Cornyn, Luján introduce bill to expand, preserve Big Bend National Park

Santa Elena Canyon as seen from Old Maverick Road Wednesday, April 21, 2021, at Big Bend National Park. Old Maverick Road is a 14-mile dirt road that passes along the Terlingua Creek badlands on the west side of the park between Maverick Junction and Santa Elena Canyon according to the National Parks Service. (Jacob Ford | Odessa American)

WASHINGTON U.S. Senators John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Ben Ray Luján, D-NM, Wednesday introduced their Big Bend National Park Boundary Adjustment Act, which would authorize the U.S. National Park Service (NPS) to acquire more than 6,000 acres of donated or voluntarily sold land along the western boundary of the park.

“Texas is home to beautiful terrain and vibrant wildlife, and Big Bend National Park is no exception,” Cornyn said in a news release. “This legislation expands and preserves the park’s heritage, natural resources, and scenery while also safeguarding private property rights, and I urge my Senate colleagues to support it.”

“Big Bend National Park is one of the many treasures in the Southwest,” Luján said in the release. “I’m proud to join my colleagues to introduce bipartisan legislation to expand Big Bend National Park. This expansion will allow the National Parks Service to conserve the ecosystem along the Terlingua watershed for years to come.”

U.S. Representative Tony Gonzales, TX-23, introduced this legislation in the House of Representatives.

The Big Bend National Park Boundary Adjustment Act would authorize the limited expansion of Big Bend National Park by:

Authorizing NPS to acquire approximately 6,100 acres of land adjacent to Terlingua Creek along the western boundary of the park; clarifying that NPS may only acquire land within the expansion site through donation, purchase from willing property owners, or exchange and explicitly prohibiting the use of eminent domain or condemnation, thereby protecting private property rights.