Obama Adds $2.4 Million for Santa Monica Mountains Protection
February 21, 2012
-Provided by Congressman Brad Sherman’s Office
Congressman Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks) announced that the Obama Administration included $2.4 million in its Fiscal Year 2013 Budget to acquire and protect up to 238 acres of undeveloped land in Zuma and Trancas Canyons in the Santa Monica Mountains.
The project was one of six nationwide land acquisition priorities in the budget and the only project in California.
“After years of fighting Congressional cuts to the Land and Water Conservation Fund, I am pleased that the President’s budget once again highlights the importance of acquiring and protecting land in the Santa Monica Mountains,” said Congressman Sherman. “We cannot afford to lose more land to development and the administration’s investment in the Santa Monica Mountains, if approved by Congress and signed into law, will help protect critical habitat and expand recreational opportunities for generations of park visitors.”
“I am pleased to have led the effort in Washington to persuade the National Park Service, and Department of the Interior to fund this critical land acquisition. In fact, this is the only National Park Service land in California requested in the President’s budget.”
In December 2011, Congressman Sherman wrote to the Secretary of the Interior and the National Park Service Director to urge the administration to include three land acquisitions in the Santa Monica Mountains in the Fiscal Year 2013 Budget.
Sherman also hosted Interior Secretary Ken Salazar during a visit and tour of the Santa Monica Mountains on July 9, 2010 as part of President Obama’s America’s Great Outdoors Initiative, to promote and support efforts to conserve outdoor open spaces and to reconnect Americans to the outdoors.
The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area is the nation’s largest urban national park providing a variety of outdoor activities for over 33 million annual visitors.
Congressman Sherman also secured nearly $20 million in federal funding to acquire and preserve open space in the Santa Monica Mountain, including King Gillette Ranch in Calabasas and Zuma and Trancas Canyons, as well as complete the 65-mile Backbone Trail.








