Posts Tagged ‘federal funding’

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, 11/1

November 1, 2011
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.  Full versions of these stories can be found on The Trust for Public Land’s website.

New Federal Fiscal Year Begins; FY 2012 Budget Still Unclear
With the new federal fiscal year having begun on October 1, it’s a good time to take a look at the status of congressional actions on the federal FY 2012 budget. After the flurry of negotiations and deal-making related to the debt ceiling extension and the deficit in late July, Congress left town for its six-week August recess and returned soon after Labor Day. The focus since then has been squarely on the economy, the President’s jobs package, and the work of the so-called “Supercommittee,” which was established as part of the debt ceiling agreement.

LWCF and Conservation Funding Needs Your Support
As reported in the FY 2012 update on land conservation programs, Congress is working on the FY2012 budget, including the Interior appropriations bill, and has begun deliberations on long-term budgeting decisions through the “super committee” process. Therefore, this is a critical moment to tell your Members of Congress to oppose cuts that would cripple funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and hurt jobs and local economies.

Interior Secretary Salazar Announces Approval of New Urban National Wildlife Refuge
On September 29, 2011, on a dairy farm just south of Albuquerque, New Mexico along the Rio Grande, Department of Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced formal establishment of a new urban National Wildlife Refuge. The new refuge–known as Middle Rio Grande National Wildlife Refuge–will be established on the land known locally as Price’s Dairy.

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Conservation finance links, 9/1

August 31, 2011

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

Federal
New report shows federal excise taxes on sporting goods has great ROI

California
Delays in park bond projects could hurt future bond measures in SF

more

Colorado
Arapahoe County places open space tax extension on November ballot

Connecticut
East Lyme referendum still on despite hurricane

Editorial in support of East Lyme referendum

New Jersey
Funding for open space heads to Oradell voters

Christie gets mixed reviews on environmental record

Lower open space tax to appear on Haddonfield ballot

Texas
Travis County finalizes November bond election

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Washington Watch 5/6/11

May 6, 2011

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 also available on the Web.

——

FY 2011 Budget is Final; FY 2012 Begins
Congress returned from a two-week spring recess on May 2nd, and after wrapping up the extremely long Fiscal Year 2011 budget process and taking the first steps towards setting the budget for the next fiscal year. Due to concerns over the deficit, discretionary spending, the cost of mandatory spending programs and the need to increase the debt limit or risk serious financial implications, the next several weeks and months will be largely focused on these top-line budgetary issues.
Details here

Conrad Anker testifies in Support of the Land and Water Conservation Fund
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.
Details here

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.
Details here

Hope everyone has a dandy weekend

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Conservation finance links, 2/15

February 15, 2011

LandVote(TM) Logo

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation.  As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.
California
Cuts to Williamson Act will have major effect on open space protection

Federal
Senate Bill extends tax breaks for donated land

Georgia
Dunwoody considering parks bond

Illinois
Will County considering another open space bond

Michigan
Lawmaker would like to divert state conservation funds

Minnesota
Analysis of Clean Water, Land and Legacy Act

Pennsylvania
Lehigh County leaders call for continued state conservation funding

County Commissioner urges support of Monroe County open space bond

Monroe County open space bond is a tough sell

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Senator Robert C. Byrd, conservationist

July 7, 2010

Harpers Ferry National Historical Park - Photo: Ken Sherman

A few years ago, I attended a family wedding that took me, for the first time, to West Virginia. My wife and I loved the wild look of the state and decided to stay after the wedding to explore. We stopped for an afternoon at Harper’s Ferry National Historical Park, explored the New River Gorge National Recreation Area, and drove north from Lewisburg along the edge of the Monongahela National Forest.

I knew, of course, that we were on a kind of Robert Byrd conservation  tour of the Mountaineer State. If federal money was used to support a West Virginia conservation project over the last five decades, Senator Robert C. Byrd helped to make it happen. The nation’s longest serving senator, who died on June 28 at the age of 92, left behind a conservation legacy that will support his home state’s quality of life and vital tourism economy for many decades into the future.

In a July 4 letter to the editor of The Charleston Gazette, TPL, the Nature Conservacy, and the Conservation Fund affirmed the senator’s conservation legacy:

America’s great outdoors lost a strong supporter on June 28, with the death of Sen. Robert C. Byrd, but his legacy will live on in the mountains, rivers and forests that future generations of West Virginians will enjoy.

Robert Byrd as Senate Majority Leader - Official portrait by Michael Shane Neal

Robert Byrd served 51 years in the Senate and was Senate Majority Leader from 1977 to 1981. He was first elected in 1959 and was already beginning his third term the year TPL was founded. TPL has since protected more that 74,000 acres in West Virginia, the vast majority of it using funding generated with Senator Byrd’s help.

