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HOME arrow BLOG arrow “Should we close our national parks?”
“Should we close our national parks?”
Written by Guest: Michael Frome   
Friday, 01 August 2008

 “Should we close our national parks?” 


The late Bernard DeVoto asked this question in a powerful essay published in 1953. I don’t believe that he really meant to lock the gate and throw the keys away, but rather to awaken the public to the critical, serious issues the parks faced at that time in history.
 
I feel the same question should be asked today. If anything, the issues are more critical now than in DeVoto’s day, half a century ago.
 
Consider that in 1992 the University of Arizona Press published my book, Regreening the National Parks, and now I am working on a new updated edition. Virtually all my research and continued study show that our treasured national parks have suffered from political interference and profiteering power, and are being reduced to commercialized popcorn playgrounds.
 
I hope that I can help to reverse this course and restore the esteem our national parks deserve. Toward that end I invite and welcome your input on how you see the parks, with their pluses and minuses, and your suggestions on how to best protect and manage them in the public interest. But first, this evidence:
 
Olympic National Park, Washington. After seven years in the making, the park has released its final General Management Plan (GMP), covering 900 pages in two volumes, and meant to guide park management for the next 20 years. A critique in the newsletter of Olympic Park Associates, the citizen group of the region, notes: “It takes some positive steps toward ecosystem protection. But despite the urging of conservationists, it tends to be overly focused on motorized use and presents a timid approach to preserving the wilderness integrity of this world-class park.”
 
Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has before it a brief filed by a citizen coalition challenging the park’s Colorado River Management Plan as heavily weighted in favor of motorized tour boats and helicopter exchanges. The lawsuit contends those uses in the river corridor fail to preserve wilderness values, and fail to protect the Grand Canyon’s natural soundscape in violation of the NPS 1916 Organic Act. It challenges commercialization of the river in favor of concession craft while severely limiting self-guided river runners.
 
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina-Tennessee. Conservation organizations early in July conducted a press conference in Knoxville to protest the Bush administration proposed change in EPA regulations that would result in worsening air pollution. The rule change would alter power-plant emission-reporting requirements in a way that would lead to serious underestimates of pollution increases in the park. It would make it easier for new coal-fired power plants to gain approval, and six such plants have been proposed within a 200-mile radius of the park. Great Smokies already is the most heavily polluted national park.
 
Yellowstone National Park, Montana-Idaho-Wyoming. “From mid-December to mid-March Yellowstone bans automobiles from most of the park, but it welcomes snowmobiles on 189 miles of snow-covered roads. One of these machines can emit as many hydrocarbons as 250 cars – and there are about 80,000 snowmobiles in the park each season. Park employees complain of headaches, nausea and throat irritation from the pollution, and fresh air has to be pumped into park entrance booths. The Bluewater Network, leader of the national campaign to keep snowmobiles out of the park, calculates that in addition to fouling the air, two-stroke snowmobile engines dump 180,000 to 210,000 gallons of unburned gasoline and motor oil on Yellowstone’s ecosystem each season.” – Ted Williams, Forest Magazine, Summer 2008. 

++
 
Yellowstone is our so-called "flagship" national park, but hardly protected as such. In California, tight little Yosemite Valley, with 30,000 visitors daily, is more like a city than a park. These places are called "sacrifice areas," as though to legitimize the sacrifice. John Muir said, "Come to the mountains, for here there is rest." He didn't say it would be in a lodging facility with bath, bar, restaurant, entertainment, bike rentals, ice-skating and room service. If that valley were relieved of one-half of its buildings, automobiles and people, it would become twice the national park it is today.
 
In my agenda there should be fewer roads in the parks, and no off-road vehicles, no airplane or helicopter sightseeing disruptions of pioneering adventure. National parks should not be reduced to popcorn playgrounds or theme parks, but preserved as sanctuaries, sustaining the soul of America; they are priceless time capsules for tomorrow that we are privileged to know and enjoy today.
 
