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Author Topic: Mount St. Helens should not become Washington's fourth national park......  (Read 2620 times)

Offline KillzElk

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READ THIS .. WOW  :yike: :yike:

Committee: No park status for volcano
Panel advising Congress does want Mount St. Helens to receive better funding Wednesday, March 4


Read Below or Click link...
http://www.columbian.com/article/20090305/NEWS02/703059960

Mount St. Helens should not become Washington's fourth national park, according to a committee advising Congress.

The committee wants the cash-strapped U.S. Forest Service to retain the 110,000-acre national volcanic monument, but the advisory panel is calling for changes that would elevate the monument's importance in the federal budget. The panel resisted calls for turning it over to the National Park Service.

That's the key finding in a wish list of proposals released by the committee this week for public review.

None of the proposals carried a price tag, but the list is ambitious.

It includes a new highway extension north to Randle, which would easily range into the hundreds of millions of dollars; overnight accommodations at the shuttered Coldwater Ridge Visitor Center; and unspecified destination resorts in and around the monument.

The panel expects to prioritize its suggestions during an all-day meeting on May 14.

U.S. Sens. Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray and Reps. Brian Baird and Norm Dicks commissioned the 14-member committee more than a year ago to explore the surrounding community's vision of the monument's future and make a recommendation about the best course of action. The committee includes a cross-section of elected officials, recreationists, scientists and residents.

It held a series of meetings over the past year.

"What we heard from the public was pretty loud and clear in those seven meetings to keep it with the Forest Service, but with more money and better management," said Paul Pearce, the Skamania County commissioner who served as the panel's co-chairman.

He cited concern that the Park Service would impose new restrictions on hunting, fishing and off-road use if the monument became a national park.

In 2007, Cantwell raised the possibility of turning it over to the Park Service when chronic budget shortfalls forced the Forest Service to permanently close the Coldwater Ridge Visitor Center after just 14 years.

The advisory panel instead suggested establishing the monument as a mandatory line item within the Forest Service budget, similar to the treatment of national parks such as Mount Rainier. Under that scenario, the monument would be pulled out of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and treated as its own unique entity — similar to the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area.

Even if more money materialized under that scenario, it would do little to boost a stagnant trend in visitors to the volcano, said Sean Smith, Northwest regional director of the National Parks Conservation Association in Seattle.

"One of the primary goals is to raise the profile and reverse these declining visitation trends," he said. "Just giving the money to the Forest Service isn't likely to create this buzz around Mount St. Helens."

The current monument manager said he was pleased with the group's suggestions.

"We're tickled," said Tom Mulder, the Forest Service's monument manager based in Chelatchie Prairie. "The premise that a place like the monument should be funded better, I think everybody agrees with that."

However, he said the Forest Service hasn't yet taken a position on the budget proposal. Mulder added that the agency has in the past discouraged congressional earmarks for particular locations.

National parks receive a line item allocation of funding in the federal budget each year. By contrast, Mount St. Helens receives its share of recreation money from the Forest Service only after it filters through three distinct layers of administrative overhead, from national headquarters, through the regional office in Portland, and, finally, through the Gifford Pinchot forest headquarters in Vancouver. At each level, the monument must compete with other recreation programs operated by the Forest Service.

Erik Robinson: 360-735-4551, or erik.robinson@columbian.com.

Offline Cascade_Sherpa

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This is a huge relief! Growing up I spent a ton of time up in the high lakes area, camping, backpacking, motorcycle riding.  And to see how much the land, both public and private, is managed is tragic and appalling.  Weyerhauser, Fibre, and now all of the timber companies have made it a policy to close the woods as much as possible.  Although the area has some complex access issues, it would be great for the local sportsman to form a committee who's goal was to prove to the timber Barron's that the public....ie. hunters, fisherman, etc., can be trusted to be good stewards of the woods.  To lose even more of a foothold would have been another nail in the coffin for like minded individuals who want to pass on the outdoor traditions to our kids.

Offline Crunchy

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Amen brother!!  I hunt there and would hate to see all that go down the tubes.  Lots of fond memories, and more to come.

Offline Huntbear

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Looks like all our sentiments sent in  emails, letters, and voiced by those that attended the meetings were read and heard.  Good news.
By my honorable conduct as a hunter let me give a good example and teach new hunters principles of honor, so that each new generation can show respect for their god, other hunters and the animals, and enjoy the dignity of the hunt.

Calling an illegal alien an 'undocumented immigrant' is like calling a drug dealer an 'unlicensed pharmacist'.

 


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