Wednesday, April 29, 2020

11 PA Fishing, Hunting Groups Urge Lawmakers To Oppose Freeze On Local Farm Conservation, Environmental Restoration Project Funding

Eleven major hunting and fishing groups in Pennsylvania have written to lawmakers opposing efforts to freeze state funding for county conservation districts, local farm conservation and environmental restoration projects.
The letter refers to legislation-- House Bill 1822-- passed by Republicans in the House last week freezing new grant commitments from the Conservation District Fund, Environmental Stewardship (Growing Greener) Fund, Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund, the Agricultural Conservation Easement Purchase Fund and more. 
The bill is now in the Senate for consideration.  Read more here.
The groups said in their letter-- “The hundreds of projects receiving grants from these special funds appear in every corner of the state, employ thousands of people, and enable non-profit organizations and volunteers to contribute to project delivery. 
“A single project may need the services of tree farms and plant nurseries, excavating crews, general contractors and require the purchase of building materials. 
“In the dire economic times we face, special funds, and the projects they enable, provide a lifeline to the workers and businesses in our hardest hit communities.
“These funds are also a boon to the state’s $26.9 billion outdoor economy which employs 390,000 Pennsylvanians.”
“By placing a freeze on new project spending for an undetermined amount of time, thousands of jobs will be lost, clean drinking water and flood mitigation efforts will go uncompleted, and shovel-ready projects to improve our quality of life will sit idle.”
 The groups join others like the PA Association of Conservation Districts, Lancaster Clean Water Partners, PA State Grange, PA Land Trust Association, PA Recreation & Park Society, PA Parks & Forests Foundation, the PA Environmental CouncilPA Municipal Authorities Association opposing a freeze on local conservation district, farm and environmental project funding.
The text of the letter follows--
Sportsmen and women in Pennsylvania fully appreciate the urgency and need to address the Covid-19 coronavirus in our Commonwealth. We are thankful for the extra time and work the legislature has put forth in the past several weeks to provide families and businesses proper health and economic relief.
However, the approved Amendment 05143 to House Bill 1822 is not an effective measure in this relief effort. 
This amendment specifically targets eight conservation funds, including the Environmental Stewardship Fund (Growing Greener) and Keystone Recreation, Park, And Conservation Fund (The Keystone Fund), freezing any new contracts and effectively restricting all new conservation projects from receiving much needed funding until the end of the Governor’s emergency declaration.
Sportsmen and women across the Commonwealth rely on these funds for clean streams for fishing, healthy habitat for hunting, and a multitude of other outdoor recreation opportunities. 
Additionally, projects funded by these programs receive large private investments and non-government match, often to the tune of 3-1. 
At a time when more Pennsylvanians are turning to the outdoors and open spaces to improve their physical and mental health, now is not the time to cancel the future projects that provide these essential services to our citizens while leveraging partner match to relieve the burden on taxpayers.
Growing Greener, the Keystone Fund, and the remaining six special funds targeted in this legislation are investments in our Commonwealth’s economy. 
The hundreds of projects receiving grants from these special funds appear in every corner of the state, employ thousands of people, and enable non-profit organizations and volunteers to contribute to project delivery. 
A single project may need the services of tree farms and plant nurseries, excavating crews, general contractors and require the purchase of building materials. 
In the dire economic times we face, special funds, and the projects they enable, provide a lifeline to the workers and businesses in our hardest hit communities.
These funds are also a boon to the state’s $26.9 billion outdoor economy which employs 390,000 Pennsylvanians. 
Guides, outfitters, outdoor retail stores, and a host of other tourism-based businesses all benefit from the completion of conservation projects funded through these programs.
By placing a freeze on new project spending for an undetermined amount of time, thousands of jobs will be lost, clean drinking water and flood mitigation efforts will go uncompleted, and shovel-ready projects to improve our quality of life will sit idle.
We recognize the path to recovery from this disease may be a long one, but hastily targeting critical conservation funding and stifling government programs that collaborate with non-profit organizations and the private sector is not the economic solution Pennsylvanian’s need or deserve. 
We ask members of the State Senate to recognize the positive impact these funds and collaborative projects have in preserving the land and water Pennsylvanians enjoy and depend upon, especially in these difficult times, and support removal of amendment A05143 from HB 1822.
Signed,
[Editor’s Note: $172 Million Just Sitting There: The Senate and House are still sitting on a $172 million surplus in their own operating accounts, but they don’t seem ready to repurpose the money to help taxpayers and real people during the COVID-19 pandemic.  Read more here.
[Sacrifice is good… for other people in their view, apparently.
[Click Here to read more about "legislative privilege" and hiding how the General Assembly spends taxpayer money.]
Related Articles - Wildlife Groups & Funding:
-- Op-Ed: My Fellow Conservatives Are Out Of Touch On The Environment - Fmr. Gov. Tom Ridge
[Posted: April 29, 2020]  PA Environment Digest

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