Clean Up City of St. Augustine, Florida

In secret, behind locked gates, the managers of the Nation's oldest (European-founded) City illegally dumped 40,000 cubic yards of contaminants in the Old City Reservoir, where people fished and swam for generations. St. Augustine's pollution symbolizes our City's putative leaders' lack of trust in the public's right to know. This is advanced citizenship. Please share your questions and whistleblower disclosures about City government. Then let's demand answers. Expect democracy.

Friday, November 06, 2009

Fixing seawall requires federal funds -- National Park Service can provide the funds

See below. We need a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, which will provide the funds we need to host presidents, kings and the Pope, among millions of visitors from 2012-2015. A National Park -- there is no substitute.

Squabble over seawall -- City, state spar over responsibility for repairing 50-year-old seawall


JENNIFER EDWARDS
Staff Writer
Publication Date: 11/06/09

A simple repair to a rusty fence post along the bayfront has revealed a bigger question: Whose responsibility is it to pay for repairs to the aging seawall?

City Attorney Ron Brown said it's the state Department of Transportation's responsibility. The state is not sure.

For now, the city has reinstalled the post atop the portion of the seawall that runs from the Castillo de San Marcos to the Bridge of Lions. But, Brown said, the state Department of Transportation needs to pay for the work.

The city fixed the post because, "We don't want people to fall in the bay," Brown said. But "The state had to reluctantly admit (the wall) was theirs."

Brown said deeds from 1991 show that DOT is responsible for the seawall, and he sent a letter to the state about two weeks ago telling them that.

But state officials are not convinced the seawall is their responsibility, and have ignored two other maintenance bills Brown sent for repairs the city made over the past year to the seawall, including one for $104.47 for repairs to some of the chain between the posts. Ê

Over time, maintaining the wall could become quite expensive, Brown said.

Gina Busscher, public information director for FDOT District 2, speaking for the state's legal department, said, "We are investigation the issue."

She provided documents that indicates that the state considers the city responsible for the wall, and thus its repairs. The state Department of Transportation general counsel, Alexis Yarbrough, could not be reached for comment.

The post-and-chain fence is sprouting rust in several places and some posts are now brown rather than the original black.

"They've been there for years and I can see that the condition of them has become critical," said Greg Moore, St. Augustine Historical Society board member.

Brown said the deteriorating railing creates unsafe conditions.

"The condition of the seawall and the stanchions (posts) and chain railing on the seawall have deteriorated over time and have not received recent maintenance or repair except for emergency repairs ...," he wrote in the letter to the state. "The chains and stanchions ... serve as the only barrier between crowds on the seawall and the easterly edge of the wall."

There's also the condition of the wall itself, which is showing deep cracks.

The area beneath the post the city reinstalled, for instance, has deteriorated, another city official said.

"The concrete broke loose where it was bolted," said Tim Shields, facilities manager. "I am sure that the age of it and the salt and the environment has taken its toll."

The city will have to wait for the state's response. In the meantime, it will keep making emergency repairs.

"We're going to keep doing that, and we're going to keep billing the state for it," he said.

About the wall:

* The portion of the seawall that runs from just south of the Castillo de San Marcos to the Bridge of Lions is about 50 years old.

* The original seawall was constructed from 1833-1844, said Greg Moore, St. Augustine Historical Society board member. Jason Sheffield, city administrative service manager, has said 675 feet of the original wall remain south of the bridge.

* The original portion north of the bridge, however, is located beneath the median that divides the north- and south-bound lanes of Avenida Menendez. It was replaced with a new sea wall when Avenida Menendez was widened as part of the remodeling of the bayfront that took place at the end of the 1950s, said Charles Tingley, senior research librarian for the Historical Society Research Library.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/110609/news_2152570.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Impressive turnout for the first of "First America" fora

800 people! See below. That's more people than I've ever seen in that auditorium, and we first moved to St. Augustine exactly ten years ago yesterday. Our residents are passionate about our history and environment and want to protect it. That's why we support a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, with an "emerald necklace of parks," a national indigenous history museum and a national civil rights museum, right here where European-American history began in 1565.

Native peoples tell of their hardship, wars

Native peoples tell of their hardship, wars



PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/06/09

St. Augustine's 450th Commemoration Commission's first historical presentation Thursday night was billed as a way for city residents to learn about the "Peoples Before Ponce de Leon," but the Timucuans were mentioned only briefly and in passing.

The presentation mostly focused on Native Americans in Florida who lived hundreds of years after the Spanish arrived.

Still, Flagler Auditorium's 800 seats were packed to overflowing, with people sitting on the floor. The program was laced with humor and was well-received by the audience.

In introducing this first event, St. Augustine Vice Mayor Errol Jones -- substituting for Mayor Joe Boles, who is out of town -- said, "We have a rich history and hope to tell it to the world over the next five years."

To begin, Dana Ste. Claire, executive director of the 450th Commission, introduced Seminole historian and cultural specialist Willie Johns and Herbert Jim of Tampa, who belongs to an independent tribe.

Johns lives on the Brighton reservation, one of seven Seminole reservations in Florida.

He told of his recent emotional visit to the site here where Osceola was betrayed and captured by U.S. soldiers while the Seminole chief was under the protection of a white flag of truce.

Osceola was kept captive at the Castillo de San Marcos. He died there three months later of malaria.

"The history (of the native peoples) is alive, and it's here," Johns said. "Not many people know about it."

Timucuan villages, here when Pedro Menendez arrived, disappeared, their people Christianized, he said, adding that some went to Cuba and some blended into tribes which later became the Seminoles.

He remembered his great-grandmother, who died in the 1930s at 95, coming to St. Augustine to buy slaves.

"My family has always owned slaves," he said. "Slaves were kept until the 1920s. Nobody told us about the Emancipation Proclamation."

Now the Seminoles have casino gambling, thousands of head of cattle and 97 restaurants around the globe.

"We've done all right for a tribe that was left for dead. We're going to take St. Augustine back," he joked.

He said the name Seminole comes from a mispronounced Spanish word meaning "untamed."

Herbert Jim, a storyteller, told of the poverty and hardships his ancestors had to endure and how the children of his tribe were told to only speak their own language and not to learn English.

"We survived," he said. "My great-grandmother died in 1993 at 103 years old."

A family story relates the burning of his great-great-great-grandmother's village by horse soldiers. She sent the children out the back of her dwelling into the woods while soldiers came in the front and killed her, he said.

"That story has been passed down," he said. "We came out of the woods. We had to fight back. We fought. We survived."

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/110609/news_2153582.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

City needs to save money

Another free trip to Spain for city burghers -- when will they ever learn? See below.

City staffers headed for Aviles, Spain

PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/06/09

St. Augustine's history has always been connected to the northern Spanish city of Aviles -- the birthplace of Pedro Menendez -- and now the city's upcoming 450th birthday will make that connection deeper and more pronounced.

Mayor Joe Boles and his wife, plus three other St. Augustine couples, have traveled to Aviles for a week to meet unofficially with business, cultural and government officials, making friends and contacts. Boles and his wife are paying their own way.

City Manager Bill Harriss said Thursday that Hariss sent two city employees, John Regan, the city's chief operations officer, and Dana

Ste. Claire, executive director of St. Augustine's 450th Commemoration Commission, to accompany the unofficial delegation.

The trip's cost, including airfare, hotel and meals, will total roughly $4,000 for the two men, he said.

"I won't know exactly until they come back," he said.

Regan will be there the entire week, Ste. Claire only two days.

Ste. Claire had to be here to present the initial offering of "Discover First America: Legacies of La Florida," shown at Flagler College Auditorium on Thursday night. The presentation was called "People's Before Ponce de Leon."

He also was expected to ask about a Spanish ship that Aviles said it would build and sail to St. Augustine by the time of the birthday. The 450th Commission plans to build a caravel here as well, the type of ship used by Ponce De Leon.

Harriss said, "Basically, this is not a city trip. Any time our commissioners go (on trips), I want to make sure a staff member's there to keep things in perspective."

And, though the trip is unofficial, some official city business is bound to be discussed, he said.

Plus, since Mayor Boles is the only commissioner going and it's an unofficial trip, Florida's Sunshine Law does not apply.

"This was an opportune time for the visit," Harriss said. "Dana hadn't been over there yet and wanted to go. I need to keep everyone walking down the same path."

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/110609/news_2152619.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

FOX-TV 17 NASHVILLE: Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA IN TENNESSEE PROMOTING MORE ROADBUILDING AND PORK BARREL

New Hope For I-65 Project-Sky Arnold

Twice a day one stretch of I-65 becomes a Williamson County mess.

The interstate drops from 8 lanes to either 6 or 4 in between highway 96 and 840.

"It's awful, what should take 15 or 20 minutes tops to get to work takes a minimum of 30 minutes and if it's rainy it's another 10 minutes," said Elaine Sage.

Sage says she often takes the back roads from her Thompson Station home to Cool Springs to avoid the traffic jam.

She says the frustrating thing is the problem only lasts for a few miles.

"As soon as you get past highway 96 there are no cars anywhere," said Sage.

Tennessee has a $100 million dollar plan to fix it but the State is waiting for federal money to arrive.

"Without the federal funding coming in for congress which is very restrictive right now...without transportation bill we're kind of waiting to see what congress will do," said TDOT's Joe Carpenter.

Carpenter says projects across the State have stalled, because Congress has yet to approve the Federal Highway Bill.

It will pay about 80% of the cost of the project in Williamson County.

That plan gained some important support Monday morning.

John Mica, the ranking Republican on the House Transportation Committee, joined Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn for a tour of the area.

Both say they support it.

"One of the things we have seen an agreement on for citizens in this area is that fixing that traffic on I-65 is a pretty high priority," said Blackburn. New Hope For I-65 Project-Sky Arnold

Posted: Monday, November 2 2009, 08:11 PM CST

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

National Park Service Presence in St. Augustine Must Increase

The City of St. Augustine now agrees that the National Park Service presence in St. Augustine must increase.

The National Heritage Area for the Port is a nice idea, but not enough.

There is no land acquisition and no regulation with a National Heritage Area.

There is land acquisition and there is regulation with a National Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway -- along lines to be developed by Congress and local citizens.

If you want the seawall fixed, support the National Park.

If you want Riberia Street fixed, support the National Park.

If you want to preserve our 11,000 years of history and our beautiful beaches and forests, support the National Park.

Port may become Heritage Area -- Designation could qualify renovated port site for federal loans

Port may become Heritage Area -- Designation could qualify renovated port site for federal loans

PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/03/09

St. Augustine, oldest port in the nation, may be a candidate for a federal designation as a National Heritage Area, historian and archaeologist Dana Ste. Claire said Monday night.

Ste. Claire, executive director of the 450th Commemoration Commission, told more than 200 St. Augustine residents during a "general assembly" at Flagler College Auditorium that the port is only one area that will be improved before the city's 450th birthday bash in 2015.

"We will build the world a stage and host this," he said.

A renovated and improved port will amplify St. Augustine's role as one of the earliest points of international trade and commerce, and would, Ste. Claire said, be the perfect place to berth the "San Augustin," a reconstructed 16th-century Spanish caravel used by Juan Ponce de Leon in 1513.

Other benefits would include increased tourism, national promotion through various sources and an eligibility for federal loans.

Sam Turner of St. Augustine Lighthouse & Museum said a National Heritage Area "would be a community undertaking."

The Lighthouse, the A1A Scenic Highway group and St. Johns County will be taking the lead, he said.

"It will allow us to showcase important aspects of the (port)," he said. "It allows the city to appreciate what is has and to convey that to visitors."

So it would "dovetail easily" with other 450th commemoration preparations, he said.

The process can take two or three years, but the entire Heritage Area would include the entire watershed -- the Port plus both the Guana and Matanzas rivers.

"Our entire history is based on the water. It was the main means of transportation both in prehistory and after Europeans arrived," Turner said.

Residents who attended the Town Hall meeting were each given "First America" passports, stamped with a unique blue seal depicting a Spanish Conquistador and confirming they were there.

Ste. Claire outlined the draft strategic plan for the celebration, saying the Steering Committee would need many subcommittee members and volunteers.

"Would anyone want to chair the fundraising committee?" he asked jokingly.

Several residents questioned how the 2-1/2 year celebration -- from April 2013 to September 2015 -- will be funded. In other words, one member of the audience asked, "Will city taxpayers bear the burden of the cost?"

Mayor Joe Boles answered that one,

"Absolutely not," he said. "Each signature event will be responsible for its own funding. Plus the city will get a piece of every T-shirt, drinking cup or commemorative coin that's sold."

In addition, he said, the Steering Committee will receive $500,000 per year from the federal 450th Commemoration Commission, though appointments to that board are moving glacially through the Interior Department because all nominations must be vetted by the White House, Boles said.

"Our goal is to dream big," he said. "We are only limited by our creativity. In some ways, we'll have to rely on ourselves, just as we've done since 1565."

Discover First America series begins Thursday

The local 450th Commemoration Commission, in partnership with Flagler College, the city of St. Augustine, St. Johns County Tourist Development Council, and The St. Augustine Record, will host the free series. Grant support for the series comes from the Florida Humanities Council, Florida Public Archaeology, Florida Trust and Historic Research Media Institute.

All programs begin at 7 p.m. at Flagler College Auditorium.

* Thursday, Nov. 5 -- "Peoples Before Ponce de Leon," presented by the Seminole Tribe of Florida; Willie Johns of the Brighton Reservation, Okeechobee; and Herbie Jim and traditional arts demonstrators, Tampa.