++
 
But there is more:
 
Here’s my answer to the question of whether the Blue Ridge Parkway [Virginia-North Carolina] should offer visitors more modern amenities and a cushier experience: No. Absolutely not…
 
According to recent news reports, the parkway is working on a new general management plan, and making things more “comfortable” for those who venture there is among changes under discussion. They’re talking about adding electrical hookups and hot showers for the campgrounds, and TVs and telephones for the lodges. They’re even talking about paving trails in the woods so that people can ride bikes without worrying about such natural obstacles as rocks and roots.
 
What terrible ideas…making changes that would put new barriers between visitors and nature would be a big mistake. We have far too many already.” -- Linda Brinson, editorial page editor, Winston-Salem Journal, July 6, 2008.
 
++

…The reason for the drop in park visitation is nothing other than simple economics.  Americans are being priced out of the parks by costs.  A weekend visit to Yosemite National Park for a family of four is crowding the  $1000 mark.  Hotel rooms in the park average $200 a night. Add entry fees, gas, meals and a guided tour and you are talking big bucks. Even a bare ground campsite runs $19 a night.

 You fail to understand that national parks are not commodities to be bought, sold, or interpreted solely in economic terms.  Places such as Yosemite and Yellowstone were not established as moneymakers. They represent the best of the American earth -- and under law are to be held inalienable for all times…
Furthermore, it was a federal judge who ruled that the park service had to follow the law concerning the carrying capacity.  Blame the judiciary or the lawmakers. It was the early conservationists who envisioned the concept of wildland preservation. -- Eugene Rose, Letter to the Editor, Fresno Bee. (Rose is a retired reporter who for years covered national parks and forests in the California Sierra Nevada and was known as the “conscience of Yosemite.” In 1987 he revealed that the Yosemite Park and Curry Company grossed $87 million for its exclusive contract but paid a concession fee of $585,000.)
 
++
 
There aren't many places left where you can gaze skyward at night and see stars. Thankfully, many Western national parks are still among those places. You'd also expect to see panoramic daytime vistas in places such as Utah's Capitol Reef and Canyonlands national parks, but on some days, you may be disappointed. The reason: air pollution.  The two Utah parks are among 10 nationwide identified by the National Parks Conservation Association as being near to losing the clear air we've all come to expect at our public recreational lands. Others aren't far behind.

 And if a federal proposal to relax air-quality standards is implemented, those scenic views could be further threatened. That must not happen, for several reasons, both aesthetic and economic.   National park visitors should be able, literally, to get away from it all -- the noise, crowds, smog, traffic and nasty fumes from power plants and vehicle exhaust that they probably encounter at home -- when they travel to the parks… Editorial in the Salt Lake Tribune, July 7, 2008.      
 
++
 
Any clear vision for the national parks of the 21st Century must uphold their reputation in the worldwide realm of parks and protected areas. That is both challenge and responsibility, as President John F. Kennedy recognized. In welcoming delegates to the First World Conference on National Parks held in Yellowstone National Park in 1962, Kennedy declared:
 
Growth and development of national park and reserve programs throughout the world are important to the welfare of the people of every nation. We must have places where we can find release from the tensions of an increasingly industrialized civilization, where we can have personal contact with the natural environment which sustains us. To this end, permanent preservation of the outstanding scenic and scientific assets of every country, and of the magnificent and varied wildlife which can be so easily endangered by human activity, is imperative. National parks and reserves are an integral aspect of intelligent use of our national resources. It is the course of wisdom to set aside an ample portion of our national resources as national parks and reserves, thus ensuring that future generations may know the majesty of the earth as we know it today…
 
An earlier president, Theodore Roosevelt, in 1903, after camping with John Muir among the ancient sequoias of Yosemite, listening to the hermit thrush and the waterfalls tumbling down sheer cliffs, wrote that "It was like lying in a great solemn cathedral far vaster and more beautiful than any built by the hand of man." Then TR went to Stanford University, where he declared: “There is nothing more practical than the preservation of beauty, than the preservation of anything that appeals to the higher emotions of mankind.”
 
