In April of 2010, President Barack Obama announced the America's Great Outdoors Initiative to help reconnect Americans to nature. More than 100,000 people provided their input, which was synthesized in President Obama's recently released America's Great Outdoors Report.
Of particular interest to the administration was the relationship between children and nature, warranting a separate report of responses gathered during 21 youth listening sessions.
Young people showed a strong desire to spend more time outdoors, and talked about the challenges that made outdoor recreation difficult or inaccessible to them. Some saw parks as uninviting or irrelevant because they or their families lacked environmental knowledge or lacked the means to travel to parks. They worried about the safety of parks or how they could even reach one and noted that there isn't enough outdoor education or recreation in schools to make them feel comfortable in nature. Also of concern was the difficulty in finding government jobs in conservation and that applying to these positions is daunting.
Young people offered suggestions for improving their experience with nature:
The next step of the initiative is to work with a range of partners to implement the recommendations of the report. To read the America's Great Outdoors report, click here.>>