larger tax “extenders” bill now being debated in the Senate. While no one is arguing over the conservation tax incentive provision, its enactment will be delayed until a compromise is reached on the overall package.

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Large landscape “listening” in Montana

June 2, 2010

Swan Valley / Montana Legacy Project Photo: John Lambing

For the first “listening session” of President Obama’s America’s Great Outdoors Initiative, Washington and local leaders gathered yesterday at the Rolling Stone Ranch in Montana to hear about the many cooperative conservation efforts to protect the Crown of the Continent ecosystem.

Interesting context for this meeting can be found in yesterday’s Billings Gazette, in a piece by Rick Graetz, a geography professor at the University of Montana and co-director of the university’s Crown of the Continent Initiative.

In 1886, James Willard Schultz and George Bird Grinnell traveled through what is now present-day Glacier National Park. Together, they trekked from St. Mary’s Lake into the Swiftcurrent region and eventually clambered up the famous glacier that now bears Grinnell’s name.

Grinnell was so enchanted with the sweep of the land that he would return again and again for the next 41 years, all the while promoting protection of the area he termed the “Crown of the Continent.” Exactly 100 years ago last month, his efforts helped create Glacier National Park.

Today, the original vision behind Grinnell’s “Crown” has been expanded to include a vastly important region that extends beyond the confines of Glacier. And every year, that vision grows stronger and more vivid thanks to the conservation work of Montanans from all walks of life.

Today’s coverage of the meeting includes an AP story and an informative piece in the Missoulian that tries to make clear why the administration chose this region to kick-off its effort to highlight large-landscape, cooperative conservation.

With so many subjects and so many speakers, it was a little unclear what the whole gathering was about. But as the spring rainshowers came and went, it became apparent the sheer size of Montana’s recent land management efforts was a learning opportunity for the rest of the nation.

“There’s a growing awareness that it’s going to take local leadership and vision like this to drive progress,” [Secretary of Agriculture Tom] Vilsack said. “Maybe not to drive but to facilitate. We’re seeing it in the Everglades in Florida and in the Maine forestlands and in Arizona there’s some of this happening. But it may not be as mature as it’s happening here. You’ve institutionalized the process here.”

Some projects, like the Blackfoot Challenge or the Rocky Mountain Front Heritage Act, have been gestating in local communities for decades. Others, like the Montana Legacy Project’s buyout of Plum Creek Timber Co. lands, came together in a matter of years. All together, they involve hundreds of thousands of acres coming under new management strategies designed to protect special places and preserve local jobs and communities.

TPL has been an active player in this work, most recently as a partner with The Nature Conservancy in the Montana Legacy Project to protect 310,000 acres within the 10 million acres Crown of the Continent ecosystem.

A New Report

In a related matter, the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy has released a policy report, “Large Landscape Conservation.”

In response to increasing activity at the large landscape scale, leaders from the public, private, and nongovernmental sectors participated in two national policy dialogues and many other informal discussions in 2009. Convened by the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and the Center for Natural Resources and Environmental Policy at The University of Montana, the intent of the dialogues was to synthesize what we know about large landscape conservation and to identify the most important needs as we move forward.

There is general agreement that the promise of large landscape conservation is its focus on land and water problems at an appropriate geographic scale, regardless of political and jurisdictional boundaries. While it is hard to define precisely what constitutes a large landscape conservation effort, there is a growing consensus that such efforts are multijurisdictional, multipurpose, and multistakeholder, and they operate at various geographic scales using a variety of governance arrangements.

I haven’t had a chance to review the report as yet, but the Lincoln Institute’s materials are always meaty and useful.

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Bits and bytes for a Monday morning

May 10, 2010

Boosting self esteem - Photo: Darcy Kiefel

Five minutes of green can boost self esteem
Thanks to TPL volunteer extraordinaire Tom Reeve for alerting us to a news article from Reuters about the psychological benefits of parks. TPL collects and publishes information on the benefits of parks and open space, and we will file this one under “benefits, health, mental”.

Researchers from the University of Essex found that as little as five minutes of a “green activity” such as walking, gardening, cycling or farming can boost mood and self esteem . . .

Many studies have shown that outdoor exercise can reduce the risk of mental illness and improve a sense of well-being, but Jules Pretty and Jo Barton, who led this study, said that until now no one knew how much time needed to be spent on green exercise for the benefits to show.

Tell the president (yes, that one) your conservation ideas
In the wake of President Obama’s America’s Great Outdoors Conference of April 16, the USDA has posted an online application for sharing conservation ideas in three broad areas: reconnecting with the great outdoors, private land conservation, and public land conservation. Anybody can read and rate the ideas. To comment or post, you will need a free account (click “register” at the top of the page.) An interesting experiment in using technology to further policy dialog.

The Big Slick and the Big Easy
Not sure how long The Wall Street Journal keeps content online for non-subscribers, but this opinion piece by freelancer Douglas McCollam contains some wonderful writing and interesting observations on what others are calling the “Gulf oil spill,”  but which McCollom says should really be characterized as “an erupting, underwater oil volcano.”

