Landers: WWRP has proven its worth
In a perfect Olympia, state lawmakers would give the same consideration to funding Eastern Washington programs as they do for those on the West Side.
Native wildlife habitat protection would be evaluated on par with developing soccer fields.
Legislators would rally kudos from hunters and anglers as well as bird watchers and hikers.
While Utopia isn’t around the corner, a program that fosters these values is alive, proven and deserving of another round of significant funding by the 2013 Washington Legislature.
The Washington Wildlife and Recreation Program was founded in 1989 through a bipartisan effort. The program seeks to weed out political barriers to securing land for outdoor recreation and wildlife habitat.
WWRP has been the state’s primary source of funding for parks, trails and wildlife habitat. It is the only source of state funding for working farms.
Here’s how it works:
- The WWRP is funded by the Legislature. Gov. Jay Inslee has recommended $75 million for the next two years. The House suggests $70 million. The Senate, so far, has offered only $39 million – the lowest in the history of the program.
- The Washington Wildlife and Recreation Coalition is a nonprofit group that supports the program and manages the evaluations that rank grant applications from cities, counties, agencies and groups for projects. Working with matching funds from groups as diverse as the Friends of the Centennial Trail and Ducks Unlimited has allowed the coalition to leverage more than $1 billion for projects in every county across the state.
- The state Recreation and Conservation Office officially distributes the money based on the rankings and holds the applicants accountable for fulfilling their projects.