Representatives Zinke and Vasquez announce public land caucus to maintain America’s outdoor legacy.
Today, hunters, anglers, conservationists, and all Americans who value our nation’s public lands celebrate the announcement of the bipartisan Public Lands Caucus led by Representatives Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.) and Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.) and co-chaired by Representatives Mike Simpson (R-Idaho) and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.).
“On both sides of the aisle, Americans cherish our public lands,” said Joel Pedersen, president and CEO of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “From the Northern Rockies of Montana to the Gila Mountains of New Mexico, these lands and waters provide invaluable opportunities to millions of hunters and anglers. The voices of this bipartisan Public Lands Caucus are now more important than ever, and we join our nation’s sportsmen and women in thanking Representatives Zinke and Vasquez for their leadership to safeguard America’s outdoor legacy.”
The bipartisan Public Lands Caucus will provide a Bully Pulpit—a term coined by President Theodore Roosevelt, a staunch advocate for public lands—for members to speak on issues important to preserving our country’s public land legacy with support from their colleagues.
America’s 640 million acres of national public lands—including our National Forests and Bureau of Land Management lands—are the setting for irreplaceable hunting and fishing access to millions of Americans. Many of the best trout and salmon rivers originate on federal lands, and these public landscapes provide intact habitat that is essential for the long-term survival of big game species. Federally managed public lands are the backbone of America’s outdoor recreation industry, which contributed $639.5 billion to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product in 2023.
A May 6 vote by the House Natural Resources Committee during the budget reconciliation process passed a late-night amendment to sell some public land in Nevada and Utah. Already this year, more than 6,000 hunters and anglers have sent letters to Congress urging lawmakers to keep land sales out of reconciliation.
“There are well-established criteria and processes for disposing of public lands, and reconciliation legislation is not the proper venue for such decisions,” said Pedersen. “Any proposed sale of public lands must involve a transparent public process, all transactions should serve the public interest, and proceeds should be reinvested in new public land access and habitat conservation. TRCP looks forward to working with the Caucus to ensure any land sales are supported by the sporting community.”
Learn more about proactive legislation led by Representatives Zinke and Vasquez that would require congressional approval for the sale or transfer of most federal lands HERE.
3 Responses to “TRCP Applauds Bipartisan Public Land Caucus”
Is everything sacred to America for sale? Now, including our public lands? Absolutely not! No, we need to acquire more public lands, not sell off some.
Lawmakers Tour Innovative Water Projects in Southeast Arizona
Bipartisan delegation explores federally funded water initiatives aimed at boosting Arizona’s resilience amid growing challenges.
On April 22, the TRCP and partners hosted a legislative field tour of four innovative water resilience projects in Southeast Arizona, all critical to ensuring water availability in the state for communities, fish and wildlife, and aquatic and terrestrial habitats.
TRCP’s Western Water Policy Associate Christian Fauser, along with Audubon Southwest’s Haley Paul and Business For Water Stewardship’s Harold Thomas, brought Representative Juan Ciscomani (R-Ariz., CD 6) and staff from Senator Gallego (D-Ariz.)’s office to projects that collectively demonstrate the extensive impact that large-scale state and federal funding for water resilience have on Arizona’s water future. The tour featured works from the Metropolitan Domestic Water Improvement District (Metro Water), Marana Water, the Santa Cruz Watershed Collaborative (SCWC), and Tucson Water.
One key project the tour highlighted was a Metro Water well site that treats Tucson’s drinking water for PFAS—chemicals that are linked to health conditions including cancer and reproductive issues. Marana Water also discussed improvements to water meters, and Tucson Water discussed the replacement of grass with turf to improve efficiency, save water users money, and conserve water supplies. The water conservation-oriented organizations all emphasized the importance of federal and state grant funding for water resiliency efforts.
Representatives from Tucson Water also discussed their Tucson Airport Remediation Project (TARP), in which a groundwater treatment plant produces up to seven million gallons of highly treated groundwater per day. Most of this water is delivered to the reclaimed water system and used for irrigation throughout the community. Treated water also goes into the Santa Cruz River, which has helped create new habitat for species such as quail and javelina, in the previously dry site.
While stopped along the banks of Tanque Verde Creek, Representative Ciscomani acknowledged the important role of federal and state funding for water resilience projects, through programs such as the Bureau of Reclamation’s Cooperative Watershed Management Program, in enhancing water security for the benefit of Arizona’s communities, ecosystems, and wildlife. Following his remarks, representatives from SCWC discussed their efforts to improve local drought responses that increase water resilience for the local community, as well as nearby habitat for numerous species.