Everyone is distressed by the crisis in the Gulf–at TPL we have been watching in horror as the oil drifts closer to islands and marshes we have helped to protect. From McCollom’s piece:

. . . while revenue from offshore drilling has helped fill Louisiana’s coffers, it has also inflicted severe environmental damage. As far back as the 1950s, and particularly during the 1970s and ’80s, the state’s fragile wetlands were carved up to give oil companies easier ingress and egress for exploration. Today that ecosystem lies in tatters, and the southeastern coast of the state is receding at a rate of 25-35 square miles a year with no apparent means to halt the advancing sea.

Before the spill (or rather, volcano), TPL and other conservation groups were working to conserve and restore some of these wetlands. That need will only grow more intense. But first they need to stop the gusher.  Thanks to Larry Schmidt, TPL’s man in New Orleans, for forwarding the article.

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Washington Watch

April 28, 2010

Photo: Wikipedia Commons

Periodically, the folks in TPL’s Federal Affairs department prepare a summary of conservation news from the nation’s capitol. The Washington Watch newsletter is available on the Web or by free email subscription.

Clicking on each topic brings up additional information.

White House Conference on America’s Great Outdoors
On Friday, April 16th, the White House sponsored a conference on America’s Great Outdoors, describing the event as a way to “address the challenges, opportunities and innovations surrounding modern-day land conservation and the importance of reconnecting Americans to the outdoors.” The event was held at the Department of the Interior. TPL was pleased to have been invited to attend the conference and sent several representatives to the conference including TPL’s President Will Rogers and California State Director Sam Hodder.

TPL and Urban Parks
TPL has joined the recently-formed Urban Park Coalition, spearheaded by the National Park and Recreation Association (NRPA), whose aims are to engage with Congress on urban park legislation. TPL is working on several fronts to advance knowledge about and consideration of the role of parks in addressing healthy communities.

Community Forest Program Grants
The Community Forest and Open Space Conservation Program, authorized in the 2008 Farm Bill, is a new program that will provide matching federal grants for purchase of local forestlands by local governments, tribes, and qualifying nonprofits. The program will ensure funding for the creation or expansion of community forests that can meet local needs for recreation, economic development, watershed protection, and other ecosystem services.

Conservation Tax Incentive Extension Awaits Congressional Action
The enhanced tax deduction for donations of conservation easements expired at the end of 2009. Despite the bipartisan support of well over half of the members of the House of Representatives and forty-one senators, a permanent extension of the provision has not yet been enacted. There has been some action on a temporary extension, however, but even that has been caught up in the cumbersome legislative machinery of Congress.

House and Senate “Dear Colleague,” Letters on LWCF and FLP
With the congressional appropriations process underway for FY 2011, Members of the House and Senate have written to the chairmen and ranking members of the respective appropriations subcommittees that oversee the Interior Department and the Forest Service to demonstrate their support for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and the Forest Legacy Program.

Public Testifies on Land Conservation Funding
Every year the House and Senate Interior Appropriations Subcommittees invite the public to submit written testimony in advance of the writing of the annual Interior spending bills. The process allows the public to comment on important issues and to support various programs and projects before the subcommittees. This year the House Interior Subcommittee accepted written testimony until March 19. The Subcommittee also held a Public Witness Day session on March 25 in which participants delivered spoken testimony to the subcommittee.

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As Earth Day turns 40

April 21, 2010

On this big birthday for Earth Day, I commend to you Peter Fimrite’s flash review of the environmental movement in 1,394 words that appeared in last Sunday’s San Francisco Chronicle. Fimrite places Earth Day in historical context, from the 19th-century roots of the conservation movement to our uncertainty in a time of economic anemia, political gridlock, and a looming climate crisis.

The first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, was, by all accounts, the beginning of a powerful grassroots movement, helped immeasurably by a famous TV commercial that premiered on Earth Day 1971 of an Indian shedding a tear as he saw pollution all around him.

Today, being green is routine in many people’s lives, but some of the environmental problems from 40 years ago still exist. The difference, according to conservationists, is that environmental issues are woven into the social, economic and political fabric of the country.

Fimrite’s piece is a great review of the topic for those of us who remember the 1970s — and a great introduction to it for those who have come along since.

One of the things to be thankful for as Earth Day enters middle age is that our president and his administration put conservation front and center last week by convening the America’s Great Outdoors conference. If you haven’t watched President Obama’s speech at the conference, it is only 11 minutes and well worth a look–especially to hear him say that, unlike Teddy Roosevelt, he will probably never kill a bear.

Those of us at TPL–the land-for-people people–were particularly gratified to have the president, in his remarks, endorse community-based recreation and conservation and highlight the importance of connecting people to nature where they live: “We want to foster a new generation of community and urban parks so that children across America have the chance to experience places like Millennium Park in my own Chicago.”

Later in the conference, Newark Mayor Corey Booker held up his city’s partnership with TPL as an example of how urban parks can be created and revitalized to bring outdoor recreation to city residents. Since 1995, TPL has worked with the city and donors to create nine new Newark parks and playgrounds.

Finally, I can’t help but point out the coincidence of Earth Day, 2010, with the eruption of that unpronounceable Icelandic volcano that brought air traffic to a halt over Northern Europe earlier this week. It never hurts to keep in mind that our technologies are feeble in the face of natural forces. Mother Nature can do some damage when she gets mad–we better learn how to live in her good graces.

(For those who do not recognize the above image, it is a screen capture from “The Crying Indian,” produced by the Ad Council and Keep America Beautiful and first aired on Earth Day 1971.  You can see the whole of this iconic ad here.)

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