The fourth Saturday of September is celebrated as National Public Lands Day. For many people, its primary attraction is that National Park Service and other federal "parks" including National Forests (USDA), the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Bureau of Reclamation are free that day ("A Proclamation on National Public Lands Day, 2021," White House).
Of course, public lands aren't only federal, and many local, county, state and other related government agencies call attention to the day, hold events, waive fees for access, etc. as well.
While many sites have volunteer activities, many don't. I have always been surprised that few cities aim to leverage this day (or National Trails Day in June) as volunteer and publicity opportunities, even though NPLD is considered the largest single day public lands volunteer event across the US.
As usual there are many issues.
In this blog, we frequently raise three issues.
1. Scenario planning and planning for the possibility that federal and/or state parks can close, either for federal politically-produced shutdowns or budget cutbacks and that localities should plan for this possibility, so they can react quickly when circumstances change ("Federal shutdown as another example of why local jurisdictions should have more robust contingency and master planning processes," 2013).
2. Facilitating access to parks for pedestrians and bicyclists, and adding transit services as appropriate ("A gap in planning across agencies: Prioritizing park access for pedestrians, bicyclists and transit users compared to motor vehicle access," 2015).
3. Treating the urban forest in cities as a single entity, an urban arboretum ("Arbor Day").
"The Forgotten History of Those Iconic National Parks Posters," Popular Mechanics.4. The tension in the National Park Service between big nature parks, mostly out west, and parks and sites serving urban areas ("Defining National Park Service installations in DC as locally or nationally serving") including National Heritage Areas, National Recreation Areas, Scenic Roads and Byways, and National Scenic Rivers.
Blog commenter Edward Drozd made a great point about adding to the parks and open space portfolio to better serve the more populated areas of the East and Midwest.
5. Federal parks agencies for the most part won't distribute non-federal locally produced brochures and other visitor materials. This is a problem for cities especially, and DC. The federal sites do not provide local information, and often don't even provide information on nearby sites run by different agencies.
6. In the DC area, the National Park Service should have an overarching visitor center, the Greater Washington NPS Visitor Center, providing information on all the parks and sites, rather than rely on all the individual sites and more parochially-focused visitor centers.
-- Mission 66 Visitor Centers: HIstory of a Building Type (book), NPS
-- "Rustic to Utilitarian: The Modernization of Park Architecture," National Park Foundation
-- Visitor Center Policy, Directive and Standard, and Guidelines, US Bureau of Reclamation
-- "Iconic Visitor Center Architecture"
-- Australia's Accredited Visitor Information Centers: A Strategic Directions Paper, Queensland State, Australia
Other issues include:
7. Overuse ("Post-pandemic overcrowding of national parks causing bigger problems than just long lines," LiveScience, "How Crowded Are America’s National Parks? See for Yourself," New York Times).
Dissatisfied with the limited amount of parks marketing by NPS, Utah Tourism created its own promotion program for the national parks in the state, calling them "The Mighty 5." Now the parks are "too successful" ("Tourists Heeding Utah's 'Mighty 5' Campaign Overpower Moab," Wall Street Journal, "Utah Wanted All the Tourists. Then It Got Them," Outside Magazine).
8. The tension between more passive and active access. Senator Mike Lee aims to make all federal parks provide access to off road vehicles ("Mike Lee’s bill to allow off-highway vehicles in national parks is a bad idea," Salt Lake Tribune).
9. Underfunding of maintenance.
10. Greater diversity in access (Barriers and Strategies to Connecting Urban Audiences to Wildlife and Nature: Results from a Multi-Method Research Project, NC State Extension).
11. Sound management and politics. There is always oppositional tension between Republican and Democratic control of these agencies. The Trump Administration looked at some privatization, reduced the size of certain sites ("Biden expected to reverse Trump’s order to shrink Utah national monuments," National Geographic), and moved the Bureau of Land Management HQ to Grand Junction, Colorado from DC--the Biden Administration is moving it back ("Trump Packed a Federal Land Agency Off to Colorado. Biden Is Bringing It Home," Mother Jones).
12. Climate change (Adaptation to Climate Change in Public Lands Management, Resources for the Future, "Why we need a climate plan for our public lands," Wilderness Society). We see this in terms of water and drought, sea level rise, and wildfires. This year, hydroelectric power generation is being threatened by drought. Canyons are resurfacing as water recedes ("Scientists Are Studying The Changes Occurring In Glen Canyon As Lake Powell Recedes," KUER/NPR). But also in how public lands are used for resource extraction, especially fossil fuels.
