The National Parks Second Century Action Coalition is a national coalition dedicated to promoting the protection, restoration, and operation of the National Park System to benefit the health and well-being of current and future generations.
Second Century Action Coalition Partners
National Parks Second Century Action Coalition supportive organizations to date.
See more ›The coalition will take actions that help the National Park Service achieve conservation goals, foster visitor enjoyment, engage youth, promote tourism, preserve cultural heritage, support educational and recreation opportunities, and foster diversity through federal, fee, and philanthropic funding and other measures.
Major Initiatives and Resources
Deferred Maintenance Backlog
The coalition is actively working to secure dedicated funding to address the 11+ billion deferred maintenance backlog in our national parks. Progress: Congress continues to introduce bills that, if enacted, would significantly address the deferred maintenance backlog in our national parks. The coalition is actively supporting and advocating for passage of the National Park Service Legacy Act or the Restore Our National Parks and Public Lands Act.
Centennial Challenge
In 2016, the National Park System celebrated its 100th anniversary. The coalition actively worked with the Administration and Congress to establish a long-term, public-private matching program to fund centennial initiatives and address maintenance needs and visitor programs in the national parks. The coalition also actively advocated for the establishment of a National Park Service endowment.
Progress: In December 2016, Congress passed the National Park Service Centennial Act to provide dependable, mandatory funding for the Centennial Challenge program and establish a National Park Service endowment.
Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act
The Federal Land Recreation Enhancement Act (FLREA) authorizes several agencies, including the National Park Service, to collect and expend recreation fees on lands they manage. These fees fund projects that directly benefit the visitor experience by repairing and improving facilities at national parks, offering education materials and services, and providing law enforcement. However, the authority for FLREA is scheduled to sunset in September 2018, which will result in agencies no longer having explicit recreation fee authority. The parks would lose approximately $200 million a year. The coalition is actively working with Congress to reauthorize this law before it sunsets.
Progress: Congress continues to reauthorize the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act every year. The coalition will continue to work with Congress on long-term reauthorization of this law.
Transportation Funding
The National Park System’s transportation systems (roads, bridges, tunnels, ferries, transit, etc.) have been in a steady state of decline over the past couple of decades due to chronic underfunding. The current backlog of park transportation projects totals more than $6 billion. Transportation facilities located or operating in national parks are federal facilities. The recent passage of the FAST Act provides a necessary funding increase for park roads, but many more needs remain. The coalition continues to advocate for additional resources to address park road needs and encourage Congress to fund park roads through the newly established Nationally Significant Federal Lands and Tribal Program.
Progress: At the end of 2015, Congress passed the FAST Act that authorizes federal highway programs for five years. In large part because of the advocacy efforts of this coalition, the FAST Act ramps up the annual funding guarantee to the National Park Service from $240 million to $300 million by 2021 through the Federal Lands Transportation Program. Overall, the National Park Service will receive an additional $220 million over the span of the bill.
Additionally, the FAST Act authorizes up to $100 million annually for the Nationally Significant Federal Lands and Tribal Projects Program designed to address exceptionally large repair projects such as replacement of the Grand Loop Road in Yellowstone National Park. The coalition continues to advocate for that program to be fully funded.
Park Funding through Appropriations
Budget cuts and declining funds prior to fiscal year 2016 have led to crumbling facilities and insufficient rangers and other staff to serve visitors and maintain world-class resources. Restored funding by Congress in recent years has help parks recover from neglect, better serve American and international visitors and local economies, and leave a lasting legacy for the next hundred years and beyond. The coalition continues to advocate for an increased federal investment in our national parks, particularly to the operations and construction accounts.
Progress: In recent years, Congress has provided necessary increases to the National Park Service budget. The coalition commends Congress for providing these increases and will continue to work with Congress to build on these restored funds to ensure our parks receive the federal investment they deserve.
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