News Release

Interior Department Provides $325 Million to Increase Access to the Outdoors

People line up on a bright sunny day to cut a long green ribbon, symbolizing the opening of the park leading to a large brown metal bridge in the foreground
Community leaders celebrate at a ribbon cutting ceremony to open the new Chain of Rocks Park in St. Louis, Missouri.

Great Rivers Greenway

News Release Date: August 8, 2024

Contact: NewsMedia@nps.gov

PHOENIX — Acting Deputy Secretary Laura Daniel-Davis today announced the distribution of $325 million from the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) Stateside Assistance Program to all 50 states, U.S. territories, and the District of Columbia – the largest annual distribution from the program since 1979. Investments from the LWCF are helping support the Biden-Harris administration’s America the Beautiful initiative by funding locally led outdoor recreation and conservation projects that protect and enhance access to America’s great outdoors.

Acting Deputy Secretary Daniel-Davis celebrated Arizona’s $6.7 million award in the Avondale today alongside local leaders and partners. She visited Sundance Park in Buckeye and was briefed on a $3 million LCWF project, funded in 2021 and completed in 2023, for new construction of lighted multi-use fields, ramadas, a maintenance yard and other improvements. She then toured Donnie Hale Park, the recipient of $557,000 in LWCF funding in 2021, to learn about their renovations of baseball fields, basketball courts, the playground, ramadas, walkways, lighting, fencing and other amenities.

“The Biden-Harris administration is deeply committed to ensuring that all Americans, no matter where they live or how much money they earn, can enjoy the outdoors,” said Acting Deputy Secretary Daniel-Davis. “The Land and Water Conservation Fund is helping us deliver on that commitment through locally-led and community-driven projects that are creating greener neighborhoods, more recreational opportunities and improved access to nature.”

The LWCF was established by Congress in 1964 to fulfill a bipartisan commitment to safeguard natural areas, water resources and cultural heritage, and to provide recreation opportunities to all Americans. The fund helps strengthen communities, preserve history and protect the national endowment of lands and waters. Since its inception in 1965, the LWCF State and Local Assistance Program has funded more than 46,000 projects in every county in the country.

In 2020, Congress permanently funded the LWCF at $900 million per year with wide bipartisan support through the Great American Outdoors Act, which was signed four years ago this week.

At no cost to taxpayers, the LWCF, administered by the National Park Service (NPS), supports increased public access to and protection for federal public lands and waters — including national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, and recreation areas — and provides matching grants to Tribal, state and local governments to support the acquisition and development of land for public parks and other outdoor recreation sites.

“Communities in every corner of the nation have benefited from the Land and Water Conservation Fund’s incredible investments,” said National Park Service Director Chuck Sams. “With increased investment into locally led efforts, the Land and Water Conservation Fund continues to represent the best of America while putting communities and equity first.”

Allocations within the LWCF Stateside Assistance Program for each state and territory are determined through a formula set in the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act and is largely population-based. States and Territories further allocate these funds to local projects. This fiscal year, NPS provided guidance to states to work more closely with Tribes and underserved communities during the development of their Statewide Comprehensive Outdoor Recreation Plans.

Fiscal Year 2024 Total Apportionments by State/Territory

Alabama   

$4,836,940 

Alaska   

$2,707,692 

Arizona   

$6,721,366 

Arkansas   

$3,804,481 

California   

$27,358,194 

Colorado   

$5,805,360 

Connecticut   

$4,500,235 

Delaware   

$2,906,499 

Florida   

$15,748,651 

Georgia   

$8,319,854 

Hawaii   

$3,199,750 

Idaho   

$3,319,060 

Illinois   

$10,094,573 

Indiana   

$6,049,934 

Iowa   

$3,981,511 

Kansas   

$3,947,712 

Kentucky   

$4,593,101 

Louisiana   

$4,886,948 

Maine   

$2,908,994 

Maryland   

$6,039,654 

Massachusetts   

$6,697,487 

Michigan   

$7,942,818 

Minnesota   

$5,471,584 

Mississippi   

$3,680,948 

Missouri   

$5,665,226 

Montana   

$2,847,263 

Nebraska   

$3,412,264 

Nevada   

$4,285,734 

New Hampshire   

$3,014,050 

New Jersey   

$8,187,202 

New Mexico   

$3,510,885 

New York   

$14,615,239 

North Carolina   

$7,888,541 

North Dakota   

$2,720,637 

Ohio   

$9,023,861 

Oklahoma   

$4,402,761 

Oregon   

$4,793,191 

Pennsylvania   

$9,715,364 

Rhode Island   

$3,003,631 

South Carolina   

$5,073,885 

South Dakota   

$2,763,690 

Tennessee   

$5,994,729 

Texas   

$19,664,051 

Utah   

$4,340,175 

Vermont   

$2,590,576 

Virginia   

$7,203,951 

Washington   

$6,896,599 

West Virginia   

$3,134,221 

Wisconsin   

$5,472,290 

Wyoming   

$2,619,209 

District of Columbia   

$2,772,503 

Puerto Rico   

$4,373,962 

Virgin Islands   

$2,376,883 

Guam   

$2,415,903 

American Samoa   

$2,349,568 

Northern Marianas   

$2,348,610 

Total   

$325,000,000 


www.nps.gov

About the National Park Service. More than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America's 430 national parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local history and create close-to-home recreational opportunities. Learn more at www.nps.gov, and on FacebookInstagramTwitter, and YouTube



Last updated: August 8, 2024