Get Out the Vote!
We conducted a poll that suggests 24.6 million self-proclaimed outdoor recreationists still may not vote in the upcoming election.
We conducted a poll that suggests 24.6 million self-proclaimed outdoor recreationists still may not vote in the upcoming election.
On Tuesday, August 4, President Trump signed into law the Great American Outdoors Act. His signature ends a decades long battle to save one of the country’s most important conservation programs, the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). Curious what happens next with the LWCF? Join us for a Conservation Alliance webinar with LWCF advocate Lesley Kane-Syznal on…
The Northern Red Desert is the treasured gem of Wyoming’s wild west heritage—a place where sweeping vistas, iconic landforms, big game, cultural sites and diverse wildlife abound.
To push the GAOA over the finish line, we need to ensure that there are no obstacles. There are two things that your representative needs to hear from you in order for this bill to succeed…
The United States Department of Agriculture released its Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) on 10/17, recommending the Tongass NF be exempted from the National Roadless Rule and opened to old growth logging. Exactly what President Trump requested.
Fifty-nine Conservation Alliance members joined us and Protect our Winters (POW) in an open letter to the House of Representatives, urging all members to vote in favor of restoring protections for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
The US Forest Service is proposing to eliminate public participation and science-based analysis for nearly every decision affecting national forests, from timber sales to road construction to pipeline rights of way.
The Bureau of Land Management has released its final management plan for the illegally reduced Bears Ears National Monument. The plan covers only 15 percent of the original monument as designated by President Obama in 2016, and fails to protect most of the lands with cultural and recreational significance.
The CORE Act – the most widely supportive and comprehensive attempt to protect Colorado’s public lands is making its way through the legislative process.
Restoring protections for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is important to a majority of Americans. We want to take solace in the fact that there exists at least one significant place where we didn’t let greed destroy the wild. Where wildlife roams free and man is but a visitor. It is about much more to the Gwich’in.