S-1081-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 429.
What it does
This bill would make funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) permanent starting in fiscal year 2020, rather than requiring Congress to reauthorize it periodically. The President would be required to submit an annual report to Congress detailing how the full amount of LWCF funds are allocated. Congress would retain the ability to direct alternate allocations through a specified process.
Who benefits
Outdoor recreationists (hikers, hunters, anglers, campers) who use public lands funded by the LWCF; state and local governments that receive LWCF grants for parks and open space; conservation organizations that rely on LWCF for land protection; rural and urban communities that gain or maintain access to public recreational areas; wildlife and ecosystems protected through land acquisitions funded by the LWCF.
Who is hurt
Private landowners whose property may be targeted for federal acquisition using LWCF funds, potentially facing pressure to sell; counties and localities that lose tax revenue when land shifts from private to federal ownership (federal land is not subject to local property taxes); energy and extractive industries (oil, gas, mining, timber) that may lose access to lands acquired under the program; ranchers and farmers who may face reduced grazing or agricultural access near newly acquired federal lands.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the LWCF is one of the most effective tools the federal government has for protecting public lands, wildlife habitat, and recreational access — and that its impact has been undermined for decades by Congress's failure to consistently appropriate its full authorized funding. Because the LWCF is funded primarily by offshore oil and gas royalties rather than taxpayer dollars, making it permanent would ensure a dedicated, self-sustaining revenue stream that does not compete with other budget priorities. Permanent funding would allow federal agencies, states, and local governments to plan long-term conservation projects with confidence, rather than operating year-to-year under funding uncertainty. Supporters also contend that the annual presidential reporting requirement strengthens congressional oversight without sacrificing the program's stability.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that permanently locking in LWCF funding removes a critical lever of congressional oversight, effectively placing mandatory spending on autopilot and limiting Congress's ability to redirect funds based on changing national priorities or fiscal conditions. They contend that federal land acquisition can harm local economies by removing land from private ownership and the tax base, burdening rural counties that depend on property tax revenue. Opponents also argue that the federal government already struggles to maintain its existing land holdings, and that expanding acquisitions without guaranteed maintenance funding compounds a growing deferred-maintenance backlog. Some further argue that land-use decisions are best made at the state and local level, and that permanent federal funding centralizes control in ways that conflict with principles of local governance.