* Monday, Nov. 23 -- "First America: Colonial St. Augustine," Actor Chaz Mena will conduct a Chautauqua performance as Pedro Menendez; Dr. Kathleen Deagan, Distinguished Research Curator at the University of Florida and Carl Halbirt, city archaeologist, St. Augustine.

* Wednesday, Dec. 9 -- "Pirates! Fact and Fiction," Dr. Pat Croce, Pirate Soul museum curator, author and entrepreneur; and Brendan Burke, Lighthouse Archeological Maritime Program.

* Thursday, Jan. 7 -- "The British are Coming!" presenting Bill Barker as Thomas Jefferson (through the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation), John Stevely as Jesse Fish and the British Night Watch.

* Friday, Feb. 5 -- "The Great Southern Cracker Roadshow," Janis Owens, author and storyteller, Dana Ste Claire, author and Cracker historian, and bluegrass musicians.

* Tuesday, April 13 -- "Palaces in Paradise: Flagler's Age of Opulence," Dr. Tom Graham, Professor Emeritus of History, Flagler College; John Blades, executive director of Flagler Museum; and a special "Conversation with Henry Flagler," with Flagler played by Tom Rahner and Mayor Joe Boles as himself.

* Tuesday, May 18 -- "Road to Freedom: African-Americans in Florida," by Derek Hankerson and James Bullock, both actors and creative directors.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/110309/news_2142877.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

USDOJ Press Releases: Bills of Information and Guilty Plea in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in "Operation Illegal Motion"

For Immediate Release
November 2, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Louisiana
Contact: (225) 389-0443

Another Bill of Information and Guilty Plea in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in Operation Illegal Motion

BATON ROUGE, LA—United States Attorney David R. Dugas announced today that EDWARD C. JAMES, age 65, of Baton Rouge, LA was charged in a Bill of Information with violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and with conspiracy for allegedly accepting or extorting bribes from individuals with pending criminal charges in the Baton Rouge City Court and the 19th Judicial District Court and then sharing the proceeds of the bribe or extortion with a prosecutor or court official who would arrange for the matters to be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” JAMES was arraigned today before U.S. District Judge James Brady and pled guilty to the charges contained in the Bill of Information.

The charges against JAMES resulted from Operation Illegal Motion, an ongoing investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Attorney’s Office with the cooperation of the Louisiana Office of Inspector General, the Louisiana State Police, the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigative Division and the Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General and the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, Criminal Investigations Division. The cases are being prosecuted by Deputy Criminal Chief Corey R. Amundson and Assistant United States Attorney M. Patricia Jones.

JAMES is the fourth individual charged as a result of Operation Illegal Motion and the third to plead guilty. JAMES faces a maximum sentence of twenty (20) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on the RICO charge and a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on the conspiracy charge.

After the guilty plea by JAMES, U.S. Attorney David R. Dugas stated “Operation Illegal Motion is an ongoing investigation that has uncovered evidence of corruption in the criminal court system in East Baton Rouge Parish. Anyone with knowledge of corruption at any level of government, but particularly in the court system or in law enforcement agencies, is urged to contact my office or the FBI to report that information.”

For further information, contact David R. Dugas, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Louisiana, or Lyman Thornton, First Assistant U.S. Attorney, at (225) 389-0443.

NOTE: A Bill of Information is a determination by the U.S. Attorneys Office that there is probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed by the defendant. The defendant, of course, is presumed innocent until and unless he is proven guilty at trial.

----------------


For Immediate Release
October 30, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Louisiana
Contact: (225) 389-0443

Bills of Information and Guilty Pleas in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on Charges of Using Interstate Facilities in Aid of Bribery

BATON ROUGE, LA—United States Attorney David R. Dugas announced today that FLITCHER R. BELL, age 43, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana; DARRELL JOHNSON, age 48, of Bueche, Louisiana; and LEONARD P. JACKSON, age 45, of Prairieville, Louisiana, were charged in Bills of Information alleging that each accepted bribes in exchange for “fixing” criminal matters filed and pending in Baton Rouge City Court. JOHNSON and BELL were arraigned today before U. S. District Court Judge James Brady and pled guilty to the charges contained in the Bills of Information filed against them. JACKSON is scheduled for arraignment on Wednesday, November 4, 2009, before Judge Brady.

Count One of the Bill of Information filed against FLITCHER R. BELL charges that from about 2006 through October of 2009, while serving as a senior prosecutor with the Baton Rouge City Prosecutor’s Office, BELL conspired with others to engage in bribery by soliciting and accepting payments from individuals with criminal and traffic matters pending in Baton Rouge City Court with the promise that the charges would be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” Count Two charges that BELL received cash in exchange for dismissing a criminal charge against an undercover FBI agent. BELL faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on each count.

The Bill of Information filed against DARRELL JOHNSON charges that in the spring of 2009, while serving as a law enforcement officer with the Baton Rouge City Police Department, JOHNSON accepted a cash payment in exchange for causing the dismissal of prostitution charges filed against an individual. JOHNSON faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

Count One of the Bill of Information filed against LEONARD P. JACKSON charges that from about 2006 until October of 2009 JACKSON, while serving as a law enforcement officer with the Baton Rouge City Police Department, conspired with others to engage in bribery by soliciting and accepting payments from individuals with criminal and traffic matters pending in Baton Rouge City Court with the promise that the charges would be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” Count Two charges that on September 17, 2009, JACKSON accepted a cash bribe payment in exchange for using his position as a police officer to collect a $10,000 gambling debt on behalf of an individual. If convicted, JACKSON faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on each count.

The charges resulted from Operation “Illegal Motion,” an ongoing investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Attorney’s Office with the cooperation of the Louisiana Office of Inspector General; the Louisiana State Police; the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigative Division; the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General; and the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality – Criminal Investigations Division. The cases are being prosecuted by Deputy Criminal Chief Corey R. Amundson and Assistant United States Attorney M. Patricia Jones.

After the guilty pleas by BELL and JOHNSON, U. S. Attorney David R. Dugas stated, “Public corruption at any level of government is unacceptable, but corruption of the criminal justice system threatens our most precious heritage, equal treatment under the law for all citizens. If those with access to corrupt police officers or prosecutors can obtain privileged treatment in exchange for cash bribes or other consideration, then the most important underpinnings of our legal system are threatened.”

Howard Schwartz, Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the New Orleans Division of the FBI, stated, “New Orleans usually gets all the attention relating to public corruption. As these guilty pleas today clearly demonstrate, public corruption is by no means limited to the city of New Orleans. The FBI, along with our federal, state, and local partners, each represented here today, are focusing our attention on public corruption matters in the Baton Rouge area. I’ll also take this occasion to announce the formation of our Public Corruption Working Group, which will aggressively pursue corruption at all levels. This group is comprised of the FBI, the United States Attorney’s Office, Department of Environmental Quality, Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General, Louisiana State Inspector General, Internal Revenue Service, and the Louisiana State Police.”

For further information, contact David R. Dugas, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Louisiana, or Lyman Thornton, First Assistant U.S. Attorney, at (225) 389-0443.

NOTE: A Bill of Information is a determination by the U.S. Attorney’s Office that there is probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed by the defendant. The defendant, of course, is presumed innocent until and unless he is proven guilty at trial.

EPA Press Release: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: U.S. EPA Takes Action Against San Francisco “Muni” following SF Bay Oil Spill City/County Pay $250,000

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 2, 2009 MEDIA CONTACT: Mary Simms, Simms.mary@epa.gov, 415-947-4270

U.S. EPA Takes Action Against San Francisco “Muni” following SF Bay Oil Spill
City and County to Pay $250,000 Fine, Conduct Incident Command System Training

SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is taking action against the San Francisco Municipal Transit Authority following federal violations of the Clean Water Act and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
On behalf of the U.S. EPA, the Department of Justice has lodged a proposed consent decree with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against the city and county of San Francisco for releasing at least 940 barrels of diesel fuel -- some of which entered into Islais Creek, a tributary of the San Francisco Bay.
The proposed consent decree, subject to a 30 day public comment period, will require the city and county of San Francisco to pay a $250,000 civil penalty. It will also require SF Muni to implement an Incident Command System training program that will improve coordination and communication during future incidents of this nature.
This enforcement action stems from red dye diesel fuel being released from the Woods bus servicing facility, located at 1095 Indiana Street in San Francisco during late November and December of 2005. The EPA estimates at least 39,000 gallons of fuel were released.
The spill originated at the Woods motor coach refueling facility when a faulty hose ruptured and underground storage tanks overflowed. The released diesel fuel landed in a storm drain where heavy flows from a major December rain storm caused the storm drain to overflow to the stormwater line. The fuel then caused an interference with a San Francisco southeast wastewater treatment pump station. From there, some of the fuel spilled into Islais Creek, which drains into Central San Francisco Bay.
“Facility operators must pay rigorous attention to operational practices in order to protect the San Francisco Bay and our coastal resources,” said Laura Yoshii, the EPA's Acting Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest.
The discharge of oil into Islais Creek and interference with the pump station were violations of the Clean Water Act. An EPA investigation also revealed that the release of diesel fuel was due to the failure of Muni staff to comply with federal regulations issued under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act that governs the management of underground storage tanks. The EPA has asserted that SF Muni’s federal RCRA violations include:
• Disabling an audible alarm system intended to alert operators to an ongoing release of diesel
• Failure to respond to flashing yellow alarm lights triggered by tank sensor alarms in full alarm mode
• Failure to maintain a written log noting the status, source, or reason for alarms
• Failure to use fuel inventory controls to monitor and observe that it was losing fuel from, the tanks at a constant conspicuous rate
• Inadequate containment
• A known kink and bulge in a faulty, braided, flexible hose that ultimately failed
• Failure to timely notify authorities of the release
Following the December 2005 spill at the Woods facility, the EPA investigated compliance at additional SF Muni bus servicing facilities. EPA inspectors found varying levels of noncompliance with spill prevention requirements at three facilities: the Flynn Facility, located at 15th and Harrison Street; the Kirkland Facility, located at 151 Beach Street; and the Marin Facility, located at 1399 Marin Street.
The city and county of San Francisco conducted remedial actions to clean up the spill in 2006 and has also taken initiative to evaluate its procedures and upgrade its facilities to prevent further spills. In addition to the work required by the consent decree, SF Muni has taken steps to decrease the likelihood of any future releases. These include:
• Completing all spill prevention, control, and countermeasure requirements and including installation of adequate containment, and the preparation of spill prevention plans
• Replacing the piping in underground sumps
• Replacing the containment boxes under all diesel and gasoline dispensers,
• Repairing alarms
• Installing external alarms with light and horn notifications and a remote alarm monitoring system
• Establishing new procedures to monitor fuel inventory and provide MTA staff supervision for fuel deliveries
• Additional controls in order to quickly identify and respond to releases diesel fuel
For more information on the Clean Water Act, please visit the EPA’s Web site at
http://www.epa.gov/regulations/laws/cwa.html
For more information on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, please visit the EPA’s Web site at:
http://www.epa.gov/regulations/laws/rcra.html
###

________________________________________

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Orlando Sentinel: Who's taking on Grayson? Anyone? Hello?

orlandosentinel.com/news/politics/orl-locgrayson-seat-mike-thomas-101101309oct13,0,2819143.column
OrlandoSentinel.com
Who's taking on Grayson? Anyone? Hello?

Mike Thomas

COMMENTARY

October 13, 2009

"This is an unstable man who has come unhinged."

National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Andy Sere on U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson.

The path to a long political career in Central Florida is win that first election, stay out of trouble and win the rest by default.

And now comes U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, who dynamited that model, calling Republicans knuckle-dragging obstructionists who want the sick to "die quickly."

If this fits the definition of unstable and unhinged, it certainly seems to have served a very lucid purpose.

The Republicans are cowering in knock-kneed terror.

Potential challengers are dropping out with comical regularity.

The last credible challenger standing is former state Sen. Dan Webster, who is so conflicted he can't say yes and he can't say no.

So he ponders away while the Republicans cross their fingers for a savior.

"I don't have to be in elective office," Webster says. "I am happy coasting right now. It's great."

You don't enter a race against someone like Alan Grayson with this mindset. You go into this race needing to be in Congress more than you need to breathe.

Despite all this, Orange County GOP Chairman Lew Oliver says this about Grayson, "I guarantee he's going to lose."

Oliver is an unstable man who has come unhinged.

"We'll have at least three or four candidates running," he says. "A couple will be credible or substantial people. A couple others will fall into the noncrackpot category."

If you're not a crackpot and always wanted to see Washington, call Lew immediately.

The Republicans look like a bunch of Chihuahuas yapping at the Rottweiler behind the fence. But this Rottweiler not only is snarling and frothing at the mouth, it also went to Harvard.

It is a crazy and smart Rottweiler.

So there is lots of yapping, but nobody is about to open the gate and take him on.

Consider state Rep. Steve Precourt.

Last week he boldly announced that Grayson was an "egomaniacal, socialist, loose cannon."

Then he announced someone else would have to do something about it because he wasn't running.

Yap. Yap. Yap.

Orange Mayor Rich Crotty once was considered the Republicans' best hope. In June, Grayson released a seven-page letter explaining in detail how he would gut Crotty over Crotty's leadership of the expressway authority.

In early July, Crotty said he had made a decision and would announce it shortly.

