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San Francisco's Presidio was conceived as America's privatized National Park and with each passing year as the Presidio strives to become financially self-supporting as required by its authoring legislation, it becomes increasingly commercial and less like a genuine National Park. It become more like the National Park System President Ronald Reagan envisioned when, in 1982, he set about to cut federal National Park funding to zero and to replace public funding with commercialization and user fees.
The Walt Disney Family Museum has recently broken ground within the Presidio National Park. It will pay homage to like and creations of Mr. Walt Disney.
The Gap Inc. would like to follow suit. Don Fisher, the multi-billionaire founder of San Francisco-based Gap, Inc., wants to build a 100,000 square foot museum for his personal art collection in the Presidio National Park.
The comment period for this proposal ends on Monday, October 15th. Details appear below.
Scott
--- begin quoted ---
08.Oct.2007
A Gap billionaire's museum in Pelosi's privatized National Park?
author: Naturelover
Don Fisher, the multi-billionaire founder of San Francisco-based Gap,
Inc., wants to build a 100,000 square foot museum for his personal art
collection in the Presidio National Park. The deadline for public
comments on the scope of the Environmental Impact Statement for
Fisher's proposed big box museum is Monday, October 15, 2007.
Don Fisher has a monumental problem and he wants a monumental
solution--one with possible "significant effects on the human
environment" in a National Park. The deadline for public comments on
the scope of the Environmental Impact Statement for Fisher's plan is
Monday, October 15 (see "How to Submit Comments" below).
Fisher, the multi-billionaire founder of San Francisco-based Gap, Inc.,
is reeling under the weight of his massive collection of international
investment-grade modern art. Unable to strike an agreeement with any of
San Francisco's existing art museums, Fisher has determined that he
must erect and control his own museum. Fisher has determined that it
must encompass 100,000 square feet; roughly the size of a Walmart.
And Fisher has determined that his big box should be erected right in
the heart of San Francisco's Presidio National Park. That's the
forested former Army base at the south end of the Golden Gate Bridge.
Thanks to Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi (with help from Senator Dianne
Feinstein), it's now the nation's first privatized National Park, with
most of it managed--as an "innovative public/private partnership"--by a
federal government-owned corporation called the Presidio Trust. [1]
San Francisco's progressive weekly, the SF Bay Guardian, urged its
readers to "Oppose Don Fisher's Museum" in an August 15 editorial. [2]
Meanwhile, San Francisco's corporatist media are greasing the skids for
Fisher, never asking "Why would Fisher's--or anyone's--personal art
museum belong in a National Park?" or "What relevance does Fisher's art
have to the Presidio's history or environment?" or even "How much would
Fisher charge the public for admission?" And the Presidio Trust appears
to be playing right along.
Fisher's plan was celebrated by the Hearst-owned San Francisco
Chronicle in a front-page story on August 9, 2007, which proclaimed
that "Donald Fisher's proposed contemporary art museum in the Presidio
would add a bright star to San Francisco's growing and eclectic
collection of museums..." [3] A followup article in the Chronicle on
August 13 titled "Why Gap founder Fisher decided to build his own art
museum" quotes Dede Wilsey, who oversees San Francisco's publicly-owned
museums, as saying "We were at a party in mid-June, and that's when he
[Fisher] told me that he had decided to go with the Presidio." [4]
Fisher may have decided in mid-June, but it wasn't until August 8,
2007, that the Presidio Trust issued a "Notice of Intent to Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement" for a "Public Museum at the Presidio."
The notice, published in the Federal Register on August 14, 2007, makes
no mention of Fisher, but it explains that the proposed 100,000 square
foot museum would be built on a site that "was not identified as a
'preferred location for a large museum' in the Presidio Trust
Management Plan." It says the proposed museum erection "may have
significant effects on the human environment." It also says "The Trust
will promote competition for the project site by widely publicizing a
request for proposals..." [5]
There's reason to doubt the Presidio Trust will receive any serious
competitive proposals, and there's reason to believe Fisher will have
his way unless the public speaks up.
REPUBLICAN DON FISHER: "PERSONAL FRIEND" OF NANCY PELOSI AND DIANNE FEINSTEIN
Don Fisher is among the nation's top donors to Republican candidates
and causes, but he's more than that, more than a controversial
businessman, and more than a privatization ideologue (Google this:
Fisher Edison schools). He's a former member of the Presidio Trust's
Board of Directors--appointed by "Democratic" President Bill Clinton.