Tucson’s local watersheds and the shallow groundwater areas beneath them sustain remnant riparian habitat, which has been impacted by drought and groundwater pumping over time. To address mounting pressure on the local water supply, SCWC, which includes government, nonprofit, Tribal, and university partners, is working to develop a Drought Coordination Blueprint to establish watershed-wide coordination between 40 varied stakeholders. The project will also develop a coordination plan for the collaborative and recommendations for local partners to help mitigate impacts during periods of local shortages and drought.
TRCP greatly appreciates Representative Ciscomani for his leadership on securing federal funds for watershed restoration efforts and we look forward to working with him, and other members of the Colorado River Caucus, as we strive to enhance water security in Arizona for the benefit of communities, wildlife populations, and their habitat as challenges continue to evolve. We also extend our thanks to Tucson Water, Marana Water, Metro Water, Watershed Management Group, Pima Association of Governments, and the Santa Cruz Watershed Collaborative for sharing their incredible examples of resilience projects in Arizona’s 6th Congressional District.
Learn more about TRCP’s commitment to habitat and clean water HERE
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Designed to reconnect the Mississippi River to collapsing coastal wetlands of its delta southwest of New Orleans, when complete it would move up to 75,000 cubic feet per second of sediment-heavy river water, mimicking the natural land-building processes that constructed South Louisiana. Extensive and exhaustive modeling has shown it rebuilding more than 20 square miles of marsh over 50 years, and enhancing and sustaining tens of thousands of additional acres in an area experiencing the highest rates of land loss in the world.
The diversion has been the cornerstone restoration effort of Louisiana’s often-lauded coastal restoration and protection master plans dating back nearly 20 years. Slated for funding from more than $3 billion in penalties from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster for construction and mitigation, the water and sediment would address damage from the spill and nearly a century of wetland loss caused by levees that have hemmed in the river. Construction had been underway for two years – until the Army Corps of Engineers, at the request of the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, suspended the permit in late April.
Barataria Basin marshlands, circa 1994. Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Project Now on Hold Indefinitely
In a letter to the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration April 25, the Corps cited several reasons for pulling the permit, including CPRA not fully sharing with the Corps an engineering report that showed the potential need for maintenance dredging at the diversion’s intake structure as well as persistent and intentional construction delays over the last year-plus.
It’s no secret among lawmakers, coastal restoration advocates, and Louisiana residents the current governor’s administration has never been fond of the project, generally siding with commercial fishermen and local politicians who have long claimed the project will permanently destroy shrimping, crabbing, and oyster harvest in the Barataria Basin. Concerns over project cost and long-term maintenance have been discussed by this administration much more than the forecasted benefits of the diversion.
The current administration also is blaming the previous one for the delays and the permit withdrawal. The past administration says those are baseless, untrue claims.
Mississippi River habitat requires regular inputs of water and sediment for maximum productivity. Credit: Chris Macaluso
Larger Diversions the Best Means to Rebuild Habitat
The TRCP and its sportfishing, hunting, and habitat conservation partners like Ducks Unlimited and The Nature Conservancy have long been champions for the Mid-Barataria Diversion. The profound wetland loss in the Barataria Basin has been limiting fisheries production and erasing vital waterfowl habitat for more than 50 years, punctuated by more than 200 square miles of lost marshes caused by Hurricanes Katrina in 2005 and Ida in 2021 combined.
Certainly, the re-introduction of sediment-laden freshwater into the degraded basin was going to displace some aquatic species, especially oysters and brown shrimp, which are now inhabiting open water areas that were brackish marsh less than 50 years ago.
However, the diversion project was also projected to rebuild, restore, and enhance tens of thousands of acres of wetlands, improving habitat and production for redfish, crabs, white shrimp, menhaden, and a host of other fish species, as well as ducks and other migratory and native birds. It also was going to provide protection to communities south and west of New Orleans that have become increasingly vulnerable to coastal flooding as marshes have retreated. The lasting benefits have always outweighed the short-term negative impacts. The project wouldn’t have been approved otherwise.
“Habitat lost over the last century by disconnecting the Mississippi River from its deltaic marshes is, undeniably, the primary culprit for lost productivity.”