Days turned to weeks, weeks turned to months — until finally, the mayor gave us his verdict.

He could beat Grayson "handily." But he wasn't going to run.

Pretty slick. He declared victory and bowed out of the race.

The Republicans also tried and failed to recruit Florida House Speaker Larry Cretul of Ocala.

At one point, CNL Financial Group President Tim Seneff seemed like a perfect choice. He had no political record to attack, and he had deep pockets to offset what is expected to be a lackluster fundraising cycle.

Seneff didn't dawdle like the politicians. A couple days after his name surfaced, he opted out.

This leaves Dan Webster.

He was supposed to make an announcement last week. Then he was supposed to make one Monday. I called him, and he still hadn't decided.

He is doing his best Rich Crotty impersonation.

Webster sounds very much like someone pondering whether to jump off the roof.

The Republicans are yelling: Jump! Jump!

And his family is yelling: Don't! Don't!

His family loves him, and the Republicans are using him.

"That's the way it is in politics," Webster says. "People need you when they need you."

In 10 minutes, I didn't hear a single positive thing from him about entering the race.

I think he is happy here in Central Florida, near his six kids, near his five grandkids, running his air-conditioning business, going to his church.

The alternative is that he could open the gate and go in the backyard with the crazy, frothing Harvard Rottweiler and get the worst mauling of his political life. If he wins, the prize will be going to a faraway city he doesn't like, starting life in his 60s as a freshman congressman in the minority party.

If Webster opts out, Oliver says, there will be plenty of people ready to take his place.

"His [Grayson's] solid support is below 30 percent," says Oliver.

"He loses to a generic Republican in several polls I have seen."

All he has to do is get one of those generic Republicans to run.

Mike Thomas can be reached at 407-420-5525 or mthomas@orlandosentinel.com.

Copyright © 2009, Orlando Sentinel

USDOJ Press Release: Former County Commissioner Indicted

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For Immediate Release
October 29, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Southern District of Ohio
Contact: (937) 225-2910

Former Butler County Commissioner, Dublin Attorney Each Charged with Conspiracy and Tax Crimes

CINCINNATI—A federal grand jury here has indicted former Butler County Commissioner Michael A. Fox and Dublin, Ohio attorney Robert C. Schuler, alleging that they conspired to improperly benefit from Butler County contracts involving a company doing business with the county, and that the men failed to report income from the deals on their federal income tax returns. Fox is also charged with mail fraud involving honest services for failing to disclose conflicts of interest in Ohio ethics disclosure statements he mailed annually from 2004 through 2007. Schuler is charged with perjury for allegedly false testimony he gave to a federal grand jury on October 1, 2008.

Carter M. Stewart, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, Keith L. Bennett, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Cincinnati Division (FBI) and Jose A. Gonzalez, Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation (IRS) announced the indictment today.

The eight-count indictment charges each defendant with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, and one count of filing a false income tax return. The indictment charges Fox with four counts of mail fraud involving honest services. The indictment also seeks forfeiture of any property which is derived from proceeds traceable to the offenses alleged in the indictment, including but not limited to a sum of money equal to $460,000.

The indictment alleges that Fox, 60, of Hamilton, solicited and accepted money from individuals and businesses which were Butler County contractors from 2001 – 2005 when he was a member of the Butler County Board of Commissioners.

Many of the charges stem from a contract between Butler County and NORMAP Telecommunication LLC, in 2001 to install a county-wide fiber optics communications system. Schuler bought NORMAP after the company received the contract. Schuler received approximately $1,824,281 from Butler County. The grand jury charges that Schuler and Fox arranged for $360,000 to be transferred to a bank to pay off a line of credit in Fox’s name in March 2002 and an additional $100,000 was later transferred to a consulting company Fox owned in September 2002.

The indictment alleges that Fox also received payment from other individuals and businesses doing business with the county.

The indictment alleges that Fox committed mail fraud when he mailed his Ohio Ethics Commission Financial Disclosure Statements omitting the payments he received and failing to disclose conflicts of interest in 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007. The indictment charges that Fox filed a false income tax return for 2002 when he failed to disclose and pay income taxes on the payment. The indictment charges Schuler with filing a false income tax return for 2002 by failing to report business income he received. Schuler, 46, of Dublin, is charged with making false statements in October 2008 to a grand jury investigating the circumstances surrounding the $360,000 transfer to Fox.

Each count of mail fraud involving honest services and conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud is punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment. Filing a false income tax return is punishable by up to three years imprisonment, plus taxes, penalties and interest. Perjury is punishable by up to five years imprisonment.

Each man is scheduled to have an initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge today.

An indictment is merely an accusation. All defendants should be presumed innocent until and unless convicted in a court of law.

USDOJ Press Release: Bill Allen and Richard Smith, Former Officers of VECO Corporation, Sentenced for Roles in Alaska Public Corruption Scheme

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For Immediate Release
October 28, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
District of Alaska
Contact: (907) 271-5071

Bill Allen and Richard Smith, Former Officers of VECO Corporation, Sentenced for Roles in Alaska Public Corruption Scheme

WASHINGTON—Bill J. Allen and Richard L. Smith were each sentenced in separate hearings today for their participation in a corruption scheme in which they provided approximately $395,000 in corrupt payments to public officials from the state of Alaska, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division. Allen and Smith were sentenced in U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska by U.S. District Court Judge John W. Sedwick.

Allen, 72, the former chief executive officer of VECO Corporation, was sentenced to 36 months in prison, a $750,000 fine and three years of supervised release. Smith, 64, the former vice president of community and government affairs for VECO Corporation, was sentenced to 21 months in prison, a $10,000 fine and three years of supervised release.

Both defendants pleaded guilty on May 7, 2007, to three-count informations charging each with bribery; conspiracy to commit bribery, extortion under color of official right, and honest services mail and wire fraud; and conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. According to court documents, Allen and Smith conspired with at least five members of the Alaska legislature to provide illegal financial benefits to several Alaska elected officials in exchange for those officials’ support on legislation pending before the Alaska state legislature. Allen and Smith also pleaded guilty to one substantive count of bribery, and admitted that they provided approximately $395,000 in benefits to public officials from the state of Alaska in connection with the scheme.

The Allen sentencing was handled by Deputy Chief James M. Trusty of the Criminal Division’s Gang Unit, Trial Attorney Kevin R. Gingras of the Criminal Division’s Appellate Section and Trial Attorney Peter M. Koski of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The Smith sentencing was handled by Trial Attorney M. Kendall Day and Deputy Chief Raymond Hulser of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The case is being investigated by the FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Huffington Post: Senator Reid Gets No Republican Support for Resolution Honoring Hispanic Media

For the past week, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's office has been looking for a Republican co-sponsor for an utterly non-controversial resolution honoring the legacy and role of Hispanic media.

None came, his office confirms. On Tuesday, Reid introduced and passed a resolution designating October 25 through October 31, 2009, the "National Hispanic Media Week" in honor of the Latino Media of America. The Nevada Democrat was joined by Sens. Robert Menendez (New Jersey), Mark Udall (Colorado) and Kirsten Gillibrand (New York) -- all of whom are Democrats.

The resolution was your typical no-thrills, superficial fare that often takes up Senate business. Just last month, for instance, North Carolina's Republican and Democratic senators (Richard Burr and Kay Hagan, respectively) introduced a resolution congratulating "the High Point Furniture Market on the occasion of its 100th Anniversary as a leader in home furnishing" (a thrilling legislative breakthrough).

In the case of the current resolution, however, there are obvious political sensibilities at stake. The Hispanic community, which has felt demonized by harsh anti-immigrant rhetoric from congressional Republicans and conservative media personalities, has gravitated further and further from the GOP tent. By declining Reid's efforts to sign on to a rather milquetoast resolution, the party may only exacerbate the alienation.

When a similar resolution honoring Hispanic media was introduced and passed in 2005, former Sens. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and Mel Martinez (R-FL) attached their names to the list of co-sponsors. And that was two election cycles before it became abundantly clear that the Republican Party was losing serious ground among Hispanic voters.


Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/28/reid-gets-no-gop-support_n_337364.html

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Cliches by the Carload, Some Fifteen (15) Grammatical Errors in One Little 'Ole Paragraph, RANDY BRUNSON Announces to Run for County Commission


From the local hate website, www.plazabum.com:

I personly (sic) believe That (sic) elected officals (sic) sould (sic) not endorse candidates. Although (sic) I will have to say I have been endorsed by elected officals (sic). If it happens this time it will no (sic) be reported by me. But someone that (sic) makes statements like (sic). I like all the candidaes (sic), or I (sic) going to say (sic) out of it, or it might be bad for my business
eventhough (sic) if I could I would support xyc, or many other statements. If you don't want to help and support your candidates then don't. But just vote. I hink (sic) that as a candidate we would like to know how you feel

I officially filed Friday Oct. 23 ed at 4:15 PM for dist.2 county commission.

Who I am
Some of my accomplishments
Issues
Solutions

Will be on My Web Site the first of Nov.
Press release this comming (sic) Wed.
Election in Aug. 2010

This is one of my invitions (sic), if you want to have fun and want to make a difference
please join our team.
Randy

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Another Abramoff-connected Republican Bush Operative Sentenced to Federal Prison for Abusing the Public Trust

See below.

USDOJ Press Release: Former GSA Chief of Staff David Safavian Sentenced for Obstruction of Justice and Making False Statements

Department of Justice Press Release
For Immediate Release
October 16, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
District of Columbia
Contact: (202) 514-7566

Former GSA Chief of Staff David Safavian Sentenced for Obstruction of Justice and Making False Statements

WASHINGTON—Former General Services Administration (GSA) Chief of Staff David H. Safavian was sentenced today to one year in prison on charges of obstruction of justice and making false statements in connection with the investigation into the activities of former Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff, the Department of Justice announced.

In addition to the prison term, Safavian was sentenced today to two years of supervised release by U.S. District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman of the District of Columbia.

Safavian was found guilty by a federal jury in June 2006 of obstruction of justice and making false statements, but the verdicts were later vacated by the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and remanded for a new trial. A federal jury once again convicted Safavian of one count of obstruction of justice and three counts of making false statements on Dec. 19, 2008.

The jury in the second trial heard evidence that while Safavian assisted Abramoff in connection with the lobbyist’s attempts to acquire GSA-controlled properties, Abramoff took him on a luxury golf trip to Scotland and to London. The jury found that over the span of three years, Safavian made false statements in an attempt to conceal the fact that around the time of the golf trip he aided Abramoff with business before the GSA. The false statements included statements made to a GSA ethics officer and a GSA Office of Inspector General (GSA-OIG) Special Agent as well as falsely certifying a financial disclosure form.

The jury heard evidence at trial that Safavian’s efforts to cover up the assistance he provided Abramoff continued after he left the GSA in November 2004 to become the Administrator for the Office of Federal Procurement Policy at the Office of Management and Budget. The jury found that in May 2005, Safavian made false statements to an FBI Special Agent investigating Abramoff’s lobbying activities. According to evidence introduced at trial, Safavian told the FBI agent that he was unable to assist Abramoff with GSA-related activities around the time of the golf trip because he was a new employee at GSA.

Abramoff pleaded guilty in January 2006 to charges of conspiracy, honest services mail fraud and tax evasion and was sentenced in September 2008 to four years in prison in addition to the 22 months he served prior to the sentencing date. To date, 20 individuals, including lobbyists and public officials, have pleaded guilty, been convicted at trial, or are awaiting trial in connection with the ongoing investigation into the activities of Abramoff and his associates.

The case was prosecuted by Senior Litigation Counsel Nathaniel B. Edmonds and Trial Attorney Albert Stieglitz Jr. of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Trial Attorney Justin V. Shur of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The investigation of this case was led by the FBI with assistance from the GSA-OIG. The ongoing investigation of the Abramoff matter is being led by the FBI.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Have You Heard? Can You Name the First Government Agency on the First Coast to Ban Discrimination Against Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Employees?

Answer: The Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County (AMCD), by unanimous vote at their October 15, 2009 meeting, voted to ban discrimination on the basis of "sexual orientation." The vote was 5-0.

Kudos to AMCD Chair Janice Bequette and Commissioners John Sundeman, Jeanne Moeller, Vivian Browning and Ronnie Radford for supporting the policy change. I salute them.

I am proud of our AMCD for supporting equality and I call upon every other governnental and private employer in St. Johns County to follow their example.

I was proud to help pass a resolution in the American Bar Association House of Delegates in Denver in February 1989 calling for such changes. My mentor, the Honorable Nahum Litt, who was then Chief Judge of the U.S. Department of Labor, was a member of the ABA House of Delegates and he helped lobby fellow judges and delegates to support the resolution, which twice before had been defeated. Numerous states and cities now ban such discrimination. Our Commander in Chief, President Barack Obama has called for ending anti-gay discrimination in the military.

Perspicacity and perseverance always work -- so does optimism.

It is reported by "Out in America" that "since 1990, seven counties and ten cities in Florida have amended their fair employment and housing laws to cover sexual orientation, and/or gender identity or expression. Such laws are in effect in Broward, Leon, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Orange, Palm Beach and Pinellas counties, as well as in the cities of Gulfport, Gainesville, Key West, Lake Worth, Miami Beach, Orlando, Sarasota, St. Petersburg, Tampa and West Palm Beach."

Thus, AMCD is the first governmental agency in the First Coast to respect Gay rights. It will not be the last.

