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Great American Outdoors Act Passes Congress

Great American Outdoors Act Passes Congress

Historic Bipartisan Funding for Public Lands and Trails Expected to Become Law

Media contact: Eleanor Blick
IMBA Senior Communications & Advocacy Manager
(720) 900-4622

(Boulder, Colo., July 22, 2020) — Today the House of Representatives has passed the Great American Outdoors Act with a vote of 310–107, following its passage in the Senate on June 17 with a vote of 73–25. The bill now heads to the president's desk where it is expected to become law. The legislation includes permanent full funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and addresses the deferred maintenance backlog across federal public lands with billions of dollars in new funding.

“The Great American Outdoors Act is a once-in-a-generation bill. It’s the result of decades of advocacy work for recreation and our outdoor places. Mountain bikers can look forward to more and better trails, both close to home and from coast to coast,” said David Wiens, IMBA Executive Director.

For decades the recreation community has worked to protect programs with funding levels in the millions. This bill will now fund trails, parks and public lands with $2.8 billion a year: $900 million annually in permanent full funding for LWCF, and $1.9 billion annually in new funding for the federal maintenance backlog. Mountain bikers pushed to see the Great American Outdoors Act introduced in the Senate in March, after their voices helped the outdoor community permanently reauthorize LWCF in 2019.

“Nearly 14,000 mountain bikers have contacted their representatives in support of LWCF and the Great American Outdoors Act, in partnership with thousands upon thousands more outdoor recreation advocates across the country,” said Wiens. “As we celebrate, we must remember this historic level of funding means the hard work for trail advocates is just beginning. Mountain bikers, let's stay engaged and active. Let’s get to work for more trails.”   

In the 55-year history of LWCF, the bipartisan program has only been funded at the maximum $900 million on two occasions. Funding has often been a small fraction of the maximum, and advocacy work is dedicated to preserving the program and funding. Now, instead of working to fund the program, advocates will be able to spend much more time putting the funds to use. LWCF has helped create trailheads, parks, mountain bike trails and other great outdoor recreation opportunities all across the country. Eight IMBA EPICS, from Arkansas to Montana to Wisconsin, have been made possible through LWCF funding.

The deferred maintenance backlog on public lands sits at tens of billions of dollars across the National Park Service, the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management, with the Forest Service having unfunded maintenance of more than $5 billion. IMBA and its partners worked hard to include the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management in the bill, as those agencies are vital for mountain biking. IMBA Local Partners are intimately familiar with this funding gap, and have long helped federal land managers evaluate existing mountain bike trails and address maintenance issues to ensure an enjoyable mountain biking experience. IMBA Local Partners contributed more than 54,000 hours of volunteer stewardship on public lands in 2019.  

“The Great American Outdoors Act will help meet the demand for accessible outdoor spaces, put people to work building and maintaining trails and parks across the country, and help create trail systems that provide lasting economic benefits. The pandemic has revitalized the importance of the outdoors. At the same time, it has highlighted how we don’t have enough trails close to home, and how the trails that exist aren’t always equally distributed,” said Wiens.


About IMBA:
The International Mountain Bicycling Association (IMBA) creates, enhances and protects great places to ride mountain bikes. It is focused on creating more trails close to home to grow the quantity and quality of mountain bike trail communities across the U.S., so everyone has access to close-to-home rides and iconic backcountry experiences. Since 1988, IMBA has been the worldwide leader in mountain bike advocacy and the only organization focused entirely on trails and access for all types of mountain bikers in all parts of the U.S. IMBA teaches and encourages low-impact riding, grassroots advocacy, sustainable trail design, innovative land management practices and cooperation among trail user groups. IMBA U.S. is a national network of local groups, individual riders and passionate volunteers working together for the benefit of the entire community.

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Eleanor (she/her) wants everyone to have a safe and welcoming space to ride bikes. While working in journalism and nonprofits in the Midwest, Eleanor led volunteer efforts with Big Marsh Bike Park, co-founded the Chicago Women’s CX Fund, and worked with city youth programs to get more kids on…

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