The virtues of diversions, especially Mid-Barataria, have been detailed in TRCP blogs many times over the last decade. I have also written about how the politics of river diversions don’t change the ecological realities of why they are so desperately needed. Redfish populations in Louisiana are declining, leading to a reduction in recreational creel limits less than a year ago. Mottled ducks, one of the few non-migratory ducks inhabiting the Gulf Coast, have seen their numbers diminish by more than half in the last 70 years. Louisiana duck hunters have seen fewer and fewer teal, gadwall, and pintails year after year.
The Barataria Basin’s waterfowl habitat and hunting opportunities would benefit from a large-scale diversion. Credit: TRCP
The habitat lost over the last century by disconnecting the Mississippi River from its deltaic marshes is, undeniably, the primary culprit for this lost productivity.
Alternative Project Proposals Insufficient
CPRA officials insist there are projects in the works that can be built faster and cheaper than Mid-Barataria, but have given limited public details about using dredges to move sediment to build marshes and coastal ridges and the potential for a smaller diversion – or projections of the measurable benefits of these projects.
Certainly, dredge-and-place marsh creation and barrier island restoration projects play an important role, and any size diversion from the river into the basin will help restore habitat, improve the food chain, and build land. However, there are valid, unanswered questions and concerns about how quickly construction on these potential “replacement” projects can start and if the same oil spill penalties can be applied. It’s also possible, maybe likely, a smaller diversion will have to be completely redesigned and modeled, which could take five years or more, and this sort of project may be as expensive or more expensive than the already permitted Mid-Barataria.
“There is no project instead of a diversion that delivers the resources the Mississippi River provides.”
If the goal is to maximize every available resource to stave off the continued marsh loss in the Barataria Basin that threatens communities and fish and wildlife production, diversions must be used. There is no project that can be built instead of a diversion that delivers the resources the Mississippi River provides.
While new wetlands are naturally building east of the Mississippi River at the mouth of the recently formed Neptune Pass, many detractors continue to claim projects like the Mid-Barataria Diversion are just expensive experiments that won’t build similar deltas, despite them being designed to mimic exactly what’s happening in areas where the river is free to deposit sediment.
The future of Mid-Barataria Diversion work is uncertain. Credit: Natural Resources Conservation Service
Science, Not Politics, Must Drive Decisions
I’ve spent more than 40 years fishing in the Barataria Basin. For the first 20, it’s hard now to describe the remarkable fisheries productivity and the expanses of coastal marshes I experienced. Mornings catching 100-plus speckled trout and dozens of redfish were common. But those days are rare now.
As we approach the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and Rita’s devastating 2005 landfalls, it’s painfully obvious those storms pushed the Barataria Basin’s marshes to the brink of collapse. It’s only gotten worse since.
Louisiana responded to those catastrophic storms by creating a coastal planning effort that set aside politics and focused on science and sound engineering. Coastal master plans have focused on ensuring levees, marsh and barrier island restoration, and diversions all work together.
For the sake of Louisiana’s rich hunting and fishing culture and its coastal communities facing the threats of continued land loss, here’s hoping my state finds its way back to that path very, very soon.
Banner image of tailing redfish courtesy of Pat Ford Photography
TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation.
John McMurray
Hometown: Oceanside, New York Occupation: Fishing guide/charter boat captain Conservation credentials: McMurray has been the executive director of the Coastal Conservation Association New York and director of grant programs at the Norcross Wildlife Foundation. He was also a legislative proxy for the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and served for a decade as New York’s recreational representative on the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council.
Capt. John McMurray hails as a renowned big tuna and striped bass charter captain based on Long Island, New York. The hard-charging captain has been the owner and primary operator of One More Cast Charters, Inc. for more than twenty years, where he charters trips far offshore on seaworthy Contenders and inshore on smaller skiffs. McMurray has been a leader with the New York arm of the Coastal Conservation Association and a long-time advocate for menhaden conservation. He’s also served in the U.S. Coast Guard as a coxswain and law enforcement officer, and for 16 years served as the director of grant programs at the Norcross Wildlife Foundation, which distributed over $20 million in grants that largely targeted the protection of marine fish and habitat. Driven to fish hard for his clients without respite during major runs, he’s out on the water almost every day of the season, rain or shine – including a running timeslot every other Sunday he sets aside to take his son and his friends fishing on what he refers to as “Bro-day.”
