FEINGOLD
CONTINUES EFFORT TO PRESERVE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM
Upholds Wisconsin Tradition to Protect Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation
Lands
April 2, 2008
Washington, D.C. –
U.S. Senator Russ Feingold is continuing his strong support for the
National Wildlife Refuge System by calling for an increase in funding
to help meet the tremendous budget shortfalls the refuges face. Feingold
and Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) were joined by 33 other senators in
writing to the Senate Appropriators requesting a modest increase in
funding for necessary operational and maintenance costs of the Refuge
System. Each year, rising costs and inadequate funding for the Refuge
System create huge maintenance backlogs and lead to staffing cuts. The
National Wildlife Refuge System’s financial challenges undermine
its ability to provide habitats for wildlife and wildlife-dependent
recreation for nearly 40 million Americans who visit the Refuge System
each year. In order to get the Refuge System’s funding back on
track, the Senators are requesting $514 million for fiscal year 2009,
which would be an $80 million increase over fiscal year 2008. Last year,
Feingold and Snowe led a successful effort in the Senate to increase
funding for the Refuge System by nearly $40 million.
“The Refuge System
faces immense challenges in maintaining our refuges, which over a thousand
wildlife species call home and millions of Americans visit every year,”
Feingold said. “I will continue to work in the great Wisconsin
tradition of protecting the environment by ensuring adequate funding
is available to restore and protect our treasured refuges.”
The travel and recreation
of the nearly 40 million Americans who visit the Refuge System each
year generates $1.7 billion in sales for regional economies and creates
more than 27,000 jobs and $543 million in employment income. While the
Refuge System is the premier wildlife system in the world, accumulating
debts are putting this national treasure at risk. The Refuge System
faces an operations and maintenance backlog in excess of $3 billion
and a devastating 20 percent cut in staff. In response to budget shortfalls,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced a massive restructuring
plan for the Refuge System that, if fully implemented, would result
in a loss of law enforcement, staff, invasive species control, species
restoration, environmental education, and public use programs for the
refuges.
In August 2007, Feingold
was presented with an award for his leadership in supporting the National
Wildlife Refuge System by the Cooperative Alliance for Refuge Enhancement
(CARE), a coalition of more than 20 conservation, sporting and scientific
organizations that range from the Defenders of Wildlife to the National
Rifle Association.
A copy of the letter can
be viewed here.
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