The National Wildlife Refuge Association was recently featured in The Birding Wire, a weekly newsletter that provides key information about photography, feeding, optics, news, and birding events as well as inspiring articles from the field.
Plans Finalized To Open The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge To Oil And Gas Development
The Trump Administration has finalized its plans to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil and gas development. This sacred place, protected for time immemorial, could now be auctioned off to the highest bidder. We expect they will attempt to begin lease sales prior to the November election.
Kenai: A wildlife refuge in name only?
Originally published in The Hill Opinion on August 4th, 2020
Alaska’s Kenai National Wildlife Refuge has weathered many storms in the last 80 years. Its 2 million acres of forests and wetlands southeast of Anchorage are regularly wracked by natural cataclysms such as fires that can dwarf Lower 48 events. Our organizations have fought for years to protect this amazing refuge and its wildlife populations, but now a human-made disaster is in the works.
A Great Conservation Win: The Great American Outdoors Act Becomes Law
This morning, the President signed the Great American Outdoors Act into law, ushering in a major funding boost for the National Wildlife Refuge System and fully funding the Land and Water Conservation Fund. The National Wildlife Refuge Association looks forward to working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to fully implement these programs and improving wildlife refuge habitat for wildlife and visitors alike.
Battling Barbaric Practices At Kenai National Wildlife Refuge
Alaska's Kenai National Wildlife Refuge has weathered a lot of storms since it was created in 1941 as the Kenai National Moose Range. Its two million acres of forests and wetlands Anchorage is regularly wracked by cataclysms that dwarf lower 48 events. When the 2019 Swan Lake Fire burned 168,00 acres, an area larger than El Paso, it triggered muscle memories in firefighters who quelled the 200,000-acre Funny River Fire five years earlier. Wildfires threaten humans but their regenerative benefits for wildlife are indisputable. The same can't be said of political storms.
Reflecting On A Momentous Week For Our National Wildlife Refuges
This week was a momentous week for wildlife conservation and wildlife refuges on Capitol Hill! From the protection of the Desert National Wildlife Refuge to funding for Refuge System Operations and Maintenance to the permanent funding of the Land and Water Conservation Fund, we thank Congress for their hard work to support our nation’s public lands.
Leatherback Sea Turtle Habitat Restoration In Puerto Rico
The National Wildlife Refuge Association (NWRA), the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources (PRDNER), and various community-based groups are working together to reduce major threats affecting leatherback nesting beaches around Puerto Rico with funding provided by the National Fish and Widlife Foundation (NFWF).
Capitol HIll Update: House To Take Up 3 Bills Related To National Wildlife Refuges This Week
Announcing The Winners of the 2020 O’Brien Prize For Refuge Friends
Elaine Meier named to the Board of Directors of the National Wildlife Refuge Association
Elaine Meier, owner of Elaine Meier Associates, LLC, in Florida, was named to the Board of Directors of the National Wildlife Refuge Association (NWRA) based in Washington DC. The NWRA is the leading non-government, non-profit voice advocating for wildlife conservation on the 568 refuges nationwide that comprise the National Wildlife Refuge System.