++
 
In contrast, the George W. Bush administration is probably the most openly pro-big business, anti-environmental administration in a century, perhaps the worst ever, with industry people appointed to key positions throughout the government and serving the corporate cause. Bush rejected the global warming treaty; cut or eliminated renewable energy and energy efficiency programs, and denied funds for research into wind, solar and geothermal energy. Of the many environmental changes brought about by the Bush White House, none illustrates this point better than the so-called “Clear Skies” program. It isn’t about clearing the skies at all, but about allowing power companies and large factories to change established and effective rules to their own benefit. Instead of clearing the skies, the Bush administration’s new rules would result in serious emissions increases.
 
++
 
Testimony at an oversight hearing of the House Natural Resources Committee in mid-July 2008 revealed that four highly placed officials of the Bush administration had inappropriately influenced endangered species decision-making. "A disconcerting picture has emerged of officials working at the highest levels of the Interior Department continuing to tamper with the endangered species program, trumping science with politics. The practice is pervasive…" said Rep. Nick J. Rahall (D-WV), the committee chairman. The hearing was held as a forum for the release of new findings in an ongoing Government Accountability Office (GAO) investigation into the well-publicized review of the politically tainted endangered species decisions made by former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks Julie MacDonald. MacDonald had resigned in May 2007, following the release of a scathing Inspector General report.

GAO named Craig Manson, former Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks; Brian Waidmann, current Chief of Staff to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne; Todd Willens, a former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks; and Randal Bowman, current Special Assistant to Assistant Secretary Lyle Laverty. "Today we hear that instead of cleaning up its mess, the agency has merely swept it under a rug,” Rahall said.
 
++
 
The Interior Department under Secretary Gale Norton, a Bush appointee, was scarred with scandal and corruption. The National Park Service, under Director Fran Maniella, was heavily scarred on various fronts as well  -- the worst through efforts to undo and recast the basic mission of the agency. This was to be done through “a secret Interior Department attempt to rewrite and override ninety years of laws, rules and court rulings – changes that would ‘hijack’ America’s national parks, leaving them wide open for what are now barred uses…”
 
I am quoting here from a 2005 statement by Bill Wade, a retired former park superintendent, about whom more below.

Suffice here to record that both Norton and Maniella are gone, replaced by Dirk Kempthorne and Mary Bomar, who speak more softly while pursuing the same essential agenda. They want to “reinvent” the parks, replacing preservation with promotion and “partnerships” with money interests.
 
++
 
Stephen T. Mather, the first national parks director, built a field force as a model of honorable, ethical and professional federal employment. He inspired the National Park Service "mystique," a spirit of mission, a willingness to stand tough against what he called "desecration of the people's playground for the benefit of a few individuals or corporations."  Surely Mather would look with favor on the efforts of Bill Wade and colleagues of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees to prevent “desecration of the people’s playgrounds.” The Coalition, which now has 650 members, is willing to take on tough issues, including the latest zany proposal – endorsed by the Bush administration -- to allow visitors to carry loaded firearms in the parks. The retired rangers know whereof they speak when they say they never responded to a crime that might have been prevented had a visitor not been carrying a weapon. But they did see cases where visitors shot wildlife or fired wildly in crowded campgrounds.
 
++
 
To sum up, national parks when they were new yielded discovery, adventure, and challenge. They should always do that. And they can, if we set our minds and hearts to it. As the rest of the country becomes developed, and supercivilized, national parks should be safeguarded to represent another side of America, free of technology, free of commerce and crowds, free of instant gratification, a pioneer, self-reliant side of America. I do not want them closed. I want them to serve as models for a quality environment of life. Now send me an email with your views on park issues and needs, and how to best protect and manage them in the public interest.

Comments (2) >>

Talena Ross said:

  Why is it so hard for people to learn how simple it is to take care of the earth and its people, not control, cover with concrete, or capitalize on.
December 15, 2008

Darcie Gudger said:

  I just discovered your blog in my process of researching the alarming problem of overuse abuse of natural resources. Open spaces in Colorado are suffering greatly by people treating our preserved parks like a public square in a third world country. I was concluding that natural resources have become too accesible to certain groups of people who don't care about outdoor experience or conservation. Your blog is one of the first sources I've found in two days of research supporting my theory.
I hope to link your blog to my examiner page http://www.examiner.com/x-2614-Denver-Outdoor-Recreation-Examiner />
Your organization of this blog and wealth of primary source material is appreciated!
March 26, 2009
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