The Land and Water Conservation Fund
Although state and local governments have set aside land for parks and recreation for a very long time, the modern movement to protect open space can be traced to a little-known report, Outdoor Recreation for America, released in January 1962 by the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission. The fifteen-member commission, created in 1958 by Congress and President Dwight D. Eisenhower and chaired by Laurance Rockefeller, requested that a federal funding program should be established to provide grants to states that would stimulate and assist them to meet new demands for outdoor recreation and to pay for additions to the federal recreation estate.
The commission owed its birth to forces in American society unleashed after World War II.1 From the end of the war into the 1950s, the United States witnessed a swift expansion in the demand for outdoor recreation. The baby boom and rapid urbanization coupled with increases in disposable income, leisure time, and mobility coalesced into a national awareness that the nation needed more access to parks, open space, and other areas for outdoor recreation.
Spurred by the commissionâs recommendations, President John F. Kennedy on February 14, 1963, proposed the creation of a Land and Water Conservation Fund. In a letter to Congress accompanying the legislation, Kennedy wrote:
The Nation needs a land acquisition program to preserve both prime Federal and State areas for outdoor recreation purposes. The growth of our cities, the development of our industry, the expansion of our transportation systemsâall manifestations of our vigorous and expanding societyâpreempt irreplaceable lands of natural beauty and unique recreation value. In addition to the enhancement of spiritual, cultural, and physical values resulting from the preservation of these resources, the expenditures for their preservation are a sound financial investment. Public acquisition costs can become multiplied and even prohibitive with the passage of time.2
After Kennedyâs assassination in November 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson urged speedy approval of the bill, which received broad bipartisan support. Congress approved the legislation in the late summer of 1964 and sent the bill to the president, who signed it into law on September 3, 1964, as Public Law 88â578.
The law establishing the Land and Water Conservation Fund stipulated that up to 60 percent of all appropriations for the fund could be devoted to the new state grant program, but at least 40 percent should be set aside for federal land acquisition. Congress tapped four sources of revenue to fund the program: (1) the sale of surplus federal property, (2) an existing motor boat fuel tax, (3) a new system of entrance and recreation user fees at national parks and on other federal lands, and (4) annual appropriations of $60 million a year for eight years, which were to be paid back. Because the user fees never raised more than $16 million in the early years, Congress bolstered the original funding sources in 1968 by including a portion of federal revenue from offshore oil and gas drilling, which has become the key funding source for the Land and Water Conservation Fund. Congress saw its use of offshore drilling revenue as a means to recycle money generated from a depleting natural resource to rejuvenate other natural resources. Lawmakers increased the programâs authorized funding level to $200 million a year in FY 1969, $300 million in FY 1971, and $900 million in FY 1978, where it stands as of 2003.
Four decades after its creation, the impact of this program can be seen in every county and major city in America.3 Millions of acres of recreation land in the United Statesâfrom parks and playgrounds in every state and territory to the magnificent national parks spanning the country from Cape Cod to Point Reyesâowe their existence to the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act. From FY 1965 through FY 2002, Congress appropriated $11.8 billion from the Land and Water Conservation Fund to provide monies for federal acquisition of park and recreation lands and matching grants to state and local governments for recreation planning, land acquisition, and park development.
All or a major part of dozens of our national parks and forests, wildlife refuges, and river and trail systems were acquired through the $8.2 billion that Congress has devoted to federal acquisitions under the Land and Water Conservation Fund program. In addition to creating new protected areas, the fund has helped expand existing areas through acquisitions of key recreation and conservation sites in almost every national forest and wildlife refuge east of the Rocky Mountains (see Box 1.1 ). Through FY 2001, over 4.5 million acres of federal land have been protected through the program.
Besides the federal acquisitions, from FY 1965 through FY 2002, Congress also appropriated $3.6 billion in grants to state and local governments to plan, acquire, and develop park and recreation land. These grants leveraged an additional $3.6 billion in state and local matching funds that acquired more than 2.3 million acres of recreation land, funded 37,000 state and local projects, and developed 27,000 recreational facilities spread throughout every county, state, and territory in the nation.
Although Congress authorized a spending level of $900 million a year for the Land and Water Conservation Fund, actual annual appropriations have never approached the authorized amount (see Figure 1.1).
BOX 1.1.
Sampling of public land acquired with Land and Water Conservation Fund appropriations from FY 1965 through FY 2000
In addition to grants to state and local governments, the Land and Water Conservation Fund has provided more than $8.2 billion to acquire new federal recreation lands. Following are some of the areas added to national park, forest, wildlife refuge, river, and trail systems from FY 1965 through FY 2000 for which all or a major part of land purchases were funded by the federal side of the Land and Water Conservation Fund. In addition to new areas, the fund has helped expand existing areas through acquisition of key recreation and conservation sites in almost every national forest and wildlife refuge east of the Rocky Mountains.
Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Wisconsin
Appalachian National Scenic Tra...