Congresswoman Herrera Beutler and Senators Murray and Cantwell push to restore funds for Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Community Center


Lawmakers press for Refuge funding in Fiscal Year ’22 budget; highlight positive impact Refuge has on Southwest Washington communities and small businesses

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler and U.S. Senators Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell recently sent a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) pressing the agency to include funding in the fiscal year 2022 budget for the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Community and Nature Center.

Lawmakers from Washington state recently sent a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service pressing the agency to include funding in the fiscal year 2022 budget for the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Community and Nature Center. Photo by Mike Schultz
Lawmakers from Washington state recently sent a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service pressing the agency to include funding in the fiscal year 2022 budget for the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Community and Nature Center. Photo by Mike Schultz

The USFWS fiscal year 2020 budget included funding for the Refuge construction project – yet the following year, this funding was removed from its five-year plan, making the project’s future suddenly uncertain. In the letter to USFWS Principal Deputy Director Martha Williams, the lawmakers highlight the concern this move has created amongst the communities that benefit from the tourism of the Refuge, and request that USFWS restore the funding in the FY 2022 budget.

The USFWS fiscal year 2020 budget included funding for the Refuge construction project – yet the following year, this funding was removed from its five-year plan, making the project’s future suddenly uncertain. Photo by Mike Schultz
The USFWS fiscal year 2020 budget included funding for the Refuge construction project – yet the following year, this funding was removed from its five-year plan, making the project’s future suddenly uncertain. Photo by Mike Schultz

“The Refuge receives nearly 300,000 visitors each year, and engages 20,000 annual community members through programming on-site and in local neighborhoods. The Refuge also factors into economic activity in the region; the tens of thousands of visitors provide a real benefit to the restaurants and other retail businesses in the Ridgefield area. Many small communities like Ridgefield have endured a prolonged economic downturn due to the COVID-19 pandemic and corresponding business restrictions to protect public health. The addition of a community center at the Refuge would provide an attraction for visitors to the Refuge and help provide a needed boost to businesses in the region,” Herrera Beutler, Murray, and Cantwell wrote.

The addition of a community center at the Refuge would provide an attraction for visitors to the Refuge and help provide a needed boost to businesses in the region, according to Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler and Senators Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell. Photo by Mike Schultz
The addition of a community center at the Refuge would provide an attraction for visitors to the Refuge and help provide a needed boost to businesses in the region, according to Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler and Senators Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell. Photo by Mike Schultz

The full text of the letter follows, and a PDF is available here.

Dear Principal Deputy Director Williams:

We write to ask that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS) include the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge) Multi-Purpose Building and Public Recreational Facilities construction project in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2022-2026 five-year line-item construction plan contained in this years’ FY 2022 budget request.

As you are aware, the USFWS FY 2020 budget request included funding for the construction phase of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Multi-Purpose Building and Public Recreational Facilities in the line-item construction five-year plan. However, USFWS removed the project from its five-year plan in the FY 2021 budget request reversing the FY2020 decision on recommended projects. In the agency’s response to our March 2020 letter, your agency indicated that Region 9 would include the $5.2 million in the region’s FY 2022-2026 five-year plan. We ask that USFWS make the necessary change and reinclude this funding in the FY 2022 budget request.

The facilities on site at the Refuge need vital upgrades to replace the small trailer that currently serves as the administrative office and visitor facilities with buildings that properly welcome the visiting public and enhance the visitor experience. While we are appreciative of USFWS efforts to begin work on the Refuge’s Multi-Purpose Building for administrative offices and other facilities, it is important that improvements for the Community and Nature Center facility are not unnecessarily delayed for the thousands of visitors who frequently visit the Refuge.

The Refuge receives nearly 300,000 visitors each year and engages 20,000 annual community members through programming on-site and in local neighborhoods. The Refuge also factors into economic activity in the region; the tens of thousands of visitors provide a real benefit to the restaurants and other retail businesses in the Ridgefield area. Many small communities like Ridgefield have endured a prolonged economic downturn due to the COVID-19 pandemic and corresponding business restrictions to protect public health. The addition of a community center at the Refuge would provide an attraction for visitors to the Refuge and help provide a needed boost to businesses in the region.

The residents we serve cherish what this Refuge represents: unique access to the natural beauty and native culture that are part of the identity of this region. We strongly encourage you to consider the critical importance of this project to the local community and ask you to provide funding for the Community and Nature Center facility in FY 2022-2026 five-year plan in the FY 2022 budget request.