As playwright Tony Kushner wrote in Angels in America, "only in politics does the miraculous occur.”

Thursday, October 15, 2009

REP. JOHN LUIGI MICA's AIRLINE PILOT SAFETY LOOPHOLE PASSES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

House OKs airline safety bill
By Jerry Zremski
BUFFALO NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF
Updated: October 14, 2009, 3:48 PM /

WASHINGTON � The House today approved a sweeping airline safety bill that aims to correct the problems brought to light by the Feb. 12 crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407 in Clarence, which claimed 50 lives.

By a vote of 409 to 11, lawmakers approved legislation that � if eventually agreed to by the Senate � would dramatically boost the amount of flight time a pilot needs to get hired by a commercial airline. The bill also would make it far easier for airlines to see pilots' flight records before they are hired.

In addition, the bill imposes stringent training requirements to make sure pilots know how to operate stall recovery systems and forces airlines to develop fatigue risk management systems for pilots.

"This bill, when enacted into law, will be the most significant increase in raising the standards of pilot qualifications since 1958," when the Federal Aviation Administration was established, said Rep. James L. Oberstar, D-Minn., who chairs the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

The easy passage of the bill strengthens the hand of the families of Flight 3407, who have been fighting for such tough safety measures to be included in a Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill later this year.

Most importantly, the House bill boosts the number of flight hours required for newly hired commercial pilots from 250 hours to 1,500 hours. That increase stems from revelations that the pilot of Flight 3407 reacted inappropriately to the plane's stall warning and that the co-pilot had never flown in icing conditions.

"Being a commercial airline pilot is not an entry-level position," said Rep. Chris Lee, R-Clarence.

At this point, the increase in required flight hours for pilots is not included in an FAA reauthorization bill that's expected to be up for a Senate floor vote later this year, although that bill includes other safety measures.

A House-Senate conference committee is expected to merge that Senate measure with an FAA bill the House approved earlier this year and the new House aviation safety legislation.

The Buffalo area's three House members all pushed for the aviation safety measure.

"The tragedy of Flight 3407 awakened Western New Yorkers to the lack of training and standards in the regional airline industry," said Rep. Louise M. Slaughter, D-Fairport. "Today I'm proud that the House is moving forward with legislation that I believe includes a strong new set of guidelines for improving passenger and crew safety."

The bill requires pilots to have an Airline Transport Pilot license -- and the 1,500 flight hours it requires -- before being hired at a commercial airline.

However, the bill is not quite as strong as it was when it emerged from the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee at the end of July.

Complaints from university aviation programs led committee leaders to add a new section of the bill that would allow the FAA to include university class time in that 1,500-hour flight time requirement if the class time is deemed to provide superior training than actual flying would.

"We are disappointed with the potential loophole in regards to pilot qualifications," said Kevin Kuwik, one of the leading family advocates.
"But, on the whole, the bill contains many positive measures and we will continue to fight for the Airline Transport Pilot license requirement."

Lawmakers stressed, though, that the families had already done much to improve air safety.

"Out of tragedy comes promise for safer air travel for all passengers moving forward," said Rep. Brian Higgins, D-Buffalo. "This bittersweet legislative victory demonstrates the good that can come when a community and government join together to create positive change."

jzremski@buffnews.com

Miami Herald: Crist calls for grand jury on public corruption

Crist calls for grand jury on public corruption

BY MARC CAPUTO and JAY WEAVER
Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau
Responding to a ``rash of crimes'' by public officials, Gov. Charlie Crist announced Wednesday that he wanted to empanel a statewide grand jury to root out corruption.

But while Crist talked tough about the need for reform at a press conference, he refused to discuss his close ties to indicted political player Alan Mendelsohn, a Broward eye doctor who had once falsely claimed he could bribe Crist.

Mendelsohn, who has pleaded not guilty to federal fraud charges, funded attack ads against at least one Crist gubernatorial opponent in 2006, held fundraisers for the then-attorney general and later persuaded Crist to write a personal letter to the University of Florida to admit Mendelsohn's son to medical school.

Crist made Mendelsohn a member of his gubernatorial transition team in 2007.

``What I can air out for you is the concern this administration has for a number of cases. It doesn't center around one case at all,'' Crist said when asked about Mendelsohn.

``Since I have been governor, unfortunately, I have had to remove over 30 people from public office,'' Crist said. ``That's almost one a month. And it's obvious to me that something's wrong with the system.''

The big problem: Money, said Ben Wilcox, executive director of Common Cause Florida, a good-government advocacy group.

``To run for office, you have to raise so much money, too much money,'' Wilcox said, ``and the ones who want to give it are special interests whose bottom line is to influence public policy.''

Wilcox said that, with such big money at stake, it's inevitable that questionable activity surfaces.

Crist has set fundraising records, pulling in $6.7 million in contributions since announcing his U.S. Senate candidacy in May. He is scheduled to appear Oct. 30 at an Arizona fundraiser with that state's former governor, Fife Symington, who was convicted in 1997 on federal fraud charges. His conviction was overturned and President Clinton later pardoned him.

Aside from Mendelsohn, two other Crist fundraisers have drawn scrutiny:

• Harry Sergeant III, Crist's college fraternity brother and fundraiser, employed a foreign national who allegedly gave illegal campaign contributions to Crist through an intermediary listed as ``H.S.'' in a federal indictment.

• Sergio Pino stepped down in 2006 as Crist's campaign finance chairman amid a grand jury probe into whether he raised funds illegally. Pino was never charged.

With back-to-back scandals, Broward's overnight reputation as the state's corruption capital is built on a series of sensational cases filed in federal court last month that charge several politicians and public figures with fraud and other offenses.

• Mendelsohn, a Hollywood eye doctor and fundraiser, was charged in a 32-count indictment with manipulating a major contributor to give his political action committees more than $2 million on the basis of false promises.

Mendelsohn is accused of illegally spending at least $624,000 on himself, his mistress and politicians -- including funneling $87,000 to an unnamed former elected official.

The formidable GOP fundraiser also is accused of conning a Fort Lauderdale viatical insurance executive, Joel Steinger, into donating more than $1.5 million based on Mendelsohn's claim that he bribed Crist and other officials to shut down state and federal investigations into Steinger's company, Mutual Benefits Corp.

Prosecutors say Mendelsohn fabricated everything to boost his reputation as a Tallahassee insider with clout and connections.

• Broward School Board member Beverly Gallagher is accused of accepting $12,500 from FBI agents posing as consultants for contractors who were trying to land school construction projects. The money was in exchange for her lobbying on behalf of a glass company seeking subcontracting work on a $71 million renovation project at Hollywood Hills High School.

At a November 2007 social event, Gallagher spoke with the undercover FBI agent posing as the glass company's representative. Three months later, Gallagher met with the agent, who said the firm was having trouble getting pre-qualified for a contract. He asked if he could hire her as a ``consultant.''

Gallagher agreed, the complaint says, helping the company set up a meeting with Michael Garretson, the school district's deputy construction superintendent, so the glass company could get pre-qualified. Garretson is not named in the complaint.

The undercover agent told Gallagher he was paid $4,000 by the glass company, which he split with Gallagher at a restaurant; He gave Gallagher a day planner stuffed with the cash, which she put ``in a plastic bag in which she had placed leftovers from her meal,'' the complaint said.

According to the complaint, Gallagher later influenced a schools committee to recommend a particular construction company for the Hollywood High renovation project. The undercover agent told Gallagher he was paying her for ``hooking up'' his glass company for subcontracting work on the big job. She agreed.

• Broward Commissioner Josephus Eggelletion allegedly helped three men launder $23,000 collected as part of a Ponzi scheme. The others arrested were Ron Owens and Joel Williams, both Broward businessmen. The third defendant is Bahamian attorney Sidney Cambridge. The allegations against Eggelletion are not related to his public office.

In 2006, undercover agents told Eggelletion they were interested in opening an offshore bank account for a ``nonexistent European, high-yield investment fraud scheme that was sending out `made up' statements to clients,'' the criminal complaint says.

The politician said he had contacts in the Bahamas. He and the others helped set up the bank account in the Bahamas to wire $900,000 derived from the alleged Ponzi scheme, the complaint said; Eggelletion was to get kickbacks from the deal.

In February 2008, Eggelletion met Owens and took a black leather day planner containing $15,000 cash -- Eggelletion's partial share of the proceeds, the complaint said. To establish their relationship with Eggelletion, undercover FBI agents donated $5,000 to the commissioner's private golf foundation.

• Fitzroy Salesman, while serving as a Miramar commissioner, accepted $5,840 from FBI agents posing as contractors attempting to land business with the city of Miramar, the complaint says.

An FBI undercover agent and a cooperating witness met with Salesman in April 2006 to get construction work. According to the complaint, Salesman accepted an envelope containing $1,000 from the agent and then made a phone call to a person Salesman said was a high-ranking Miramar city official.

The complaint said Salesman asked the city official if he had any no-bid $50,000 jobs available, and made an appointment with the official for that month, adding he would bring the person he thought was a contractor.

Salesman told the contractor that the city official ``owes me'' because he had gotten him his job and raises in the past, the complaint said. That city official arranged for the contractor to meet another official regarding the design and construction of a gazebo project that had been destroyed by Hurricane Wilma. Salesman also paved the way for the contractor to do renovation work on a municipal gym, the complaint says.

• Two Broward businessmen are charged with conspiring to pay $150,000 to unnamed Miramar officials in return for municipal construction work, a complaint says. Arrest warrants issued in late September named Celestine Skippy Aniekwu, a project manager for Gulf Building Corp. in Fort Lauderdale, and Luke Facarazzo Jr., president of Luke's Landscaping in Hollywood.

They're accused of scheming with FBI undercover agents posing as asset managers for a Northeastern construction firm seeking municipal work in Miramar.

No Miramar officials have been named or charged in connection with the arrests. Facarazzo surrendered to authorities and was released on bond. But Aniekwu is being sought by federal authorities. He's recorded in the FBI sting operation as saying he paid $50,000 to one Miramar official in November 2008, according to the complaint.

The official was not identified. FBI officials are investigating whether he paid that money to any official.

Marc Caputo can be reached at mcaputo@MiamiHerald.com



© 2009 Miami Herald Media Company. All Rights Reserved.

Florida Sun-Sentinel -- Crist calls for statewide corruption grand jury

South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com

By Josh Hafenbrack and Paula McMahon

Tallahassee Bureau

7:19 PM EDT, October 14, 2009

TALLAHASSEE

Citing an apparent "culture of corruption" taking root in South Florida, Gov. Charlie Crist on Wednesday called for a statewide grand jury to take a sweeping look at honesty-in-government in Florida.

The panel will have the authority to indict public officials and make recommendations for changes in state law, the governor said.

"Today we take a stand to root out public corruption," Crist said, adding his action sprang from "an unsettling string of crime, unconscionable violations of the public trust by public officials, predominantly in South Florida."

Crist called for the grand jury -- comprised of 18 citizens who will meet in secret -- in a petition to the state Supreme Court, which is expected to comply with the request. The grand jury will be scheduled to meet for one year, meaning its findings could be released just before the 2010 election. Crist is a candidate for U.S. Senate.

Democratic Party spokesman Eric Jotkoff questioned Crist's motives for calling for the grand jury, calling it a "half measure" since the governor has not moved for a similar probe into dealings in the Republican-run state Legislature. Earlier this year, House Speaker Ray Sansom, R-Destin, stepped down from his post amid a scandal involving a Republican Party fundraiser. He is under indictment, although most charges have been dropped.

While the grand jury will be statewide in scope, South Florida has emerged as an epicenter for public corruption. This month, Broward County Commissioner Josephus Eggelletion and School Board member Beverly Gallagher were arrested, as was Republican fundraiser and Hollywood eye doctor Alan Mendelsohn, who served on Crist's gubernatorial transition team. Since 2007, three Palm Beach County commissioners landed in jail in a federal corruption sting.

All those cases, however, were pursued by federal prosecutors, not the state. Federal authorities have more far-reaching tools to combat corruption, including the federal "honest services" law that requires public officials to act in the best interests of their constituents.

Broward State Attorney Mike Satz and his Palm Beach County counterpart, Michael McAuliffe, said state corruption laws are too weak and vague to be effective.

McAuliffe said current laws fail to give "clear notice to public officials when they cross the line." Many state anti-corruption laws that do exist are third-degree felonies that involve no jail time, he said.

"I would like to see a [statewide grand jury] focus on the state legislative front to give us new laws so the 20 state attorneys around Florida can be more effective anti-corruption crusaders," McAuliffe said.

In Tallahassee, statewide prosecutor William Shepherd stressed that the grand jury ordered by Crist is not meant to affect ongoing federal investigations in South Florida. In fact, the statewide grand jury will cover new ground, he said, taking a "broad-based look at our government, identifying shortcomings. ... Public service is no blank check for corrupt self-dealing."

In Broward, the GOP moneyman Mendelsohn is accused of siphoning money from the $2 million he raised for political campaigns in the last decade to pay a mistress and other personal expenses. Gallagher, the School Board member, is alleged to have pocketed a bribe that she slipped into a leftover bag at a restaurant. And ex-commissioner Eggelletion got snared for his alleged involvement in a money-laundering scheme.

Pointing to the scope of corruption in Florida, Crist noted he's suspended or removed about 30 people from public office since becoming governor in January 2007. That includes former Hollywood Commissioner Keith Wasserstrom and former Deerfield Beach Mayor Al Capellini.

