It’s official: New protections for 2.3 million acres of land and water have entered into law along with reauthorization for the Land and Water Conservation Fund and renewal of the Every Kid Outdoors program.
The John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management and Recreation Act was signed on March 12, sealing the biggest conservation win in a decade and a major bipartisan breakthrough.
“For the new Congress, this is a strong start and an opportunity to turn the corner after two years of backsliding by the Trump Administration and its allies on Capitol Hill,” said Wilderness Society President Jamie Williams in a statement. “By passing this momentous bill, Congress has embraced conservation and protection of our nation’s wild lands and waters.”
This win wouldn’t have happened without you—the thousands of people who contacted their elected officials and reminded them that public lands remain a bipartisan concern. Thank you!
The John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management and Recreation Act, which was passed overwhelmingly by the Senate on Feb. 12 and by the House on Feb. 26, is considered the biggest conservation bill in a decade, adding 1.2 million acres to the National Wilderness Preservation System and putting several key landscapes off-limits to mining and other development.
The bipartisan suite of legislation also reauthorized the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), a crucial lands protection program that lawmakers allowed to expire in September 2018, and extended the Every Kid Outdoors program.
Among the bill’s highlights:
While we celebrate this victory and gear up for more big moments in the months ahead, take a moment to tell your representatives in Washington DC that you support the passage of the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management and Recreation Act and hope to see this Congress take further action to protect our shared public lands and waters.