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July 2005, Week 2

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Subject:
Take action on Denali National Park and Preserve
From:
Phyllis J Mains <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Iowa Discussion, Alerts and Announcements
Date:
Wed, 13 Jul 2005 08:05:11 -0500
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (7 kB) , text/html (8 kB)


----------
From: "The Wilderness Society" <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: WILDALERT: Help Us Secure Enduring Wildness For Denali National
Park
Date: Tue, Jul 12, 2005, 1:15 PM


 WildAlert
July 12, 2005 

Take Action 

National Park Service drafting management plan for Denali National Park &
Preserve -- your comments needed. 

  
As pure symbol of remote, wild beauty, few places on the planet equal
Denali National Park in Alaska. Here is our nation's highest mountain.
Here is safe haven for 38 mammal species, including wolves, moose,
caribou, Dall sheep and grizzly bears. Here, simply, is magnificent
wilderness enjoyed by climbers, hikers, berry pickers, wildlife watchers
and birders. 

The National Park Service is now drafting a management plan that will
govern the Park's backcountry for the next decade and beyond. The agency
has proposed opening 4 million acres of the Park to snowmobiling and
increased airplane tours which will destroy the natural quiet and alter
the wilderness experience. Click here to tell the Park Service to manage
Denali as the natural treasure it is. The deadline is this Friday, July
15th:
http://ga1.org/campaign/denali/xw3x5w2y7eetx8? 


What's At Stake 

 Denali is the oldest and most famous National Park in Alaska. Congress
set it aside in 1917 to protect its extraordinary wildlife populations.
In 1980 Congress expanded the Park to 6 million acres and formally
designated the original 2 million-acre core as Wilderness. The National
Park Service (NPS) is now accepting public comment on a backcountry
management plan that will determine the future of this matchless place. 

We're encouraged by the Park Service's continued commitment to safeguard
the 2- million-acre Wilderness core of Denali, also known as "the Old
Park." The designated Wilderness of Denali has been closed to
snowmachines since it was established in 1917. 

But we adamantly oppose the Park Service's proposal to allow recreational
snowmobiling and increased scenic tour airplane landings in the other 4
million acres of Denali. The Denali we treasure today would not survive
such uses. 

A Motorized Invasion or Quiet Beauty? 

Recreational snowmobiling is flatly incompatible with the purposes for
which Denali was set aside and shouldn't be in the Park. Anywhere.
Period. The physical impacts of recreational snowmobiling are severe and
well documented: unacceptable air and water pollution and disturbances to
wildlife. Just as real are the impacts on the intangible but fundamental
values of wilderness: solitude, natural quiet and natural sounds, the
unhurried pace of human-powered recreation obliterated by the noise and
stink of motors. 

Growing demand for airborne sightseeing tours has driven up dramatically
air traffic over the Park's wilderness. By some estimates, Denali is
second only to the Grand Canyon now as the Park with the most congested
airspace. The swelling use has increased conflicts with hikers, climbers
and local property owners. Natural quiet and the opportunity to hear and
enjoy natural sounds are rapidly disappearing on nearly all of Alaska's
accessible public lands. Denali is no exception, but it ought to be. The
Park Service should do whatever it takes to establish meaningful
overflight regulations and limits on landings within the Park. 

Denali National Park and Preserve is, in fact and in law, a wilderness
park. The 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act declared
the Park's purposes to be preservation of those wilderness values. The
National Park Service has found that virtually all 4 million acres of the
1980 additions qualify for wilderness designation. But the agency is now
proposing uses incompatible with wilderness designation. The agency must
protect all inventoried suitable wilderness until the Congress has acted
on the wilderness recommendation 


How You Can Help: Take Action Today to Demand a Wild Denali! 

The deadline for public comments to the National Park Service is Friday,
July 15, 2005. Please take a few moments today to let the agency know how
you want this splendid National Park managed. You can send your comments
immediately from
http://ga1.org/campaign/denali/xw3x5w2y7eetx8? 

If you'd prefer to send your own comments, a sample letter below includes
the major points. Increasingly in these comment processes, your own words
are the best ones and personalized letters are likely to have the
greatest impact. If you've visited Denali and can speak first-hand about
your experiences there, all the better. 

Contact Information
Paul Anderson, Superintendent
Denali National Park and Preserve
P.O. Box 9
Denali Park Alaska 99755
Email: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>


For More Information
Learn more about the Denali Plan at:
http://www.nps.gov/dena/home/ 


Sample Letter 

Dear Superintendent Anderson: 

I appreciate the opportunity to comment on the Denali Backcountry Plan.
Denali's wilderness character, world-famous wildlife, spectacular
landscapes, clean air and water, natural sounds, and opportunities for
solitude and primitive recreation must be protected. Only the People for
the Parks Alternative promises to do so and to do so by complying with
existing policy and law. I strongly support that alternative. 

Denali's wilderness and wildlife face an unrelenting siege of human
demands and uses. Recreational snowmobiling is incompatible with the
purposes of the Park and should not be allowed in Denali. 

With the demand for scenic air or "flightseeing" tours growing, Now is
the time for the National Park Service to establish meaningful overflight
regulations and limits on landings, not to casually open Denali's
backcountry to even more landings. Natural quiet, and the opportunity to
hear and enjoy natural sounds, is rapidly disappearing from our public
lands. Denali is no exception. But it surely ought to be. 

The Park Service must complete the wilderness review and recommendation
process that the 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
mandates before it makes other management decisions. NPS management
policies and the Wilderness Act of 1964 clearly direct the Park Service
manage suitable wilderness lands as though they were designated
wilderness until the Congress acts on a wilderness recommendation. I
strongly urge you to do so. 

Sincerely,
(Your name and address) 

Words to Inspire 

"It is imperative to maintain portions of the wilderness untouched so
that a tree will rot where it falls, a waterfall will pour its curve
without generating electricity, a trumpeter swan may float on
uncontaminated water-and moderns may at least see what their ancestors
knew in their nerves and blood."

-- Bernard DeVoto 






The Wilderness Society is a non-profit organization dedicated to
conserving American wilderness. Our mission is to ensure that future
generations will enjoy the clean air and water, wildlife, beauty, and
opportunity for recreation and renewal provided by pristine forests,
rivers, deserts, and mountains. As a subscriber to WildAlert, you join
over 250,000 Wilderness Society members and supporters in our efforts to
protect and restore America's wild places. 

www.wilderness.org    1615 M St, NW    Washington, DC 20036  
1.800.THE.WILD   [log in to unmask]

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