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50-Year-Old Conservation Fund That Benefits Arizona Parks Set To Expire

Yuma Riverfront Gateway Park
(Photo by Amanda Solliday - KAWC)
The Yuma Riverfront Gateway Park is one of the community parks located in Arizona that has received funding from the Land and Water Conservation Act.

Outdoor recreation supporters are concerned the Federal Land and Water Conservation Fund will expire in September 2015 without Congressional action.

For 50 years, the fund has helped pay for everything from national recreational areas to neighborhood parks, including the Yuma Riverfront Gateway Park, Lake Havasu State Park, the Grand Canyon and many others.

Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva introduced a proposal this past April, called HR 1814, designed to permanently authorize the conservation fund.

Over 700 parks in Arizona have received money from the fund, said Mickey Rogers, grant program leader with Arizona State Parks.

“These facilities have to remain open to the public in perpetuity, so it creates a lasting legacy of outdoor recreation facilities," Rogers said.

Representative Grijalva’s bill has bipartisan co-sponsors. However, lawmakers disagree in the details — including how much money to set aside in the fund, how the fund should be divided among federal and other lands, and what fraction should be used for acquiring new lands versus maintenance of recreational areas.

The Senate has also begun hearings on a parallel effort to maintain the Land and Water Conservation Act.

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Amanda Solliday was a reporter at KAWC in Yuma from 2015 to 2016.