With this money from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund TPL helped add School House Ridge and Murphy Farm to the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, create the Gauley River National Recreation Area—a prime whitewater rafting site and economic engine for its region—and add 6,000 acres to the Monongehela National Forest around the resort town of White Sulpher Springs, one of many TPL-assisted additions to that national forest that the senator supported.

An obituary of Senator Robert Byrd can be found on the New York Times website, and his Wikipedia entry is extensive.

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Washington Watch – 3/23/10

March 25, 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.

President’s Budget Released On February 1, 2010
President Barack Obama released the Administration’s Fiscal Year 2011 budget. Included in the budget is a proposal to invest almost $620 million in outdoor recreation and strategic land investments through the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), the federal government’s primary program to protect America’s irreplaceable natural, historic, recreational, and other treasured landscapes.
Details here

Congressional Budget Hearings are Underway
In recent weeks, several congressional authorizing and appropriating committees with jurisdiction over federal conservation programs have held hearings on the FY 2011 President’s Budget request. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar appeared before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on March 3 and the Senate Interior Appropriations Subcommittee on March 9. It is likely that Secretary Salazar will appear before relevant House committees as well.
Details here

Transportation Programs Update
For several months, Congress has been grappling with how to rewrite the federal transportation authorization bill, SAFETEA-LU. The law was originally written in 2005 to cover programs through FY 2009 (September 30, 2009). Since that date, Congress has extended SAFETEA-LU programs through a number of short-term authorizations.
Details here

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Washington Watch – 1/25/10

January 25, 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.

Congress Returns
With Congress now returning from its holiday break, this is a good opportunity to update Washington Watch readers on where things stand with land conservation funding and programs. We are heading into the budget and appropriations season and there is still the little matter of climate change legislation hanging in the balance. All this will occur amid continued attention to issues like healthcare, national security, and the economy and with a looming mid-term election in the fall.  Details here

FY2011 CELCP Competition Underway
On Tuesday, January 10th, NOAA announced the fiscal year (FY) 2011 funding opportunity notice for the Coastal and Estuarine Lands Protection Program (CELCP) had published in the Federal Register. The funding opportunity notice, which contains details about the competition, the project narrative, and the CELCP checklist, is posted on the Funding Opportunities page of the CELCP website and will also soon be posted on Grants.gov. Project proposals must be submitted to NOAA by 6pm EST on April 9, 2010. Details here

House and Senate Hold Hearings on FLTFA Reauthorization
The Federal Land Transaction Facilitation Act (FLTFA) is a little-known law that has played a significant role in protecting America’s public lands. First enacted in 2000, 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. FLTFA has proved to be a vital complementary funding source to the Land and Water Conservation Fund, but its future is not yet secure. Details here

Stimulus Bill and Transportation Funding
The House of Representatives last month approved stopgap legislation that would fund surface transportation programs through the end of the fiscal year on September 30. But the legislation – a massive new economic stimulus bill (HR 2847) – barely made it through the House and faces at best an uncertain future in the Senate. So the immediate, mid-term and long-term future of transportation programs remains unknown. Details here

Legislation to Fund Urban Parks Introduced
On October 6, 2009, the Urban Revitalization and Livable Communities Act (H.R. 3734) was introduced by Rep. Albio Sires (NJ) and 22 cosponsors representing Chicago, New York, Northern New Jersey, Boston, Providence, Memphis, Philadelphia, Birmingham, San Antonio, and Portland OR. H.R. 3734 has been referred to both the House Financial Services and the House Education and Labor Committee, where it will be considered by the Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities. Details here

Conservation Tax Incentive Expires; Retroactive Extension Likely in 2010
The existing tax incentive for conservation easement donations expired on December 31 without Congress taking action to extend the provision. Supporters of the incentive, however, will continue to press for an extension that would be retroactive to January 1, 2010. Should Congress fail to enact an extension, then donations of conservation easements will be treated the same as other charitable donations, subject to the 30% limit of adjusted gross income with a carryover period of only five years. Details here

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Navy helps prevent 600-home development

January 6, 2010

Subdivision site - Photo: Susan Poag/ The Times-Picayune

A story yesterday in the New Orleans Times-Picayune highlights an unlikely but growing funding source for conservation projects nationwide.

Plaquemines Parish government and the Navy will purchase 201 acres just north of the Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base in Belle Chasse, essentially paying a combined $7 million to stop a residential subdivision near the end of one of the airbase’s most active runways.