McMurray is an oft-published outdoor writer, who currently blogs for the Marine Fish Conservation Network and has had feature articles/photography published in On The Water, Saltwater Fly Fishing, and The New York Times. A decade ago he penned a weekly conservation blog for TRCP.
Here is his story.
No one ever really introduced me to the outdoors. I didn’t really come from an outdoorsy family. Just kinda got into it myself. There was a local pond we’d go to in northern Virginia. I started out with bluegills, graduated to catfish, then largemouths in the Potomac. I later enlisted in the Coast Guard, which brought me to New York, where I discovered striped bass and became a full-on addict. Eventually I got into tuna fishing. At that point fishing kinda became my life.
I guess my most memorable outdoor adventure was at that local pond, there was a “giant” catfish (I’m sure it was probably more than one) that would break people off, stole at least one “dead-sticked” rod. No one could ever land it. Eventually, one year (I think I was 9) I stuck it, did a lap around the pond while a small crowd gathered as I landed it. It was not “big” really, maybe 10 lbs., but back then? It was HUGE! I was an instant legend (in my own mind anyway).
If I could fish anywhere in the world, honestly, it would be Long Island, New York, man. Believe it or not, we’ve got one of THE best fisheries in the world. Incredibly abundant striped bass populations. The sight/flats fishing is GREAT in the spring and the fall blitz fishery is Nat Geo-type stuff. We’ve also got an extraordinary giant tuna fishery within sight of land. Mid-shore the recreational size bluefin fishery is awesome too. Fish in the 150, even 200 lb.-range can be caught on spin gear! Offshore? We’ve got an insane yellowfin tuna fishery. We get 100 lb. fish on poppers regularly.
Conservation enhances what I do because it creates abundance, and abundance equals opportunity. The main conservation challenge off of Long Island is that A LOT of our fisheries revolve around menhaden aggregations. We get the menhaden schools, we get predators. Every year though, the large-scale processors in Virginia sail purse-seine boats and fly spotter planes up here. They sit right off the 3-mile line and rake up hundreds of thousands of pounds of menhaden, effectively shutting down bluefin and striped bass runs. It REALLY sucks.
“If we deplete forage fish stocks, those predator fish ain’t coming around.“
I’m involved in conservation efforts out of enlightened self-interest. I need there to be an abundance of both predators and forage fish around to be successful at the catching part. My business emphasizes the experience fishing brings rather than just filling coolers. So a fish in the water is WAY more beneficial than a dead one on the dock. It’s not really how many I can kill that’s important, but how many we can catch.
It’s obvious to me why conservation should matter to our next generation of anglers. We kill too many predator fish now, there won’t be any left for my kids. If we deplete forage fish stocks, those predator fish ain’t coming around. For me, or for future generations.
After advancing through committees and passing the House of Representatives with enormous support, this legislation is an important step toward reducing wildlife-vehicle collisions in Montana. On top of establishing an account, this legislation will result in a new state license plate that could generate $160k annually. The account could also receive funds from other sources to increase the amount available annually.
Throughout the West, wildlife accommodation infrastructure—including fencing, overpasses, and underpasses—has supported wildlife movement across highways while making our roads safer for motorists. Montana’s high rate of wildlife-vehicle collisions poses a significant threat to public safety and the conservation of big game.
Sponsored by Representative Katie Zolnikov (R-Billings), this legislation will establish the Fish, Wildlife & Parks Wildlife Highway Crossings and Accommodations Account, which will house funding to be used on wildlife accommodation infrastructure in Montana.
“By establishing the Wildlife Highway Crossings and Accommodations Account, Montana is making a commitment to increasing public safety on Montana’s roadways while conserving wildlife,” said Ryan Chapin, Montana field manager at the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “We join the Treasure State’s motorists and hunters and anglers in thanking Representative Zolnikov for her leadership on this bill and the legislature for swiftly advancing this life-saving legislation.”
Learn more about TRCP’s commitment to wildlife migration conservation HERE.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
TRCP has partnered with Afuera Coffee Co. to further our commitment to conservation. $4 from each bag is donated to the TRCP, to help continue our efforts of safeguarding critical habitats, productive hunting grounds, and favorite fishing holes for future generations.
This caucus is great news, and exactly what the country needs, bipartisan backing for our public lands. Thank you TRCP.
So are they going to stand up against the sale of America’s public lands?
Is everything sacred to America for sale? Now, including our public lands? Absolutely not! No, we need to acquire more public lands, not sell off some.