The nation’s public lands are for everyone, and we at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are celebrating the two-year anniversary of the Great American Outdoors Act, which is helping make greater access possible.
The National Wildlife Refuge System is a jewel, and we’re committed to making sure everyone can witness the staggering beauty and conservation value of national wildlife refuges.
With its nearly $100 million per year to reduce the maintenance backlog at refuges, the Great American Outdoors Act ensures more people have better access to nature. This includes projects that:
- Rehabilitate auto tour routes, as we are doing at Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge in Wyoming. The crew at Dale Bumpers White River National Wildlife Refuge in Arkansas has received almost 4,100 tons of gravel to complete work on to rehabilitate its campground and roads.
- Repair offices and visitor centers. Such work is nearly complete at Cherry Valley National Wildlife Refuge in Pennsylvania. Attwater Prairie Chicken National Wildlife Refuge in Texas is repairing or replacing multiple facilities, and Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge in Illinois is working on a replacement visitor center.
- Update water infrastructure, as at San Luis National Wildlife Refuge in California, a wintering site for hundreds of thousands of waterfowl. Funding is also being used to replace hunting blinds.
- Rebuild and install kiosks at Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, which included moving three trailer loads of materials and equipment 40+ miles one way.
More projects are underway throughout the country, often small-scale infrastructure repair projects at refuges, many of which are in rural and underserved locations.
Thanks to the Great American Outdoors Act together with the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law we are making the public lands and waters we manage a better fit for the needs of the 21st century. Increasing access to public lands for all Americans, a key goal of the Biden-Harris administration (ours, too).
Original source can be found here.