Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Latest park proposal still worries some
Mail Tribune
October 20, 2005
By PARIS ACHEN
A second draft of proposed revisions to national park management
policies released Tuesday dropped language that could have
opened national parks to cell phone towers, snowmobiles and
private watercraft.
The new proposal "continues the tradition we’ve always had of
protecting park resources unimpaired for future generations,"
said Elaine Sevy, a Park Service spokeswoman in Washington, D.C.
The first proposal, by Deputy Assistant Secretary of the
Interior Paul Hoffman and leaked to the media in early
September, would have changed the definition for park impairment
from "an impact to any park resource or value" to one proven to
"irreversibly harm" resources.
"Paul Hoffman’s proposal was submitted to get the Park Service
to begin looking at new options and incur debate," Sevy said.
"There never were any hard-lined regulations."
Crater Lake National Park officials said it was too early to
know how the proposed revisions would impact Oregon’s only
national park, on 183,224 acres in Klamath County northeast of
Medford.
"We just started reviewing the draft, so we don’t have a
consensus on what revisions should be made," said Michael
Justin, Crater Lake spokesman.
But some Park Service retirees said some of the language in the
new proposal is still worrisome.
"It’s better than the Hoffman draft, but it’s too early to see a
good picture of how it is going to impact national parks," said
George Buckingham, retired chief ranger at Crater Lake National
Park. "The devil is in the details."
One concern is a proposal to delete a part of the policy that
gives priority to conserving park resources over providing
enjoyment of the park to the public.
"If you don’t have the park preserved, you can’t have
enjoyment," said Buckingham, president of Friends of Crater
Lake.
Sevy said the proposal would not change the Park Service’s
mission to protect park’s resources.
The move to revise the policies was prompted by a congressional
request in 2002 and increasing public demand for modern comforts
and activities in parks, Park Service officials said.
About 100 Park Service employees participated in the revision
process, they said.
Park Service management policies are based on congressional
intent, case law and the 1916 Organic Act, which created the
National Park Service and have given parks the most natural
resource protection of any federally managed land.
The public has until Jan. 19 to comment on the proposal.
Park Service Director Fran Mainella said the Department of
Interior and Congress could play a part in which version is
ultimately adopted.
Reach reporter Paris Achen at 776-4496 or e-mail pachen@mailtribune.com.