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The Story of UsAn interview with Tom Kiernan of the National Parks Conservation Association17 Jul 2007
A moment of reflection at Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve.
Photo: Richard and Robin via flickr
Every year, millions of Americans pack up their families and head out to visit one of America's national parks. My family was no different: I vividly recall the patchwork of reds, oranges, and yellows blanketing the Appalachian mountains as autumn made its big entrance one year. Another time, I remember being transfixed by a herd of Yellowstone bison -- burly, ancient-looking creatures -- crossing the paved road we were traversing in our large, modern minivan. Maybe for you, the Statue of Liberty is an inspiration, the Mojave the place where you found yourself, the Alamo a sight you'll never forget. That's the "glory of the [national] park system," says Tom Kiernan, president of the National Parks Conservation Association. "The system has a whole spectrum of stories about America and about each one of us as individuals."
Tom Kiernan.
With an eye to the National Park Service's upcoming centennial in 2016, NPCA recently released an action plan for fixing our park system and, just last week, a comprehensive report [PDF] on how climate change will affect the diversity of America's parks. Kiernan spoke to me from his office in Washington, D.C., about his hopes for these projects -- and his hopes for the future of the lands he lobbies for every day. The report says a number of things: First of all, it looks at the impact of global warming on different types of parks throughout the national park system and throughout the United States. So we are showing that global climate change will impact the full diversity of the national park system -- a system representing the breadth of the natural and cultural treasures of this country.
We then go into some of the strategies, both from an individual American's perspective -- what we as individuals can do -- and also what we as a country can do and need to do, both to reduce the impact of climate change in the parks and to help adapt and manage the national park system within what will be a warmer climate.
We're trying to look at it from all those angles. We do see this as a clarion cry for our national park system and the need to address climate change, because it will profoundly harm the national park system if it continues unchecked.
We feel strongly that Congress needs to move on climate change and that it needs to move at the same time on the other pollutants that are devastating our national park systems. So we are looking for a bill that addresses carbon, sulfur, nitrogen, and mercury. All four of those pollutants need to be addressed in a comprehensive way if we are going to protect the air quality of national parks.
We have, for example, the National Parks Centennial Initiative, which proposes the largest increase ever in the operating budget of the parks. The House of Representatives, under Norm Dicks' (D-Wash.) leadership, actually exceeded what the administration put on the table. Under Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the Senate committee essentially matched what the House did. So we've got some momentum around significant funding increases for the parks that are an important first step in addressing the broader funding challenges, and frankly, in addressing, then, some of these ecological and other challenges that the parks face.
So [the parks] desperately do need additional funding, but we want at the same time to see significant management enhancements and greater efficiencies inside the park service. We also believe there are a number of other dimensions in preparing our parks for their second 100 years that need to get added to this total initiative between now and 2016 -- things like expanding the national park system.
And back to air quality and climate change -- you know, we cannot end up with a park system at the centennial that's fully funded but yet is continuing to be hammered by horrendous air pollution. That's not a park system that will survive its second 100 years.
Here's just one example that partially gets at this point: When you ask the American public which of the services provided by the federal government are the most appreciated, the No. 1 service -- more than Homeland Security, more than Social Security, or Medicare, or Medicaid -- is our national parks. People profoundly appreciate the national parks, as much as their local backyard fishing hole, or their local park, or their local national forest or wilderness area.
I see your point on the glitzy magazines and all that. Climate change and energy efficiency are broadening the movement, but not to the exclusion of the traditional love that we have for the outdoors and wildlife ... I'm curious, is Grist doing well? You mention all the glitzy enviro magazines -- are you guys doing well, too?
There are some tectonic shifts at work here with the environment, and open space, and natural ecosystems. People are starting to understand how profoundly important they are and how reliant we are on them. So I'm convinced that it's so much more than a fad.
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