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America's Great Outdoors Report Won't Get Warm Welcome In House Natural Resources Committee

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Published Date

February 18, 2011

U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings says now is not the time to be investing more in the public lands.

Noting that the Interior Department has billions of dollars in maintenance backlogs, the chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee says now is not the time to embark on more spending to expand the public lands empire.

U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Washington, made the remarks in reaction to President Obama's release of his America's Great Outdoors report, a document that calls for greater investment in public and private lands to offer greater recreational opportunities and produce healthier communities.

The congressman's reference to the billions of dollars in maintenance backlogs most surely was a reference to the National Park Service's backlog, which is in the neighborhood of $8 billion.

The America's Great Outdoors report, meanwhile, calls for full funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, a total of $900 million, to, among other things, help add acres to national parks, conserve and restore public and private lands, improve urban parks, and create community green space.

In the wake of the president's release of the report Wednesday, Rep. Hastings released the following statement:

“America has a responsibility to care for our treasured public lands and ensure that they are there for future generations to enjoy. Proper conservation requires a balanced approach. This means protecting and maintaining the land the federal government already owns and ensuring our multi-use public lands remain open to public enjoyment and available to help build our economy and create jobs.

“Being good stewards of our land does not require imposing restrictive policies that block recreation, agriculture, energy production and other job-creating activities. Yet this is too often the approach of the Obama Administration. For example, the Interior Department’s new ‘Wild Lands’ policy will not only hinder public access and cost jobs, but is a gross circumvention of Congress’ authority to designate Wilderness areas.

“It’s concerning that the President is proposing hundreds of millions of dollars in new spending for the federal government to purchase more federal land, even though it cannot properly maintain the land it already owns. The Interior Department currently has maintenance backlogs that measure in the billions of dollars.

“America has a debt that is costing jobs and putting future generations at risk. This requires us to set priorities. There are many worthy projects and programs that our country simply cannot afford right now. I believe the government has a responsibility to maintain the land it already has before spending money we don’t have to acquire more land.”

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Comments

Buying private lands within existing parks often improves management and lowers operating costs.


Rangertoo

Certainly lowers the inholder's operating costs and in many cases cultural and historical histories that stretch longer than the NPS's existance. That's how NPS alters cultural history with a flawed premise that their opinion of cultural history does not consider "living" history.


Reality, it does stir discomfort when change is needed. Forget the hope that PR specialists are trained to give cover to deficient policies. I'll take reality!


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