Yosemite National Park:
Closed for Preservation
Lincoln dedicated the valley to the public
"for all time." The National Park Service wants to ignore this
promise.
By TOM MCCLINTOCK
Set aside by President
Abraham Lincoln in 1864 with the express purpose of "public use, resort
and recreation," Yosemite Valley is a national treasure that Lincoln
ensured would be preserved "for all time." Ever since Lincoln created
the park, Americans have enjoyed a host of recreational opportunities and
amenities that enhance their experience of the Valley. Those days might be
over.
In January 2013, the
National Park Service issued a proposal called the Merced River Plan that would
cut everything from bicycle and raft rentals to iconic facilities, including
the ice skating rink at Curry Village, the art center, and a historic stone
bridge that dates back to the 1920s. For generations, these facilities have
enhanced the experience of the park for millions of visitors. Now, the very
nature and purpose of Yosemite is being fundamentally transformed into an
exclusionary agenda that can best be described as "Look, but don't
touch."
Why is the National Park
Service seeking to slash swimming pools and horseback riding programs? It all
goes back to a lawsuit. Environmentalist groups such as Friends of Yosemite
Valley and Mariposans for the Environment and Responsible Government challenged
the National Park Service's 2000 and 2005 plans to manage the Merced River,
which runs through the park, claiming that the Park Service was insufficiently
preserving the river's "wild and scenic" character.
The Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals agreed with the plaintiffs and invalidated the Park Service's plans
in 2008. A settlement, agreed to in September 2009, required the Park Service
to draft a new plan for the Merced River—and also paid these professional
environmental litigants more than $1 million, courtesy of American taxpayers.
Although the settlement
requires a plan for the Yosemite Valley consistent with the Merced River's
official designation as "wild and scenic," nothing in that
designation requires the removal of visitor amenities, according to former
Democratic Rep. Tony Coelho, who wrote the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act in 1987.
In an April 2013 letter to the director of the National Park Service, Mr.
Coelho wrote: "The Merced River in Yosemite Valley has been recreational
for almost 150 years. Yosemite Valley has never been wilderness. Any plan which
proceeds under the WSRA should not change any infrastructure, or ban any
activities traditionally carried on in Yosemite Valley . . . I oppose any such
measures."
As public outrage
against the plan has mounted—especially by the three counties most directly
impacted by the plan—the litigants have found willing mouthpieces in the
editorial boards of the San Francisco Chronicle and Sacramento Bee. In recent
editorials and columns, these papers have assured the public that the plan will
relieve chronic overcrowding at the park and protect the river from any future
degradation.
In fact, this plan locks
in and compounds overcrowding that has plagued the park since flooding wiped
out almost half the campsites in 1997. At the time, Congress appropriated $17
million to "relocate" the campsites damaged in the flood. The money
was spent, but the campsites were never replaced. Now, the Merced River Plan
would permanently impose a 30% reduction in campsites and a 50% reduction in
lodging compared with the pre-flood era. This would mean longer waiting lists
and fewer overnight accommodations.
Three swimming pools in
Yosemite give visitors a safe and supervised place for their children to cool
off in the summer. But the Park Service wants to close two of them because they
do not positively contribute to "resource protection," or aren't
protective of the "outstandingly remarkable values" of the river.
That guarantees overcrowding at the remaining pool, pushing families seeking
water recreation into the river, which lacks lifeguards.
National Park Service
Director Jon Jarvis assures the public that "commercial services,"
like ice skating and raft rentals, "may be reasonably relocated outside
the river corridor but remain in Yosemite Valley, or in other locations inside
or outside of the park." That means tourists will have to walk or drive
much greater distances to access these services and then endure long lines when
they get there.
According to its
advocates, the plan doesn't ban services like bike rentals, it only suggests
moving them to better locations. But a read through the Merced River Plan puts
the lie to this claim. It talks specifically about "eliminating" and
"removing" these services and predicts that "over time, visitors
would become accustomed to the absence of these facilities and would no longer
expect them as a part of their experience in Yosemite." Their intent could
not possibly be clearer.
In testimony before the
House Natural Resources Committee, National Park Service officials assure us
that although bicycle rentals will be "eliminated" in the interest of
environmental protection, visitors will still be free to bring their own bikes.
That invites an obvious question: What exactly is the environmental difference
between a rented bike and one that is privately owned?
Every lover of Yosemite
needs to read this report. It proposes breaking the compact that has long
existed between the American people and their government to preserve the
Yosemite Valley for the many outdoor recreational activities that the public
has enjoyed there for nearly 150 years.
My district includes the
Yosemite National Park and I represent the gateway communities that depend on
park tourism to support their economies. The locally elected governments in the
region are unanimous in their opposition to this plan, reflecting the clear
sentiments of the overwhelming number of local residents.
Many things need to be
done to improve access and traffic flow through the park. But destroying the
amenities that provide comfort and enjoyment for millions of Yosemite visitors
each year isn't among them.
Mr. McClintock is a
Republican congressman from California.
A version of this article appeared August 23, 2013, on page A9
in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Yosemite
National Park: Closed for Preservation.
No comments:
Post a Comment