March 25, 2006
Rahall Slams Bush’s Funding Cuts for Conservation Programs
By HNN Staff
Washington, DC (HNN) – While oil and gas conglomerates have been racking up
record profits and shortchanging the Treasury by not paying their royalty
obligations, the Bush Administration is proposing to step back 30 years in
funding levels for a popular program that provides citizens recreational
opportunities, charged U.S. Rep. Nick J. Rahall D-WV.
Iin a recent letter to Chairman Charles Taylor (R-NC) and Ranking Member
Norm Dicks (D-WA) of the Subcommittee on Interior Appropriations Rahall,
representing West Virginia’s 3rd District, requested that funding for the
Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) be increased by $100 million for the
Stateside portion of the program, and by $220 million for Federal land
acquisition purposes.
"The Fund is a balanced and effective means of dedicating a small fraction
of the enormous revenues generated by depletion of outer continental shelf
resources to the conservation of resources on shore," stated Rahall.
Concerning the Administration's funding proposal, Rahall wrote, "This level
of funding severely undermines the 40-year-old promise of LWCF, and,
instead, allows the Fund to be used to offset spending for other purposes.
If enacted, the proposed LWCF funding would be the lowest in more than 30
years, and woefully inadequate for protecting vital resources."
The Stateside program serves as an indispensable component of State parks
and recreation budgets nationwide. But the Administration effectively
zeroes out that half of the LWCF program, depriving State and local
governments of funding needed to provide recreational facilities for their
citizens. Such funds are typically used, for example, for local parks, and
provide safe play areas for youth sports teams, investments in the
well-being of America's youth.
Rahall added, "The result of these thinning budgets is that many important
programs are scrambling for crumbs. The extent of harm is becoming evident
by absurd suggestions that Americans sell their heritage - their children's
public lands inheritance - to offset worthy Department programs."
Adding insult to injury, disturbing accounts of uncollected royalty revenues
– funds
that these wealthy oil and gas companies owe the government – are making
headlines.
"These unpaid royalties negatively affect the ability of government to
operate effectively and cost the American taxpayer important services.
Further, this situation undermines the public's trust that their government
is receiving what it is due from use of the Nation's public resources,"
declared Rahall.
Rahall has joined other House Democrats in calling for Congressional
hearings to review the Department of the Interior's royalty collection
program.
The Administration also proposes a $92.9 million cut in construction and
maintenance for the National Parks, as well as a $10 million cut in repair
and rehabilitation.
"A significant investment in maintenance is desperately needed to avoid
permanent damage to some of the most popular and historic structures and
facilities in the National Park System," said Rahall.
Further, the budget request proposes to extend authority to collect the coal
industry-paid fees which finance the Abandoned Mine Lands (AML) program
through the end of Fiscal Year 2007. Currently, that authority expires at
the end of June 2006.
"As an author, along with Representative Cubin, of legislation to extend the
life of that program, I am pleased that the Administration has acknowledged
the need to continue this program. I have long advocated an extension as
essential to providing certainty to industry and to the States striving to
address dangerous abandoned mine sites. But also important is the way those
funds are annually allocated," wrote Rahall.
For years, the allocation of AML funds has failed to keep pace with
expansive restoration needs. Moreover, it has failed even to keep up with
the level of AML receipts. The Office of Surface Mining has identified $3
billion just in top-tier priority coal mining site problems, with billions
more needed for work at sites that pose risks to humans and the environment.
The result of continued underfunding is a progressive deterioration of the
mine sites, growth in the dangers posed to nearby communities, and,
ultimately, increased costs to repair and reclaim those properties.
Rahall declared, "I urge allocation of these funds at a higher level, more
in keeping with the real needs of mining communities."
While Americans demonstrate widespread support for endangered species
recovery, the budget request does not commit sufficient resources. For
example, the endangered species listing program warrants $30 million. An
increase from the approximately $18 million proposed would enable the Fish
and Wildlife Service to make a dent in the backlog of the 282 species that
are candidates for listing, and the 524 listed species without critical
habitat designations.
"Dwindling funds have impeded our ability to conserve valuable resources,
maintain our National Parks and National Forests, and enable the recovery of
a wealth of animals threatened by extinction," concluded Rahall.






