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[Page S2748]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GREAT AMERICAN OUTDOORS ACT
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, on an entirely different subject, while
the Senate remains the only Chamber in this Capitol with its lights on,
we are going to continue with legislative work for the country. We will
take our first vote today to advance the Great American Outdoors Act--a
generational bill from Senator Daines and Senator Gardner--that will
secure the future of our Nation's natural treasures.
America is home to 419 national park sites, 567 national wildlife
refuges, and hundreds of millions of acres of public lands. Every year,
millions of Americans turn to these lands for recreation, inspiration,
and for their livelihoods. These resources exist because of the
visionary actions of prior Congresses. Now it is our turn to secure
them for generations yet to come.
Our colleagues' legislation does two big things: It improves access
to parks and public lands by investing in maintenance and upkeep, and
it secures permanent support for the missions of the Land and Water
Conservation Fund.
Their legislation has already persuaded 59 cosponsors here in the
Senate. It has earned the bipartisan endorsement of the last six former
Secretaries of the Interior, and a diverse coalition of independent
advocates--from The Nature Conservancy to the Outdoor Industry
Association to the American Battlefield Trust--have called on us to
pass this bill.
This bill has unusually broad, bipartisan, and vocal support because
the issues at hand affect so many different communities so concretely.
Every year, visitors to America's national parks bring more than $40
billion in economic impact to the gateway towns that surround them. The
State and local parks, stewarded by the LWCF, help to generate another
$166 billion in local economic activity and support more than 1.1
million jobs.
My fellow Kentuckians and I know this firsthand. At least 120,000
jobs are supported by active outdoor recreation in the Commonwealth.
From hunters and anglers in the Daniel Boone National Forest to
tourists visiting Mammoth Cave, our State's natural treasures occasion
nearly $13 billion in annual consumer spending. Yet Kentuckians also
know that tight budgets for maintenance often mean that historic sites
go without important repairs and upgrades that would ensure safe access
and smooth operations. So we are acutely aware of the need to address
the deferred maintenance backlog, which this legislation tackles head-
on.
So I am very grateful to our colleagues from Montana and Colorado for
shepherding this legislation. I am proud of the stand they have taken
in support of our Nation's natural wonders and the millions of American
livelihoods that depend on them. I look forward to discussing this
landmark legislation more in the days ahead, to supporting it here on
the floor, and to urging every one of my colleagues to join in.
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