The TPL-negotiated deal prevents development of a planned subdivision of 600 homes and gives the parish a chance to build a park on the land. The Navy’s participation prevents uses of the property that are incompatible with its location at the end of main runway of the Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base.

The Navy is contributing $5 million for a restrictive easement, “to ensure that any building or changes to the land are compatible with property immediately below the flight path at the end of our most active runway,” said Capt. Bill Snyder, the air station’s commanding officer.

Parish and military officials worried that the . . . development and others would be incompatible with flight operations at the 50-year-old airbase if residences were built under a key flight path, where jet engine noise is the loudest and the potential for a crash is the highest.

That mix, officials feared, ultimately could threaten the air station’s viability, curtail aerial training and in the worse-case scenario lead to its closure.

The Navy funds come from the Department of Defense Environmental Protection Initiative (REPI)which since 2005 has funnelled more than $200 million through the four armed services to conserve land around military bases nationwide.

As of August, these funds had been used to help conserve more than 76,000 acres at 53 military installations in 23 states. While the DOD’s primary goal is to prevent incompatible uses around its bases, the conservation resulting from the projects can be significant.

TPL has used the funds in more than twenty projects to help protect properties as diverse as a 3,700-acre nature preserve near urban Honolulu and 62 acres for a regional park along the Mississippi River in Minnesota.

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Maine conservation in 2009 — and a pitch for federal funding

January 4, 2010

Indian Cellar - Hollis Maine - Conserved 2009 Photo: Jerry and Marcy Monkman

As the Maine Sunday Telegram highlights Maine’s 2009 conservation accomplishments, a working group is completing a pitch for federal funding of conservation in that state’s North Woods.

From the Maine Sunday Telegram:

What began with low expectations and uncertainty about the economy ended as a big year for land conservation in Maine, with tens of thousands of acres of farmland, forest and lakefronts permanently preserved statewide in 2009, according to conservation advocates.

The deals range from landscape-scale purchases in the North Woods to strategic protection efforts in the more populated southern part of the state.

(That story was written before TPL announced the conservation of 10,000 acres at Stowe Mountain and Robinson Peak this morning.)

One impetus to these conservation accomplishments may have been the “green lining” in the current real estate downturn, which we have blogged on before, most recently here.

In York, for example, a coalition of land trusts raised more than $3 million and preserved the 151-acre Highland Farm, a tract of fields and forest habitat near the York River estuary and a pond that supplies drinking water to three communities.

The farm had long ago been identified as one of the last large undeveloped coastal tracts in the region. But when it was put on the auction block in 2003, a developer beat out conservationists and bought it, said Wolfe Tone, state director for the Trust for Public Land in Maine.

The developer submitted plans for 38 building lots on the property and already had permits to begin the first phase before agreeing to sell to conservationists.

“We got another run at it, and we turned it right around,” Tone said. “He was going to go ahead (and build) if we didn’t get it.”

In Maine’s North Woods, conservation successes have developed from coalition-building between conservationists,  forestry interests, and local residents; and a  story this morning in the Bangor Daily News highlights such coalition-building as key to possible federal funding for North Woods conservation. 

After months of discussion and several promising meetings with Obama administration officials, a working group is completing a pitch for federal funding for “landscape-scale” conservation in Maine’s North Woods that would also strengthen the state’s forest products industry.

Last summer during a visit to Maine, U.S. Interior Secretary Kenneth Salazar expressed interest in hearing suggestions about how the federal government could help Maine preserve large swaths of forestland.

But Salazar made clear that any proposal would need a broad base of support that includes landowners and industry.

The story suggests that federal conservation in the North Woods will probably not take the form of a big national park, such as has been proposed by advocates over the last few years. 

“At its heart, this is a proposal to maintain a sustainably managed forest landscape, which continues to produce wood products and protects ecological values, while maintaining and improving recreational opportunities,” reads a draft outline of the report.

What the Great Maine Forest Initiative is not proposing, coalition members and state officials insist, is a national park, a national forest or any other significant expansion of public lands in Maine.

Suggestions for another national park in Maine are “a no-starter with me,” Gov. John Baldacci said this week. “I am proud of Maine’s leadership and what we have been able to do on our own … We would be using federal dollars, and the attraction of the federal government is the opportunity to have conservation on a landscape scale.”

The proposal calls for working with landowners to protect land largely through conservation easements. Some “special places,” such as old-growth forests or areas with particular value from a recreational or ecological standpoint, could be purchased from willing property owners with the help of federal dollars.

The goal is “to protect anywhere from 500,000 to 2 million acres of working forests in the largest unfragmented forest east of the Mississippi River”  and may serve as a model for funding other working-forest conservation.

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