DOINews: NPS Director Joins Massachusetts Community in Celebrating 50th Anniversary of the Land and Water Conservation Fund

08/14/2014
Last edited 09/05/2019
NPS Director Jon Jarvis speaking at the event.
National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis speaks at the commemorative event, held at Varney Playground in Chelmsford, Mass. The town recently received a significant LWCF grant for playground improvements. Photo by NPS.

On August 11, National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis joined U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas, Massachusetts Energy and Environmental Affairs Undersecretary of Environment Martin Suuberg, Massachusetts State Park Director Priscilla Geigis, Town of Chelmsford Board of Selectmen Chair Patricia Wojtas and other state and local officials for a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, which supports local conservation, outdoor recreation and clean water projects across the country.

In June, Chelmsford received a $248,352 Land and Water Conservation fund grant to fund renovations of Varney Playground, where the event was held, including new ADA-compliant walkways, creation of a nature trail, exterior and interior renovations to the field/bathhouse, a new boat dock and construction of a relocated basketball court.

“The Land and Water Conservation Fund empowers communities to fulfill their visions for recreation and conservation locally,” said Jarvis. “With the renovations funded by the Fund, Varney Playground will allow more families and children to get outdoors to play and learn about the natural world around them.”

Since states match funds awarded through the Land and Water Conservation Fund, over the past 50 years, Massachusetts has leveraged more than $100 million to help create, develop and improve conservation and recreation sites across the commonwealth. This year, Massachusetts will receive more than $900,000 from the Fund.

President Obama has called for full, permanent funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund in his proposed budget, recognizing it as one of the nation's most effective tools for protecting important water sources, expanding access for hunting and fishing, preserving historic battlefields, and creating ball fields and other places for kids to play and learn.

Since its establishment in 1964, the Land and Water Conservation Fund has conserved land in every state and supported tens of thousands of state and local projects. The fund does not use taxpayer dollars; the primary source of income derives from fees paid by oil and gas companies drilling offshore in waters owned by the American people. The program has only been fully funded once in its 50-year history and is at risk of expiring without action from Congress.

By: April Slayton, NPS
August 14, 2014

Story appears in NPS' The Morning Report; photo, InsideNPS.

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