Critics, though, wonder whether a year-long grand jury is the best route, given the state Legislature already has the power to stiffen corruption laws in the 2010 legislative session, which starts in March.

Florida has had 18 statewide grand juries, designed to combat organized criminal activity that crosses county lines. Recent juries have looked into gangs, check-cashing fraud schemes, identity theft and illicit prescription drug sales. Often, results have been mixed because they have authority to make suggestions but not take final action.

What's more, Florida leaders have known for years that state public corruption laws lack teeth. In 1999, then-Gov. Jeb Bush created a task force that recommended a broader definition of public corruption and a stiffer, 15-year maximum sentence for bribery. Even with Bush pushing the idea, a watered-down version didn't pass until 2003.

Bids to further strengthen the state's corruption laws await legislative action. Sen. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach, is pushing legislation to extend the federal "honest services" law to state prosecutors, among other bills.

"I appreciate Crist doing the grand jury, but frankly, what we need is political will," said Gelber, a former prosecutor running for attorney general in 2010. "We don't need to wait a year. We have the ideas now."

Josh Hafenbrack can be reached at jhafenbrack@sun-sentinel.com or 850-224-6214.

Copyright © 2009, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

JOHN LUIGI MICA MAKES PIG'S BREAKFAST, FOISTING OFF SAFETY LOOPHOLE ON AIRLINE PASSENGERS



MICA wants pilots to have 1500 hours experience (unless you go to Embry-Riddle or other aviation university). MICA's playing politics with pilot and airline safety. His sneaky, last-minute amendment succeeded -- he made a pig's breakfast of airline safety.

Time for him to go.

Buffalo News: House vote set today on training for pilots -- But new provision revises flight hours



By Jerry Zremski
News Washington Bureau Chief
Updated: October 14, 2009, 8:55 AM /

WASHINGTON — The House is expected to vote today on new airline safety legislation — but because of a backroom deal among lawmakers, the measure is not quite as tough as the families of Flight 3407 victims would have liked.

The final version of the bill, unveiled Tuesday, includes an entirely new section aimed at placating collegiate aviation programs. The provision allows an undetermined amount of university class time to be counted toward the 1,500 "flight hours" the bill would require before a pilot could join a passenger airline.

The requirement still would rise sharply from the current 250 hours.

But the behind-the-scenes addition of that new language — included at the request of a powerful Florida lawmaker whose district includes a prominent flight school — didn't exactly thrill those who lost loved ones in the February crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407 in Clarence Center.

"This is kind of out of the blue," said Susan Bourque, whose sister, Beverly Eckert, was among the 50 people who died in the crash.

Indeed, even some of the bill's co-sponsors — such as Rep. Chris Lee, R-Clarence — did not know the changes had been made.

"I'm a little mystified," Lee said. "I'm always surprised with the ways of Washington."

Lee and the Flight 3407 families stressed, though, that even with the changes, the bill represents an extraordinarily strong effort to bolster flight safety.

The legislation also would impose stringent training requirements to make sure pilots know how to operate stall recovery systems and would force airlines to develop fatigue risk management systems for pilots.

Democrats and Republicans on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee worked together on the bill, which the committee approved unanimously July 30, just a day after it was introduced.

But Embry-Riddle University and other universities with aviation programs later complained that the 1,500-flight-hour requirement would cause prospective students to shun them in favor of local flight instructors who offer plenty of hands-on experience.

In response, Rep. John L. Mica of Florida — the top Republican on the committee, which oversees aviation, and the congressman from the district that includes Embry-Riddle's campus — went to work.

Negotiations with Rep. Jerry F. Costello, an Illinois Democrat and chairman of the aviation subcommittee, produced the compromise, which allows the head of the Federal Aviation Administration to decide how much classroom time can be counted as flight time under the 1,500-hour requirement. The classroom time would have to "enhance safety more" than would additional hours in the cockpit, the insertion says.

FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt and other pilots who testified at a House hearing last month voiced strong support for a 1,500-hour fight-time requirement, which has reduced the concerns of the Flight 3407 families.

"I'm a little bit nervous about this," said Mike Loftus, a former Continental pilot whose daughter, Maddy, died in the crash. "If it were anybody other than Randy Babbitt in that job, I would be worried" that the flight-hours requirement would be genuinely weakened.

Only two weeks ago, Mica called Bourque to reiterate his support for the 1,500-hour flight time requirement.

Neither Justin Harclerode, Mica's spokesman, nor Tim Brady, dean of Embry-Riddle's College of Aviation, returned calls seeking comment on the new language in the bill.

The provision raises a key question about the legislative process: Can senior lawmakers insert language into a bill that has already been approved by the committee?

"In essence, yes," said Jim Berard, a spokesman for the Transportation Committee.

Such last-minute insertions are not unusual. Lee cited that fact, and the flight-safety insertion, as reasons for his push to require that all legislation be made public 72 hours before a final vote.

The new provision conflicts with legislation introduced last week by Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., which does not give the flight schools a break on the 1,500-hour flight time requirement.

"There is no question that we should be raising the training requirements for commercial pilots," Schumer said. "The Senate's version of this legislation goes right to the heart of the problem, and I will work with the conference committee to put the Senate's stronger language in the final bill."

The Flight 3407 families will push for that, said Kuwik, who called the insertion of the new language into the House bill "our introduction to politics."

jzremski@buffnews.com

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

USDOJ Press Release: Minneapolis Packaged-Ice Company Agrees to Plead Guilty and Three Former Executives Plead to Customer Allocation Conspiracy

Department of Justice Press Release
white spacer
For Immediate Release
October 13, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Southern District of Ohio
Contact: (937) 225-2910

Minneapolis Packaged-Ice Company Agrees to Plead Guilty and Three Former Executives Plead Guilty to Customer Allocation Conspiracy -- Company Agrees To Pay $9 Million Criminal Fine

WASHINGTON—A packaged-ice company, headquartered in St. Paul, Minn., has agreed to plead guilty and to pay a $9 million criminal fine for allocating customers, the Department of Justice announced today. In addition, three of the company’s former executives pleaded guilty for their roles in the conspiracy to allocate customers.

According to a one-count felony charge filed under seal on Sept. 10, 2009, and unsealed today in the U.S. District Court in Cincinnati, Arctic Glacier International Inc. engaged in a conspiracy to suppress and eliminate competition by allocating packaged-ice customers in the Detroit metropolitan area and southeastern Michigan, beginning Jan. 1, 2001, and continuing until at least July 17, 2007. Under the plea agreement, which must be approved by the court, Arctic Glacier has agreed to cooperate with the Department’s ongoing investigation.

According to separate one-count felony charges, also filed under seal on Sept. 10, 2009, and unsealed today in the U.S. District Court in Cincinnati, Frank Larson, Arctic Glacier’s former senior vice president of operations, and Keith Corbin, the company’s former vice president of sales and marketing, participated in the same conspiracy beginning at least as early as March 1, 2005, and continuing at least until July 17, 2007. According to an additional one-count felony charge filed under seal on Sept. 10, 2009, in the U.S. District Court in Cincinnati and unsealed today, Gary Cooley, the company’s former vice president of sales and marketing, also participated in the conspiracy from at least as early as June 1, 2006, until July 17, 2007. Under the three separate plea agreements, which must be approved by the court, the former executives have agreed to cooperate with the Department’s ongoing investigation.

In court documents, the Department said that the three former executives and Arctic Glacier, conspired with another packaged-ice competitor to allocate packaged-ice customers in southeastern Michigan and the Detroit metropolitan areas. As a part of the conspiracy, Arctic Glacier, its former executives and other co-conspirators exchanged information for the purpose of monitoring and enforcing adherence to the agreed customer allocations and refrained from competing for the allocated customers.

Arctic Glacier, Larson, Corbin and Cooley are each charged with allocating packaged-ice customers in violation of the Sherman Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $1 million fine for individuals and a $100 million fine for corporations. The maximum fines may be increased to twice the gain derived from the crime or twice the loss suffered by the victims if either of those amounts is greater than the Sherman Act maximum fines.

These charges stem from an ongoing antitrust investigation into the packaged-ice industry. As a part of the same investigation, Home City Ice Company pleaded guilty on June 17, 2008, for its participation in a conspiracy to allocate customers and territories in the packaged-ice industry. The investigation is being conducted by the Antitrust Division’s Cleveland Field Office and by FBI offices in Ann Arbor, Mich.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Dallas, Texas; and Cincinnati and Toledo, Ohio.

Anyone with information concerning customer or territorial allocation agreements, or other anticompetitive conduct in the packaged-ice industry, should contact the Cleveland Field Office of the Antitrust Division at 216-687-8400.

U.S. REP. JOHN LUIGI MICA MET FIVE TIMES WITH TURKISH LOBBYISTS IN 2007

See below. He also met with lobbyists for the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Interesting....

jaxpoliticsonline

Jacksonville-Area Congressmen Have Interesting Foreign Ties
By Jack Adams

There's an interesting new website that is making waves in Washington, DC. Foreignlobbying.org is focused solely on bringing sunshine to the interactions of members of Congress with lobbyists of foreign governments. Not merely limited to lobbyist interactions, the site also looks at campaign contributions from lobbyists who represent foreign governments. According to the site, Northeast Florida's US Representatives and Senators appear to have some rather interesting connections.

Ander Crenshaw, the reliably conservative Republican representing District 4, has met with lobbyists representing foreign nations, some of whom would hardly be seen as allies by most conservatives--Azerbaijan (9 interactions since late-2007), Egypt (1 interaction), Libya (6 interactions) Turkey (1 interaction) and Egypt (1 interaction). Crenshaw also accepted a 2008 campaign contribution from a lobbyist for Cassidy & Associates, a firm that represents Pakistan.

Corrine Brown, the liberal Democratic stalwart in District 3, appears to have a fondness for a less controversial foreign government--Morocco. She met with lobbyists representing the country 6 times in 2008. It should be noted that all of those visits were said to be in regards to the plight of Western Sahara refugees. Brown has also met once with lobbyists representing Egypt and Azerbaijan. She has met with representatives of the government of Republika Srpska 6 times. Brown has also accepted campaign donations from 5 lobbyists who represent foreign nations in 2008, including representatives of Egypt, Japan and New Zealand.

Bill Nelson (D), Florida's Senior Senator, has met with lobbyists representing a number of countries, including Turkey, Qatar, Haiti, Ethiopia, the United Arab Emirates, Dubai and Korea. His political contributions include lobbyists who represent Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and New Zealand.

Former Senator Mel Martinez (R), who recently resigned before completing his term to join a Washington, DC law firm, met with lobbyists representing the United Arab Emirates, Morocco, Egypt, Turkey, Iraq, the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Equatorial Guinea, Mexico, Serbia and Taiwan. Martinez accepted a number of campaign contributions from lobbyists representing foreign governments, including representatives of Poland, the United Arab Emirates and Montenegro.

John Mica, the Republican Representative in Florida's 7th District, appears solely focused on the nation of Turkey, meeting with lobbyists 5 times in 2007 about the country. His donor list includes lobbyists representing New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates.

Cliff Stearns, a Republican who represents the 6th District of Florida, met with lobbyists from Azerbaijan, Turkey and Morocco. He accepted campaign contributions from lobbyists representing Pakistan.

Ander Crenshaw appears to have the most intriguing visitor list of all of Northeast Florida's Congressmen. The nation that seems to have captured his attention the most is the relatively obscure former Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan. Interestingly enough, Azerbaijan produces roughly 800,000 barrels of oil a day. Crenshaw's close ties to the oil industry were highlighted in a 2008 Folio article by Billie Bussard. Crenshaw also frequently met with lobbyists representing Libya, a nation that until very recently was considered by the US as a country that was a "sponsor of terrorism." Libya's economy, of course, is almost solely dependent on oil production.

Abel Harding contributed to this story.

Ralph Nader Calls It "The Deferred Bribe"

So disgraced ex-Senator Mel Martinez (R-FL) is going to advise clients on government affairs, litigation, financial services, real estate, energy, defense, infrastructure development and other matters, according to a DLA Piper press release.

He can now receive what Ralph Nader would called "the deferred bribe."

See below.

POLITICO: Martinez heads straight to K Street

Martinez heads straight to K Street
By: Kenneth P. Vogel
September 24, 2009 07:54 PM EST

It used to be that lawmakers were coy about any ideas they had about heading for K Street, waiting until their terms ended before announcing they were beginning a more lucrative career.

But in recent years, members of Congress planning to become lobbyists have not been able to wait. In fact, when Florida Republican Mel Martinez this week accepted a position with the mega-lobbying and law firm DLA Piper — less than two weeks after resigning from the Senate — it brought to five the number of former lawmakers since 2007 who have abandoned their constituents midterm and almost immediately resurfaced with lobbying firms, according to data provided by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

“This used to be considered unacceptable, but it really is a growing phenomenon,” said Meredith McGehee, who lobbies for stricter lobbying and ethics regulations for the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center. “The reality is that the money has gotten so big and so tempting these days, that I think a lot of these members are saying, ‘I don’t think I’ll go back into political office, first of all, and, the money is just too big to turn down.’”

Martinez was traveling in Brazil and could not be reached for comment, but in February, his office insisted he would serve until the end of his term in January 2011 before retiring from Congress to spend more time with his family. Last month, though, he reversed course, announcing he would step down as soon as Florida Gov. Charlie Crist appointed a successor.