According to the SF Weekly, Fisher "regards Nancy Pelosi and Dianne
Feinstein as personal friends." [6] Fisher, his wife Doris, and/or
other Fisher family members have been generous donors to the campaigns
and/or PACs of Nancy Pelosi, Dianne Feinstein, and other
neo-liberal/corporatist Democrats. [7]
And the Presidio Trust's Executive Director, Craig Middleton, is a former senior aide to Nancy Pelosi.
If Fisher has his way, he won't be the first billionaire to control a
piece of the Presidio "National Park" action. His museum would be just
down the street from the Disney Family Museum (under construction now
in an existing historic building); only a few blocks from George Lucas'
sprawling, uber-private Lucasfilm corporate headquarters; close to
several of the Presidio's growing gaggle of privately-owned high-end
restaurants; and within yards of a new privately-owned luxury hotel
(now in the planning stages).
All of this is on public land, and none of this pays even a penny in
property tax to California or to San Francisco. Yet well-intentioned,
goretex-clad San Franciscans still brave the fog volunteering weekend
time to clear brush or plant native plants on land they think of as
their "National Park."
Private interests say "Jump!" The public is expected to say "How
high--and please, may I be your volunteer gardener?" It's a victory for
the haves and the have-mores. It's a neo-liberal dream come true. It's
a public/private partnership, Pelosi-style, and it could be the future
of all our public parks unless we speak up now.
HOW TO SUBMIT COMMENTS
Appropriate comments would include urging the Presidio Trust to reject
the Fisher proposal outright as unnecessary and wholly inappropriate,
not to mention out-of-synch with the Presidio's master plan. By
rejecting the proposal, the Presidio Trust would spare themselves the
expense of preparing an EIS and of marketing Fisher's plan to the
public. Other issues to raise in your comments--including the potential
for serious auto traffic congestion within the Presidio--are touched on
in the SF Bay Guardian's editorial. [2]
According to the Presidio Trust's Notice [5], "Written comments or
suggestions to assist in identifying significant environmental issues
and in determining the appropriate scope of the EIS should be submitted
on or before October 15, 2007."
Fax comments to: Presidio Museum at 415-561-5308
Mail comments to: Presidio Museum, Attn: NEPA Compliance Manager, The
Presidio Trust, 34 Graham Street, P.O. Box 29052, San Francisco, CA
94129-0052
E-mail comments to:
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Keep in mind that the Presidio Trust's Notice warns: "Please be aware
that all written comments and information submitted will be made
available to the public, including, without limitation, any postal
address, e-mail address, phone number or other information contained in
each submission.
You might also send a copy of your comments to your Congresspersons, and to Nancy Pelosi at:
Fax: 202-225-8259 or 415-861-1670
E-mail:
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REFERENCES
In addition to the following, check out the SF Bay Guardian's many
articles regarding the Presidio (Google this: pelosi presidio
site:sfbg.com)
[1] Pelosi's "Presidio Trust Act" of 1996 gave control of most of the
Presidio not to the National Park Service but to a new, federal
government-owned corporation, the Presidio Trust, to preserve and
manage the Presidio "through an innovative public/private partnership."
The Presidio Trust Act (Title I of H.R. 4236, November 12, 1996) is online at link to www.presidio.gov
[2] "Oppose Don Fisher's Museum" http://www.sfbg.com/entry.php?entry_id=4278&catid=4
[3] "Fisher art would join explosion of S.F. museums" (title of article
from the Chronicle's print edition)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article/article?f=/c/a/2007/08/09/MNLQRF5LC.DTL
[4] "Why Gap founder Fisher decided to build his own art museum"
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/08/13/MNP7RFR09.DTL
[5] Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement and
Conduct Scoping; Public Museum at the Presidio"
http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-IMPACT/2007/August/Day-14/i15892.htm
[6] "The Influencer: Meet Donald Fisher, the private billionaire with
unprecedented sway over ordinary San Franciscans' lives" by Matt Smith,
SF Weekly, June 21-27, 2006, Volume 25, Number 21 (This article
appeared as the cover story in print, but it appears to be absent from
the Weekly's website, www.sfweekly.com.)
[7] www.opensecrets.org
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