By
T.
Steelman
This
holiday weekend, many Americans will be enjoying the country’s national parks
and other public lands. Our national parks are considered by most to be our
greatest treasures, holding precious places in trust for Americans to enjoy for
as long as this nation exists.
In
the June 30 edition of the New
York Times, an op-ed by Reed Watson appeared. In it, Watson made a case
for not creating any more national parks. He points out that the National Park
Service can’t maintain what we already have:
“Throughout the national park system, an enormous backlog of deferred maintenance is eroding the visitor experience and threatening the very resources that the National Park Service was created to protect. Earlier this year, the park service announced that the cost of deferred maintenance had reached $11.5 billion.”
Rhode Island's National Park - looks like nice timber |
The Kochs’
big money organizations — including the “ATM of the right,” Donors Trust (pdf) — make significant contributions
to PERC. Watson, himself, used to work directly for the Charles G. Koch
Charitable Foundation.
PERC
is a big advocate for the privatization of our public lands and for opening
them up to private use.
Like drilling. Well, since they have ties to
the fossil fuel industry, that’s not a big surprise. Watson wrote another op-ed in 2009 that called for land
management agencies to be required to turn a profit. How? By opening our public
lands to industry. Like mining and timber and oil.
You
might not be familiar with the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF), but you
should be. The LWCF uses funds which come from oil and gas fees to pay for
outdoor projects all over the country. It is now up for renewal, expiring on
September 30.
It has bipartisan support but — big surprise — some Republicans
are holding it up, wanting to divert LWCF funds to cover park maintenance. The
LWCF is budget-neutral, by the way. You might contact your Congress people and
let them know that you expect them to pass this without a fuss.
PERC
has also been involved in trying to give control of the parks to the states or
to sell them off completely. They released a study earlier this year that
supports the turn-over, with “evidence” that it would benefit the states
economically. This “evidence” was widely disseminated by right-wing pundits
from talking points written by oil-and-gas PR man, Richard Berman (aka “Dr. Evil”). Turns out the plan
really wouldn’t help the states.
The
Center for Western Priorities shredded the PERC study (pdf) , saying it had…
“… glaring flaws would suggest that the authors designed a study to specifically support the organization’s ideology, which prioritizes extractive industries, reduces public access through privatization, and ignores the benefits of balanced land management.”
CWP
also noted that the states have said that they can’t afford to keep the parks
on their own. It could bankrupt many of them. The idea is really not popular in
the West, especially when you add the *selling
the parks off* part. Oh, and
it’s unconstitutional.
With
PERC being a Koch-controlled organization, it is obvious that an ideology is
behind it. This “No More National Parks”
nonsense is driven by oil and gas and its bought-and-paid-for Congress
Critters. They want to seize and sell off our national parks. It’s obscene.
It’s downright un-American.
Since
Congress created the national park system in 1872, there have been over 400
areas brought under its protection. National parks, monuments and reservations
cover more than 84 million acres in all 50 states and U.S. territories.
These
lands are our heritage. They are our heart. What would we be without Yosemite,,
Arcadia, Everglades, Bryce Canyon and Big Bend? A poorer nation, that’s what.
Can you imagine oil wells in Big Cypress or Aztec Ruins? The Senate has already voted to allow private companies to abuse
our public lands: SA838 passed in April. It endangers national forests and
wildernesses, some of which are right next to national parks. Drilling in the
Grand Canyon, anyone?
I
don’t know about you, but if Congress tried to sell off or open to industry my
closest national park — Olympic — I would chain my old body to the closest tree
and die there, if need be. We cannot allow greed to destroy these precious,
sacred places. Stand up and say, No!”
Author T. Steelman: A lifelong Liberal, I have
been writing about politics for over 20 years, half of that time online. While
I'm a policy wonk and interested in all aspects of politics, my focus is on
religion, especially issues of religious freedom since I am a Wiccan. Though I
do try to keep it in check, my sarcasm gets off of its leash -- more and more
often nowadays. I enjoy reading, making jewelry, Prog Rock and etymology. I
share my home with my husband, daughter, 2 cats and a small herd of alpacas.
"If the future's looking dark, we're the ones who have to shine..."