That prompted some quick recruitment outreach by DLA partner Ignacio Sanchez, who has been active in Republican politics and knew Martinez — a former trial lawyer, Orange County, Fla., mayor, secretary of Housing and Urban Development and Republican National Committee chairman — from Florida legal circles and their shared interest in Cuban-American issues.

“When he announced he was going to retire and let the governor appoint someone to finish out the term, I immediately talked to him and said, ‘You really ought to consider looking at our firm. I think you would really do well, and we would love to have you,’” Sanchez told the Blog of LegalTimes.

Sanchez, who was traveling with Martinez and also could not be reached, told the BLT that

Martinez met with folks from DLA before heformally stepped down from the Senate but stressed that the firm extended “no financial terms, no offer, no details” to Martinez until after he resigned Sept. 9.

“We didn’t have any discussions with him until he decided to leave the Senate, and we didn’t conduct any negotiations with him of any sort until he had left the Senate,” said John Merrigan, a DLA partner.

Merrigan pointed out that DLA has employed many former members of Congress, including former House Majority Leaders Dick Gephardt and Dick Armey, and employs ethics experts to ensure compliance with congressional rules and restrictions.

A 2007 law requires members of Congress to disclose negotiations with prospective employers.

The Secretary of the Senate’s office, which would be the repository for such disclosures, had not received one from Martinez as of Thursday.

But Sanchez’s outreach would not have invoked the rules, said Brett Kappel, a lobbying lawyer, though Craig Holman, who lobbies for stricter disclosure requirements for the nonpartisan group Public Citizen, said the rules leave wiggle room.

The pre-employment negotiation provision was prompted partly by former Louisiana Rep. Billy Tauzin’s acceptance of a job heading the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America in 2005, a year after he helped write a law that expanded Medicare payments for prescription drug, which redounded to Big Pharma’s benefit.

Tauzin, a Republican, waited until after his term expired to take the PhRMA job, which reportedly paid him $2.5 million a year. But in December 2007, then-Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) left Congress with years left in his term to create a lobbying firm, while Rep. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) stepped down in November 2007, only to accept a position in 2008 with the lobbying firm Dickstein Shapiro.

In 2008, Rep. Al Wynn (D-Md.), who was defeated in a primary, and Rep. Richard Baker (R-La.) left before their terms expired to take lobbying jobs — Baker with the Managed Funds Association: and Wynn with Dickstein Shapiro.

Lobbyists’ salaries are not public information, but last year, Martinez’s new firm DLA, which registered nearly 50 lobbyists, reported more than $11.8 million in lobbying revenue, which doesn’t include legal and consultation fees unrelated to lobbying.

Martinez, who is barred from lobbying his former colleagues for two years, will advise clients on government affairs, litigation, financial services, real estate, energy, defense, infrastructure development and other matters, according to a DLA press release announcing his arrival.

In the release, DLA’s Global Chairman Francis B. Burch Jr., boasted of Martinez’s clout “on both Capitol Hill and in his home state of Florida,” as well as his “significant network of international contacts, particularly in Spain and in Latin America, which will be a major area of growth and expansion for DLA Piper over the next year.”

According to the firm, DLA has an office in Tampa, and Martinez will spend the bulk of his time working from Florida.

© 2009 Capitol News Company, LLC

DLA Piper Law Firm Press Release: "US Senator Mel Martinez joins DLA Piper"

News & Insights > News
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News
29 Sep 2009
US Senator Mel Martinez joins DLA Piper
Former Florida Senator and HUD Secretary brings decades of legal and legislative experience and expands the firm’s reach into Latin America
Press Release
DLA Piper announced today that former United States Senator Mel Martinez has joined the firm’s Government Affairs practice as a partner. Martinez was a member of the United States Senate representing Florida from January 2005 to September 9, 2009. He brings extensive legislative and legal experience to the firm and will advise clients on government affairs, litigation, financial services, real estate, energy, defense, infrastructure development and other matters.

Senator Martinez comes to DLA Piper with a career spanning both the public and private sectors. In addition to his Senate service, he previously served as United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Mayor of Orange County, Florida and General Chairman of the Republican National Committee. Martinez also has over 25 years in private legal practice, with a focus on civil litigation. In his legal practice, he conducted numerous trials in state and federal courts throughout Florida involving a wide array of product liability and insurance coverage matters.

“Senator Martinez has served the federal government as a US Senator and as Secretary of the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, as well as the State of Florida proudly over a long and decorated career in public service,” said Francis B. Burch Jr., Global Chairman of DLA Piper. “Senator Martinez is highly respected on both Capitol Hill and in his home state of Florida. He also has vast experience and a significant network of international contacts, particularly in Spain and in Latin America which will be a major area of growth and expansion for DLA Piper over the next year.”

“DLA Piper’s global footprint and international networks provide me with the ideal platform to return to private legal practice, while allowing me to stay close to home and my family,” said Martinez. “The firm has market-leading practices in areas like financial services, energy, real estate and defense, where I know I can make a significant contribution. Working in DLA Piper’s offices in Florida, I look forward to helping the firm grow its practice in Latin America and collaborating with a team of distinguished lawyers and professionals with the highest level of legislative knowledge and diplomatic skill.”

A Preeminent Government Affairs Capability

DLA Piper’s Government Affairs group is well positioned to counsel clients in a wide range of legislative and administrative advocacy matters including antitrust competition and trade regulations, electronic commerce and privacy, federal affairs and legislative practice, international trade and state affairs, among others. Co-chaired by former Michigan Governor and former United States Ambassador to Canada Jim Blanchard and former Assistant Attorney General at the Department of Justice Thomas M. Boyd, the Government Affairs group includes lawyers and other professionals who have held senior elected, appointed and staff positions in all branches of federal and state governments and possess the necessary knowledge and insight to guide clients through successful advocacy campaigns before legislative and executive branch decision makers as well as independent federal agencies.

About Mel Martinez

Martinez has a distinguished and diversified career in public office. As a United States Senator, Martinez focused on numerous public policy and legislative issues, serving in leadership roles on numerous Senate committees including Ranking Member of the Sea Power Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee, Chairman of the Subcommittee on African Affairs of the Foreign Relations Committee and Ranking Member of the Special Committee on Aging. In addition, he was also a member of the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs as well as Energy and Natural Resources committees. While in office, Martinez also served as General Chairman of the Republican National Committee from January through September 2008, leading the transition in leadership following the 2006 election cycle. He was the first Cuban-American to serve in the United States Senate, and the first Cuban-American to chair a major party.

Martinez also served as the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development from January 2001 through December 2003. Following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, he was instrumental in the rebuilding efforts of lower Manhattan, authorizing $400 million to retain and attract residents to Lower Manhattan, and was also one of the first public officials to call for stronger regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. He also established the America’s Affordable Communities Initiative, pursued reform to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and revived the Interagency Council on Homelessness.

Senator Martinez also served as Mayor of Orange County, Florida from November 1998 through January 2001, where he managed a budget of $2.8 billion as well as a staff of 9,000 employees.

Prior to his public service, Martinez was in private practice for 25 years.

Martinez earned a B.A. and J.D. from Florida State University.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Federal Trade Commission Press Release: FTC Remedies Interlocking Directorate Between Google and Apple

Statement of FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz

Regarding the Announcement that Arthur D. Levinson Has Resigned from Google’s Board
On October 12, 2009, Google announced that Arthur D. Levinson, the former Chief Executive Officer of Genentech and a member of the corporate boards of both Google and Apple, is stepping down from Google’s board. Earlier in the year, Apple announced that Eric E. Schmidt, CEO of Google, who had also been a director of both firms, was stepping down from the Apple board.

“Google, Apple, and Mr. Levinson should be commended for recognizing that overlapping board members between competing companies raise serious antitrust issues and for their willingness to resolve our concerns without the need for litigation,” said FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz. “Beyond this matter, we will continue to monitor companies that share board members and take enforcement actions where appropriate.”

Section 8 of the Clayton Act (“interlocking directorates”) prohibits, with certain exceptions, one person from serving as a director or officer of two competing corporations.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Office of Public Affairs
202-326-2180

Board considers $86K sound wall

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009 at 1:27 am by Shaun Ryan
By PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com

St. Augustine City Commissioners said Monday that they’ll consider approving a 14-foot-high, 150-foot-long sound-dampening wall at Hamilton D. Upchurch Skate Park on Red Cox Drive to help eliminate the irritating “ker-thump” of skateboards for nearby homeowners.
The $86,000 wall would reduce the sound level by nine to 12 decibels. But the commission declined to make a decision Monday to go forward.
Chief Operations Officer John Regan had recommended installing a wall that high but told the board he’d like more scientific research about how well it could work.
“If the board erects a 14-foot wall, changes the demographics of the park (to children only) and keeps the metal rails off, you’ll have a facility that will be compliant (with the city’s noise ordinance),” he said.
The commission’s frustration with the wall’s cost was evident Monday.
Mayor Joe Boles said, “This has been a nightmare from the beginning. I’ll never enter into a public-private partnership again. Not while I’m here.”
That money could have been used to help pave Riberia Street, he said.
The park was initially hailed as a successful partnership between the city and private entities that wanted to support skateboarding.
But homeowners on Flamingo Drive complained for months that the constant crash of skateboards hitting the park’s concrete surface ruins the peace of their homes and yards.
Homeowner Patricia Pribisco said, “A lot of us were against it.”
Her neighbor, John D. Hodgin, said the city’s sound tests showed that even on a slow skating day, the meter at his house recorded 160 “impulse events” per hour.
“People who speak for the park are well-meaning, but only the families who live near the park know what it’s like to live there.”
But the city sold their neighborhood on the skate park by promising an eight-foot earthen berm that would eliminate noise. The berm was never built and Regan said Monday that recent sound engineering tests show that a berm wouldn’t have worked anyway.
Commissioner Leanna Freeman said, “Somebody designed the park without a noise barrier.”
Vice Mayor Errol Jones said, “Yes, but we signed off on it. We approved it.”
Boles said, “It was sold to the community as a beginner’s skate park. It has been anything other than a beginner’s park. It’s a hangout. If you’re old enough to drive, drive to Treaty Park. If we had put it together as we originally proposed, it wouldn’t be the nuisance it is.”
Boles, a skater himself once, said he wanted an age restriction limiting it to youngsters.
But City Attorney Ron Brown said that would be difficult to enforce.
Jones said, “I’m tired of our city passing ordinances that we’re not prepared to enforce.”
Regan said the city had imposed a budget of $75,000 for a noise-dampening wall.
“This is a very difficult engineering problem,” he said. “But it’s not that difficult a construction project. The higher we make it the more it will be in compliance (with city noise ordinances).”
After the commission’s decision not to make a decision, Flamingo Drive resident Susan Hill said, “We hope the process will continue. An efficient noise berm would be in everyone’s best interest.”

Signature filed bogus lawsuit, it is dismissed

See below. Our County Commissioners wisely decided to have County staff manage our St. Augustine Ampitheatre, and they've done a fine job.

The County Attorney was right -- Signature had no breach of contract claim.
Signature also had no experience running entertainment venues -- it was a startup company that thought it could throw its weight around to take the public fisc.

Kudos to the County Recreation staff for proving that government can be run more like a business and meet peoples' needs -- the ampitheatre is successful and has brought new visitors to our area.

Signature got no relief from the Courts -- case dismissed.

Judge tosses Signature suit -- Traynor: 'No breach of contract' found in group's fight over design of amphitheatre

RICHARD PRIOR
richard.prior@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 10/10/09


A St. Johns County judge has decided there was no breach of contract over management of the St. Augustine Amphitheatre because there was no contract.

Signature Entertainment, of Ponte Vedra Beach, thought it had a deal with the county, but, instead, was responding to a "request for proposal and not an invitation to bid," Circuit Judge J. Michael Traynor wrote in his Oct. 6 ruling.

"(T)he selection of (Signature Entertainment) was simply an agreement to negotiate a contract and not the forming of a contract between the parties."

Traynor dismissed Signature's complaint "with prejudice," meaning it cannot be refiled.

That hasn't necessarily discouraged Bruce Lucker, the company's president and CEO.

Lucker said Friday that his attorney is examining the decision, and, "We are evaluating our legal options."

He said he was "not concerned, but surprised" that the judge had ruled he couldn't refile the complaint.

Not surprisingly, St. Johns County Attorney Patrick McCormack was pleased with the ruling.

"The county is gratified for the well reasoned decision rendered by the Court in this matter," McCormack said. "Furthermore, taxpayer dollars will be saved."

As it dismissed Signature's proposal, the County Commission decided in March 2007 to have the Parks and Recreation Department manage the Amphitheatre.

According to the County's financial projection, Signature would bring in more money than the County could but would also have more expenses.

The expectation was that Signature would lose $341,000 in its first year, while a County-run facility would lose $116,000.

Signature notified the County Commission in April 2007 that it was due $575,000 in "expenses and lost profits" after the company was dropped as the proposed manager.

"We were not treated fairly, honestly or ethically (by the County Commission)," Lucker said at the time. "We were told to negotiate a contract, and we hired an attorney (who) negotiated every single segment of that contract.

"We spent an inordinate amount of money."

Under the anticipated terms of an agreement, Signature was to be paid $96,000 per year for the first five years of managing the Amphitheatre. Five years of lost salary made up most of the damage amount, Lucker said at the time.

Legal fees made up the rest.

McCormack cautioned the company two years ago not to pursue a suit, saying its claims were "without legal merit."