13. Grazing etc. As always, cattle users believe their interests are inadequately represented ("Mitigating Malheur’s Misfortunes: The Public Interest in the Public’s Public Lands," Georgetown Environmental Law Review).
14. Public media. It is rare that for profit television covers public lands issues. One exception is the NBC Bay Area (SF) show "Open Roads."
Many state PBS groups produce and televise programs on public lands including "Outdoor Idaho" and "Outdoors Maryland." Programs from all around the country can be viewed via PBS's Passport television access platform available to donors.
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A book to be published next year, Our Common Ground: A History of America's Public Lands, by lawyer John Leshy, who served as solicitor for the US Department of Interior, is the author of a definitive casebook on federal public lands law and is an emeritus professor of law.
Biden expands Bears Ears and other national monuments, reversing Trump cuts
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2021/10/07/bears-ears-biden-monument/
ABC News: US national parks to offer look into green-friendly transit.
ReplyDeletehttps://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/us-national-parks-offer-green-friendly-transit-81229283
AP story, 11/17/2021
Kinda pathetic. In the past, there was a funding stream as part of the every 5-6 year transportation funding bill, for transit related projects in association with federal lands.
But the "modern" Republicans ended it.
Facilitating sustainable mobility access to parks is the #2 item in the list.
The Washington Post: Opinion | Ken Burns: National Parks Service site reminds us of America's violent history.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/11/22/ken-burns-sand-creek-massacre-america-violent-history/
Doctors in Canada can now prescribe national park passes to patients
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2022/02/07/national-park-prescriptions-mental-health/
For National Trails Day in 2022, Tennessee offered guided hikes at all 56 of the state parks.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.tn.gov/environment/news/2022/5/31/tennessee-state-parks-host-national-trails-day-hikes-saturday--june-4.html
Wall Street Journal: Beyond the National Parks: Public Lands to Visit—Without the Crowds.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.wsj.com/articles/beyond-national-parks-guide-least-visited-lands-worth-visiting-11660320924?mod=flipboard
“There are so many precious places Americans aren’t even aware of, ” says Jim Pattiz, co-founder of More Than Just Parks, a film company and informational website about the nation’s federally managed parks, forests, monuments and other public lands. “Some may require a slightly more do-it-yourself mind-set, but the bottom line is you don’t have to go to a national park to see incredible landscapes.”
https://morethanjustparks.com/
https://www.nationalforests.org/
https://publiclands.org/
Impact on waterways, rivers, fishing, from climate change, warming.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/climate-change-comes-for-favorite-summer-pastime-fishing
"Climate change comes for a favorite summer pastime: fishing"
6/2022 issue
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/21/books/review/tree-thieves-lyndsie-bourgon.html
ReplyDelete"When It Comes to Timber Theft, There Are No Clear-Cut Villains"
Lyndsie Bourgon’s “Tree Thieves” casts the American environmental movement in all its complexity.
Proposed Youghiogheny River hiking, biking trails stir western Maryland.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/08/19/youghiogheny-river-maryland-bike-trails/
America’s natural heritage
A visitor’s guide to the country’s 63 spectacular national parks
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/lifestyle/national-parks/
How an 81-year-old fisherman’s quest could transform public riverbed access in Colorado
ReplyDeletehttps://news.yahoo.com/81-old-fisherman-quest-could-192343544.html
5/22/23
https://wjla.com/news/local/naacp-arlington-tree-equity-is-a-matter-of-life-and-death-asthma-related-health-issues-michael-hemminger-life-expectancy-asthma-and-allergy-foundation-of-america-church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-ecoaction-arlington#
ReplyDeleteNAACP Arlington: tree equity is 'a matter of life and death'
5/22/23
With Black communities disproportionately affected by serious asthma-related health issues, the NAACP Arlington Branch is looking to plant the seeds of change in tree equity.
Branch President Michael Hemminger said there is a significant disparity in the number of trees in Black communities compared to White communities, which plays a role in why Black people are more likely to suffer severe complications with respiratory illnesses like asthma. ...
Earlier this week, the NAACP Arlington Branch, through a strategic grant and partnership with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, presented a $60,000 donation to EcoAction Arlington to help plant more trees in 10 historically Black neighborhoods across the county.