Details Emerging about the Execution of the Great American Outdoors Act

The National Park Service recently published an article that contains more details about how The Great American Outdoors Act will be funded, both the source of funding and a timeline for the release of funds.

According to NPS, the bill signed by President Trump on August 4th enables the use of revenues from energy development to provide up to $1.9 billion a year for five years to provide needed maintenance for critical facilities and infrastructure in our national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, recreation areas, and American Indian schools. It will also use royalties from offshore oil and natural gas to permanently fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund to the tune of $900 million a year to invest in conservation and recreation opportunities across the country. Assuming the programs are fully funded, the new funding amounts to $2.8 billion a year.

It’s a Start

As we have written previously, the total deficit in funding of projects to maintain national parks, national monuments and other endangered lands under supervision by the federal government amounts to approximately $13 billion.

In a strange kind of way this may be better than fully funding the entire shortfall sooner. I have written in recent posts about my concern, as a career program and project manager, that attempting to execute such an immense scope of work across an immense landscape would certainly be hard to manage at best, and prone to waste and inefficiency at worst.

It is with a spoonful of optimism that I look forward to getting my eyes on the list of actual projects undertaken in 2021 and beyond. Let’s all get behind this plan, because after all, it is the plan we have. Recall that we have had no plan at all to catch up with the backlog of maintenance for the past twenty years or longer.

Link to the NPS article referenced above is here.

Get Involved

Please let me know if you are interested in helping us support this work, by clicking CONTACT US and entering the word ‘COUNT ME IN’ in the box labeled ‘Your interest…’. Your contact information is kept confidential and never sold or shared. I will personally respond to you within five days, and I don’t use autoresponders or mail bots.

Thank you for your interest in saving our wild lands and the animals that call these places home. Stay safe, my friends.

p.s. Take only pictures and leave only footprints!

My Story: Why I Shuttered my Business to Become an Activist for Conservation

My story is no different than most personal accounts of people who were born in the 1950s and lived through the sock-hop rock-n-roll Sixties, the tie-dyed Seventies, the Cold War Eighties, the internet-connected Nineties, the Great Recession of the 2000s, and now the Age of Enlightenment 2010s. I have sleep-walked through several of those decades, experienced the highs and lows of social interaction, found a successful trade that I could turn into a career, and then, finally, “Thank God!” I found something that I really enjoy doing. For me, it was photography, and specifically, digital photography that unleashed my creative desires, awakened me at night with new ideas, and yes, photography gave me a reason to experience the most wonderful places on planet Earth. Oh, just one more thing…I found love, too, but that’s a story for another day.

Larry Rogers, set up for a moose in Grand Teton NP (Photo: Gregory Stamp)

 

 

“Thank God! I found something that I really enjoy doing!”

Continue reading “My Story: Why I Shuttered my Business to Become an Activist for Conservation”