"We tried to avoid litigation here," McCormack said Friday. "We presented to them the reasons why we felt that the County had a strong position.

"My opinion at the time was, 'Just say no.' I didn't think they had a claim.

"But we hired outside counsel to review the matter, to basically give us a second opinion. And we invited them to get a second opinion."


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George Gardner's St. Augustine Report: VIC ventilation errors - who pays?

George Gardner's St. Augustine Report: VIC ventilation errors - who pays?

Commissioners approved $100,000 for immediate remediation and the hiring of a construction litigation attorney to oversee who's going to pay for an apparent design flaw that forced closing of our Visitor Center (VIC) restrooms until January.
"This project was handled by outside contractors," City Attorney Ron Brown told commissioners, "and right now there's a lot of finger-pointing among them."
A ceiling collapse over the restrooms revealed excessive moisture in the overhead ventilation and air-conditioning systems. While corrections are made, portable restrooms have been placed outside the VIC. More upscale temporary facilities are expected to be set later this week.

Department of Nincompoopery

Well now. The VIC was rebuilt in 2006. Now, "hot air had been hitting cold duct work, creating moisture, which in turn dissolved dry wall and encouraged the mold."

Ceilings over the bathrooms collapsed. People could have been hurt, or killed.

It's going to cost us $100,000 to fix? I don't reckon. The City needs to tell the architect/engineer to notify their professional liability insurance carrier. Contractors generally do what the architect says to do -- that's why they're called contractors and not architects.

Who was the architect? Who picked 'em and why?

Isn't this architectural negligence, when "hot air [is] hitting cold duct work, creating moisture, which in turn dissolved dry wall and encouraged the mold?"

We don't trust the City of St. Augustine to fix a building without ceilings collapsing on the bathrooms.

Think of Government House, a true treasure. We don't want the City of St. Augustine to muck up this federally-reconstructed building with more mismanagement.

We need a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway.

We don't need to place our history ihn the hands of those City burghers who perpetrate three screwups every month.

Whether dumping solid waste in our Old City Reservoir or semi-treated sewage effluent in our saltwater marsh, or building a skate park that did not include a sound barrier berm, or discriminating against African-Americans with environmental racism and Apartheid employment policies, the City of St. Augustine is badly managed and badly needs reforming.

What do you reckon?

Ceilings collapse in visitor center bathrooms

PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 10/08/09


An unexpected — and unfortunate — configuration of the Visitor and Information Center’s ventilation system has led to moisture buildup in the attic, causing bathroom ceilings to collapse and spurring the growth of black mold.

The city closed both VIC rest rooms Wednesday and said repairs could take three to four months.

John Regan, chief operating officer, said the building’s heating, ventilation and air conditioning system is “incompatible” with the space where it operates.

“We want to preserve indoor air quality, so we’re isolating the bathrooms from the rest of the VIC as a precaution,” Regan said. “We don’t know what the cost will be, and we don’t know all the causes. We have not come to any conclusions.”

Nine portable toilets now stand adjacent to the VIC. They’ll soon be replaced by “high-quality portable rest rooms” for the coming busy tourist system, he said.

Regan said hot air had been hitting cold duct work, creating moisture, which in turn dissolved dry wall and encouraged the mold.

Parts of the men’s room ceiling remains on the floor, the spots of black mold visible.

VIC director Sharon Langford said the moisture problem affects only the bathrooms.

“The rest of the VIC is open,” Langford said. “We welcome visitors and answer their questions about where to go, sell train and trolley tickets and operate the gift shop. We’re still open and fully functioning.”

The VIC was built in 1935 as the city’s Civic Center. It was extensively renovated, adding the bathrooms and a lobby, when the Downtown Parking Facility was built in 2005 and 2006.

Regan said his immediate goals are two:

* Eliminating the mold by disinfecting the attic and replacing the ruined dry wall.

* Review the design and create a system that is appropriate for the building.

The redesign will be done by an “individual design team, he said.

“We are investigating all the issues,” he said. “We’ll give the City Commission a briefing Monday night during City Manager comments.”


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© The St. Augustine Record

Chautauqua reenactment at the beach

Neighbors: South Beaches
By Lorraine Thompson
Tuesday, October 13, 2009 ; Updated: 12:36 AM on Tuesday, October 13, 2009
The City of St. Augustine Beach will look back at the area's unique history with a Chautauqua as part of the coastal city's 50 years of incorporation celebrations. A Chautauqua reenactment will take place from 4 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the St. Augustine Beach Cultural Arts Center, located in the former St. Augustine Beach City Hall adjacent to the pier and Pier Park.

For more than a century the area has been the playground for prominent people who have embedded their names in history. The area was also part of the Chautauqua adult education movement in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Chautauqua brought entertainment and culture for the community with speakers, teachers, musicians, entertainers, preachers and specialists of the day.

The area which was incorporated as the City of St. Augustine Beach in 1959 was once developed as a Summer Chautauqua in the early 1900s and at one point was called Chautauqua Beach.





Special Chautauqua guests from the past who will mingle with visitors will include the likes of Henry Flagler and his last bride Mary Lilly Keenan Flagler, Jesse Fish, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Maria Pacetti.

Chautauqua speakers include David Nolan, local historian; Thomas Rahner, native St. Augustinian and drama professor emeritus, Flagler College; Susan Parker, executive director of the St. Augustine Historical Society; and Sandra Parks, author, owner of Anastasia Books and former city commissioner.

Legendary author Stetson Kennedy will be on hand to sign the recently released third edition of his classic, "Palmetto County." Stuart Pacetti will demonstrate the making of a seine net. Photos on loan from locals whose families have lived in the area for generations will don the walls of the former City Hall.

Events will take place in the building and in tents that will be set up in the area. Admission is free. There will be a cash wine bar and snacks and coffee for sale. For information, call Melissa Stuart at 501-1253.

*

Friday, October 02, 2009

Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA's Son Applying For Lobbyist Job At Fertilizer Institute?

Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA's son (J. CLARK MICA) was a Bush-appointed $106,000/year Schedule C appointee lobbyist at the Department of Housing and Development.

Is young MICA now in the process of applying for a job at the Fertilizer Institute in Washington, D.C.?

Were J. CLARK MICA to be hired as a lobbyist by the Fertilizer Institute, his employment there would be pure poetry in motion. J. CLARK MICA's father's rhetoric most often resembles fertilizer. J. CLARK MICA's father (JOHN LUIGI MICA) is a an oleaginous Congressman toiling for transportation interests, his uncle DAVID is a Big Oil lobbyist and his uncle DANIEL is a lobbyist for credit unions. Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA has said he loves lobbyists, some of the best people he knows.

You can watch Ken Burns' National Parks specials at your leisure on Saturday and Sunday

Tomorrow, Saturday, watch the first three episodes from Noon to 6 PM on WJCT, followed by ninety minutes on three First Coast NPS parks.

Sunday, watch a profile of park advocate Wallace Stegner at 11:30 AM, followed by the three First Coast NPS park specials from 12:30 to 2 PM, followed by the final three Ken Burns Parks programs from 2 PM to 8 PM.

Then it's time to activate and advocate for the St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway.

A St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway Will Stop "Developers" in Their Tracks

Just as in so many sacred, beautiful, historic places, where rich and powerful and influential organizations were ready to destroy history and nature, the National Park Service is empowered to stop "temple destroyers" here in St. Augustine.

From the Yellowstone to Grand Canyon to the Everglades, the National Park Service (like the Mounties), has rescued our landscape from predators.

Here in St. Augustine, NPS can buy land or accept donations from developers and stop the reign of ruin of the likes of ROBERT MICHAEL GRAUBARD and others who destroy history and nature (including a 3000-4000 year old Indian village next to St. Augustine High School).

Tonight is the last episode of Ken Burns' PBS series, "THE NATIONAL PARKS -- America's Best Idea." We've learned a lot from it -- it is the courage of individuals that helps makes a national park -- the courage to ignore the nattering nabobs of negativism, the name-callers, the mediocrities, the mendacious negatives -- people "who know not that they know not that they know not."

As Robert Kennedy said in South Africa, “each time a [person] stands up for an ideal or speaks out for the rights of others, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples can form a current that can sweep away the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.”

United States of America v. DONALD FRANK MINTMIRE

In 1980, in Washington, D.C., then-associate Barnett, Alagia & Carey lawyer DONALD FRANK MINTMIRE told me that the law was essentially boring, rotely applying rules to facts.

That's one point of view, which is about as uninspiring and unenlightened as it gets.

From the sound of the Florida Trend article about his federal criminal conviction (below), DONALD FRANK MINTMIRE found ways to make the law far more interesting and lucrative -- namely, obstruction of justice. As the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals found in the case of United States of America v. DONALD FRANK MINTMIRE, his modus operandi included embroiling his own son in his "box job" securities marketing schemes.

Corporativists apparently believe that "the family that preys together, stays together."

For those Northeast Florida lawyers who think they can "laugh all the way" to the proverbial bank based on influence and hubris, hair-brained "get rich quick" schemes, there is a lesson here.

I'm going to write a song, "The eyes of Justice are upon you." (sung to the tune of "The Eyes of Texas")

The United States Department of Justice is ever-vigilant, and watching you.

What do you reckon?

Florida Trend: Sour Grapefruits


Ex-lawyer Donald Frank Mintmire


Sour Grapefruits
By Mike Vogel - 2/1/2008


Henry T. “Skip” Clements tells this story: There he was, a citrus entrepreneur from Florida, in an auditorium in Philadelphia in 1997, sitting in the front row
between the chairmen of Boeing and General Motors, an invited guest to hear the president of China give a speech. The two corporate big shots ignored Clements and talked across him, especially after he told them, “I sell oranges for a living.”

The Chinese president concluded his remarks to a standing ovation, exited the stage and stopped near the three men.“Thank you, Mr. Clements, for being here. Hope you can join us for dinner,” the Chinese president said. He left without a word to the two chairmen. The Boeing head turned to Clements and said, “What did you say you do for a living?” Recalls Clements,“I smiled and walked away.”

The tale follows a template for plenty of other Clements stories: The lowly outsider, dismissed by the elite, redeemed at the end — with those who dismissed him getting their comeuppance.

The Philadelphia meeting became just a piece of a much larger story — one that Clements hasn’t been able to make fit his template. It’s a story of a crooked lawyer, a scam — and Clements, the dreamer, who says he wound up going from “the king of the citrus industry to being homeless in just a number of days.” He craves an ending of his own writing, one with his redemption — and retribution for those he blames for his downfall.

Silver-haired, big and broad-shouldered, Clements, 56, is a U.S. Marine veteran. A Long Island native, he came to Stuart on Florida’s east coast after the Vietnam War. He earned a bachelor’s in education in 1974 at Florida Atlantic University, didn’t want to teach and went into the citrus business. In a few years he became a partner in a packinghouse, where fruit is processed and packed.

He became an investor and officer in a private-sector consulting business in Stuart that taught companies how to prevent industrial espionage. When that consulting business ended, Clements returned to citrus.

Stuart lies in the Indian River citrus region where, as Doug Bournique, executive vice president of the Indian River Citrus League, says, the “Rolls-Royce” of fruit is grown. The problem in the 1990s was that growers were producing citrus like Fords. Prices fell by a third. Grapefruit and orange growers statewide needed a new market. Says Dan Richey, former chairman of the Florida Citrus Commission and third-generation grower, “Obviously, we’re drooling when we see the population China has.”

Growers and Florida urged the U.S. government to pressure China to open its market. Clements had another idea. Using Washington contacts, he wooed the Chinese directly. For backing for his Clements Citrus, he got an investment from Joseph Rizzuti, an accountant in nearby Palm City, and later from other local business luminaries.


After Clements invited the Chinese ambassador to Martin County and hosted his visit, he landed on National Public Radio — bringing out the TV crews and politicians who had until then ignored him. Clements became a celebrity, and his efforts and love of the spotlight made him a household name in Stuart for a time. The Stuart News, which sent a reporter with Clements to China, wrote that Clements “literally could save Florida’s $8-billion local citrus industry.”



Clements, in an interview, leafs through binders of his memories: The photos of him with Chinese officials, a close-up of the dinner — the actual meal on the plate — that was served at one function. It all culminated in 1998, when he received permission to bring Florida citrus into China under an exemption to its overall ban. “To be the only person in the largest market in the world. It was just amazing,” he says.

The industry, to put it mildly, was skeptical. For one, many growers and packers suspected the Chinese were only making a show of opening their market to get favorable trade treatment. Second, there was Clements himself and his reputation in some quarters for self-promotion. Among those who knew Clements, most said “this isn’t adding up,” says Richey, the former citrus commissioner. “There was never any substance to his deal that we could see.”

“To be the only person in the largest market in the world. It was just amazing,” says Clements.

Says a friend of Clements, Gordon Hunt, the state’s former international citrus marketing director: “Some people think the world of him, and others say, ‘What a pain in the ass.’ ” Still, says Hunt, who later served briefly on Clements’ corporate board, Clements was responsible “hands down, more than anybody in the state” for opening China to Florida citrus.


In any case, Clements’ monopoly was short-lived. China broadened the deal beyond Clements, officially opening its markets to Florida citrus in 2000. Meanwhile, Clements and Rizzuti had been forecasting huge growth for their company, with Rizzuti suggesting in a local newspaper that $1 billion a year in sales is possible by the end of the decade. But by then, even with a nearly two-year head start, Clements had yet to ship anything. He had no groves, no packinghouse and minimal funding.

