Phyllis,
 
Could you compare and contrast this egg-gathering proposal with the  
subsistence hunting of caribou that takes place in the Arctic National  Wildlife 
Refuge. Is the caribou kill there limited to a certain  number? (I don't call 
it "harvesting"--that's manipulative misuse of  language.)
 
Note: from Wikipedia we learn that the human population of the Refuge is  
only about 400, in an area of about 19,000,000 acres.
 
Thanks,
Tom
 
In a message dated 7/22/2011 8:19:48 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:


 
Senate hearing July 28 on bill (S.1063) attacking  Glacier Bay National Park
—Your support for the park needed now.  

Along with the National Park Service (NPS) in Alaska,  Alaska’s Senators 
Lisa Murkowski (R) and Sen. Mark Begich (D) want to let  members of the Huna 
Tlingit tribe of SE Alaska collect glaucous-winged gull  eggs in Glacier Bay 
National Park.  Their bill, S. 1063, would authorize  this subsistence 
practice in a park long closed to the extraction of wildlife,  including 
subsistence hunting, trapping, fishing, and gathering by Alaska  Natives. 

Glacier Bay is one of  the nation’s finest wilderness national parks and 
wildlife sanctuaries.  It is a World Heritage Site, a major component of an 
International  Biosphere Reserve, and a critically important summer feeding 
ground for  endangered humpback whales.  It provides essential security for 
Steller  sea lions.  It fulfills Congress’s mandate to be one of the national  
parks in Alaska that “…are intended to be large sanctuaries where fish and 
 wildlife may roam freely…without the changes that extensive human activity 
 would cause.”   

The Sierra Club  strongly opposes S. 1063.  Opening this park would inflict 
harm on the  gulls—by reducing the number of fledglings in the park by 22%, 
according to  the National Park Service (NPS)—and it would likely result in 
 proposals  for additional subsistence practices in the park.  The tribe is 
on public  record as wanting the park opened to subsistence hunting for 
mountain goats  and seals.   

If Congress were to  approve S. 1063, other federally recognized tribes in 
Alaska could ask for the  same privilege and other perhaps other subsistence 
practices in Alaska’s other  three sanctuary parks, Katmai National Park, 
the old Mt. McKinley part of  Denali National Park, and Kenai Fjords National 
Park.    

And the potential unraveling of the  park sanctuary standard might not stop 
in our 49th state.  If  enacted, S. 1063 could trigger similar Native 
American demands for subsistence  access to national parks in other states.  As 
Glacier Bay goes, so goes  Rocky Mountain, Yosemite, Yellowstone, North 
Cascades, and other premier  national park sanctuaries? 

Opening  Glacier Bay to egg gathering is also completely unnecessary.  Just 
 outside the park boundaries and within Huna Tlingit traditional territory 
are  a half-dozen traditional gull egg collection sites of the tribe.  In a  
demonstration project in 2001 and 2002 the National Park Service assisted  
tribal members to successfully collect gull eggs on one of these non-park  
sites.  This proved that NPS facilitation of such non-park collection  trips 
is a “reasonable and feasible” alternative to opening the park.  

Please act to defend the park – one phone  call 

Members of the Senate  Subcommittee on National Parks and the full Senate 
Energy and Natural  Resources Committee need to hear from Sierra Club members 
from throughout the  nation: 

If your senator is listed  below, please call his/her office before July 28 
and urge opposition to S.  1063: explain you oppose this Glacier Bay 
National Park gull-egg collecting  bill because: 
(pick one or two)  
**You care about continuing the proud  tradition of Glacier Bay National 
Park as a wildlife sanctuary and one of our  national treasures, a 
world-renowned park which John Muir explored in the late  19th century and which is a 
park dear to the heart of Sierra Club  members.   
** You support  Native subsistence in Alaska but not in this national park 
long closed to  wildlife extraction, especially as there are alternative 
proven egg-collecting  sites outside the park. 
** You fear the  precedent would lead to similar extractive uses in other 
Alaska national park  sanctuaries and maybe in famed national parks in other 
states.  
** If you have visited Glacier Bay National Park –  let them know. 

If you do not have your  Senator’s direct office number, call the Capitol 
switchboard at 202-224-3121  and ask for your Senator. 


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