Complete the actions below and sleep well knowing you are supporting public lands.
Sign the Aspen Pledge
ACRA gives $18.80 per pledge to local stewardship.
Contact Your Reps!
Email or calls take less than 5 minutes and make a big impact.
Public lands are one of the most uniquely American ideas—born from the belief that nature should be preserved for everyone, not owned by a few. The U.S. was the first country to set aside land for the people.Today, agencies like the U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service manage these lands for many purposes: recreation, conservation, wildlife, clean water, energy, grazing and more. They belong to all of us—and we each have a say in how they’re used and protected.Public lands are vital to our health, economy, and way of life. They’re a shared trust, not a commodity. This is your land—and it’s up to all of us to care for it.
Public lands are primarily funded through the federal budget, with annual appropriations from Congress to agencies like the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, and Bureau of Land Management. These funds support everything from trail maintenance and wildlife protection to staffing and visitor services. When budgets are cut, the impacts are felt on the ground through fewer rangers, closed facilities, and reduced public access.Even though public lands generate billions, the agencies that manage them don’t automatically keep that money. Most of it goes to the U.S. Treasury, and agencies must rely on Congressional appropriations—which often fall short—for staffing, upkeep, and restoration. As a result, profitable lands, like the White River National Forest, can still suffer from chronic underfunding.
Local groups, volunteers, and nonprofits are doing heroic work, but they can’t replace trained professionals who manage trails, fight fires, monitor ecosystems, and maintain infrastructure.Public lands are not self-sustaining without investment. They need consistent, adequate federal funding to remain open, safe, and healthy.