A search for financing brought Clements and his cohorts to attorney Donald F. Mintmire. A Kentucky native then in his early 50s, Mintmire had his law practice in Palm Beach, a few blocks from where he lived in a 5,425-sq.-ft. home held in the name of his wife, Patricia, who was prominent as an officer (and eventually board chair) of Planned Parenthood of Palm Beach and Treasure Coast Area.

Mintmire had a measure of prominence, too. He had represented Henry Rolfs, the quixotic Palm Beach millionaire who blew his fortune in the 1980s buying run-down properties across the waterway in West Palm Beach with a vision of redeveloping the area. Rolfs failed, but under different ownership his holdings became the CityPlace residential and commercial development that now dominates downtown West Palm Beach.

To help Clements get the money he needed to begin exporting, Mintmire provided a shell corporation. Despite the connotation of “shell game,” a shell is a legitimate, inexpensive and fast way for a private company such as Clements Citrus to go public, by merging with an existing publicly held company that has no operating business. The idea is that since the shell has — or quickly can get — approval for public trading of its stock, the merged entity can sell new shares to raise money without the delay and expense of an initial public offering. Mintmire made the marriage between Clements Citrus and a shell.


In May 2000, Clements made his first shipment to China — five containers of orange juice and oranges. In August, the company’s president said baseball great Willie Mays had agreed to be a spokesman for a U.S. rollout of the juice. In September 2000, shares in the newly named Clements Golden Phoenix Enterprises began trading. The stock immediately went up $2.25 a share to $7 as locals looked to catch Clements’ star.

Clements and those locals, however, didn’t know that the shell Mintmire provided wasn’t legitimate. It was a “box job,” a company with figurehead investors and someone behind the scenes in secret control of the public float of the stock and therefore able to profit by manipulating how many shares are sold and when. It gets its name because all the shares and control literally can be carried around in a box.

Mintmire, federal investigators came to believe, was experienced with box jobs. According to testimony at a later trial, Mintmire assembled figurehead investors in somewhere between five and 21 companies through his son, Mark, who lived in Atlanta. It worked like this: Mark Mintmire gave cash to friends and acquaintances at The Highlander, an Atlanta bar. Each Mintmire pal got about $900. Each would then write a check for $800 — keeping $100 for his trouble — to buy shares in the company Mintmire was creating.


The Highlander Bar in Atlanta

While the friends appeared to be actual shareholders, in the process of buying the shares they would sign documents surrendering their power over the stock to whoever was the bearer of the certificate. One man, Kevin Bell, wouldn’t learn he was principal, president and promoter of the shell company Clements merged with until years later — news he got from government investigators. From them, Bell also learned he approved the Clements merger. On paper, for a time, Bell had substantial gains on “his” stock — without ever knowing it.

To get the stock market to allow the company to be traded, Donald Mintmire provided assurances to National Association of Securities Dealers market regulators that the original investors were “sophisticated investors.” In reality, Bell was an electrician who, contrary to just one of the representations that Mintmire made to regulators, had a personal bankruptcy in his past.

In short, as then-federal prosecutor Mark Johnson later argued to a jury, Mintmire lied and created an artificially large number of shareholders to get a company stock listed. In the first week that Clements Golden Phoenix traded amid great excitement in Stuart, Mintmire surreptitiously cashed out of stock, netting more than $500,000, investigators later found. With his son, he netted a total of $250,000 on another company, they discovered.


Judging from a later search warrant affidavit, Clements Golden Phoenix graduated from “box job” to pump and dump. The company put out press releases to goose the stock price, according to evidence investigators gathered. As the price rose, the only ones to benefit were some of the original “investors.”

Meanwhile, insiders like Clements and the people who spent $3 and $5 per share — a total of $2 million — to buy into a private placement before the company went public couldn’t sell because their shares were restricted.

Perhaps they wouldn’t have wanted to — the company’s prospects looked good, with Clements talking up $3 million in commitments from Chinese buyers and a new brainstorm, exporting cranberry juice. With his picture on the OJ can, he talked of being the Colonel Sanders of citrus in China. And Florida Trend (this writer, in fact) cited Clements as an authority on the market [“The Last Great Canker War?” February 2001].

Those who bothered to look at the actual financial statements the company filed with the SEC would have had reason to pause. True, they were full of pronouncements about plans to build a packinghouse. But the company was bleeding cash, mostly for marketing and trips to China.

The reality of its breakthrough? Clements Golden had only a permit to sell in China and two agreements with food brokers to represent them there for a piece of sales — there were no guarantees in the contract that anybody in China would buy anything. Indeed, in its brief run, Clements Golden chalked up only $337,302 in sales, according to its SEC filings — and Clements now says he doesn’t know how it could have brought in that much. He says the company was never paid for what it shipped to China.



‘Not a close call’

In December 2000 — barely three months after it went public — the stock began collapsing. Clements, frustrated that no money was coming in from the stock trading to replenish the company as he expected, became convinced he was being played. In April 2001, he went public in the media and visited federal authorities. Clements as whistleblower was born. The company sacked him. CFO Rizzuti filed a court action to evict him from a house he had lent him. The car Clements used was repossessed — so was his boat. He says he found out his health insurance was canceled when he was hospitalized for a heart catheterization.


Investigators, Clements says, have asked him pointed questions about how he could have been so ignorant. He says he trusted others and was busy in China. “You were dealing with a neophyte when it came to stock,” he says. “Should I have known? I don’t know. Maybe.”

Johnson, who prosecuted the case and is now in private practice, says, “I’m confident (Clements) didn’t get any money. He just didn’t really understand how the financing worked, and he didn’t like it and was never very diligent about pursuing it. ... He still doesn’t really understand. Frankly, he’s not a detail guy, anyway. He’s a salesman.”

As it happens, in 2001 investigators from the SEC in Boston looked at another Mintmire-created company that had aroused suspicion. An SEC enforcement lawyer, in part using Mapquest, was intrigued to find that so many “sophisticated investors” happened to be in their early 20s and live in the same area of Atlanta as Mark Mintmire. “I mean, most of them don’t have money to invest in the stock market in the first place, and if they were going to invest, they wouldn’t invest in a company like that,” SEC attorney Lauchlan Wash later testified.


When questioned in 2003 by SEC lawyers about that company, Mark Mintmire invoked his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. Donald Mintmire testified for two days, not admitting to any crime but saying he had merely loaned the young people the money, though conceding that perhaps they didn’t know it was a loan.

In Florida, a grand jury led by Johnson and an IRS agent named Andrew Schmit investigated Clements’ complaints. Johnson traveled to The Highlander bar to meet the young figurehead investors. “Once we saw them, we thought this is going to be a fun case to try. Sophisticated investors?” One young man, who played in a band, told him, “Wow, man, there’s got to be some lyrics in this.”


But the SEC never issued so much as a cease-and-desist order to anyone involved in Clements Golden. The grand jury, however, did indict Mintmire for obstructing the grand jury investigation into Clements Golden and conspiring to thwart the investigation of that second company investigated out of Boston.

In a two-week trial in 2005, Mintmire didn’t testify. His defense consisted of reminding jurors he wasn’t on trial for fraud. His attorney, William Richey of Palm City, said Mintmire had come clean to the SEC. “He told them very bad things, much worse than what they’re alleging” in the two counts, Richey told jurors. The “Keystone Kops” government, he said, had mistaken being a lawyer representing a client — and getting paid in stock — with obstructing justice.

Jurors didn’t buy it and neither did the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “This is not a close call,” District Judge R. David Proctor wrote for the appellate panel in November in finding there was sufficient evidence for the jury to convict Mintmire.

Mintmire, 61, is scheduled to begin serving a 21-month prison sentence this month. He was disbarred. At least some other companies he was involved with now have the taint of having been represented by a convicted felon. He declined to be interviewed for this article. His son Mark could not be reached.

Richey, the elder Mintmire’s attorney, says that at their request, the judge directed the prison system to put Mintmire into an alcohol abuse treatment program while he is serving time. “It was our position that it contributed to the problem,” he says. “I think that Don Mintmire is a wonderful person,” Richey says. “If you look at the sentencing reports on him, he’s been involved in charity very deeply his entire life both in terms of giving his time as well as his money and so has his wife. This is just a very great tragedy.”

Mintmire’s comeuppance, however, isn’t enough for Clements. He wants to see others charged. From the way he talks, tops on his list is Rizzuti, the former CFO who had him evicted. In a brief telephone interview, Rizzuti says it’s been three years since any government agency has shown any interest in the case and that the statute of limitations has run out. He says he’s innocent of any wrongdoing and declined an extensive interview.

“I’m not going to engage Skip Clements ever again if I don’t have to,” Rizzuti says. “The guy’s crazier than a hoot owl. He won’t let it go. Anything he can do to show himself as the victim and keep it in front of people. A lot of people lost money on the stock. So did I. Everyone lost their ass on this deal. I’ve moved on.”

Clements, nearly seven years after he got the boot as CEO, says he can’t move on. He says he can’t get a job because his reputation and credit are ruined. He briefly worked as a teacher. An investigator suggested he try Wal-Mart. Clements lives at a friend’s house and says he can’t afford the gas to drive to nearby Miami to visit his daughter, who has leukemia. “I’m doing the right thing, and I’m paying for it,” he says.

The case has become an obsession for Clements. Johnson says that Clements expects vindication to “turn his life around and allow him to get a job. ... I think he’s overly optimistic it will change everything.”

Clements hopes that once Mintmire tastes prison, he will turn on others. He’s become a gadfly, writing letters, holding press conferences, scolding the government and then-U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales for inaction. When Gonzales resigned in August, Clements held a press conference to take partial credit.

Clements is taken aback at the notion that the government could ignore Clements Golden to focus on larger frauds that are commonplace in south Florida. “I’m going to keep going,” he says. In fact, he adds, he’s just getting something in the mail to the new Attorney General.

Calculated play?

China never took off for anyone. China represents only 1.5% of all frozen juice exports from the United States. The latest data show no China imports of Florida oranges and rank it as only the 15th export market for grapefruit with just 10,000 cartons, compared to 4.6 million cartons for Japan, the largest market. Former Citrus Commissioner Richey says a major problem was that exporters who did ship to China had difficulty getting paid. Says the citrus league’s Bournique, “We thought it was going to be a tremendous market, but it was a flop.” The whole affair makes Johnson wonder whether the Chinese were being sincere with Clements. After all, if a country wanted to appear to be opening its market, without really doing so, would it give a permit to a major juice company or to a guy on a financial shoestring without groves or a packinghouse?

What St. Augustine Florida Needs is A Bigger National Park Service Presence




We've heard it a thousand times. A tourist family or couple is rousted by local police, whether city or county. They write a letter to the newspaper, resolving never to come back.

Our local law enforcement agencies are too often perceived as redneck by visitors.

Their unprofessionalism reflects poorly on our town and does not encourage repeat visits. Whether artist and musician arrests, the parking fiasco or speed traps or just plain gooberishness, our local law enforcement too often act thuggishly.

An increased National Park Service presence will come with the St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parfkway. Park rangers enforce the law but they also know the territory and give tours. They don't insult visitors, engage in racial profiling, or hassle people from out of town.

With five million visitors a year, do we want tourists to stay more than an hour?
Do we want them to come back?

The National Park SErvice -- there is no substitute.

Mosquito Control Board needs to cancel building, not buy helicopters, stop aerial spraying of neurotoxins

The Anastasia Mosquito Control Board of St. Johns County needs to cancel the $4 million building it is slouching toward building. It does not need to buy any helicopters (or build helicopter hangars). It does not need to use neurotoxins sprayed from the air. Is that too much to ask? See below.

Mosquito Board sets budget, keeps 2009 millage rate

Mosquito Board sets budget, keeps 2009 millage rate



PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 09/25/09


ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH -- Board members of Anastasia Mosquito Control District on Thursday night approved 4-1 their final millage rate and budget for 2010.

The board kept the millage the same as last year, at 0.1325 mills, which will collect $2.8 million, a drop from last year's $3.1 million budget.

Col. Ron Radford, a district board member, said, "We're the only organization in the county that did not raise their millage rate."

Board member John Sundeman opposed both the millage and the budget.

Vivian Browning, another board member, said property values have dropped, "So this year there is an actual reduction in taxes."

The budget for 2010 is estimated to be $5.6 million, of which $1.3 million will be salaries and $2.5 million will pay to construct the district's proposed new headquarters near State Road 16 and Interstate 95.

That structure became a point of contention for St. Augustine activist Ed Slavin, who said the district didn't need a new building.

"It's a Taj Mahal, and a very poorly designed Taj Mahal. It doesn't have a back door. In this economy it would be imprudent to build a $4 million building," he said.

He said going ahead with the project would be "misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance."

Browning said the new 9,000-square-foot headquarters cost would be kept within the $2.5 million limit, though there could be additional funding in years ahead.

"We'll have $1.8 million in reserve after we pay the $2.5 million for the building," she said. "Let's not back off on not getting (all our equipment) out there."

A fundamental reason for moving inland from the beach base station is to avoid the possibility of a hurricane flooding the district's vehicles, spilling dangerous chemicals into floodwaters and being cut off from the mainland and inoperable at a time when mosquito control will be vital to protect public health, she said.

Jose Perez, one of the principle architects of PGH Architects, which built the new Emergency Operations Center and the County Administration Building, said design is an "evolutionary" process.

Board Chair Janice Bequette wanted the building built as "green" as possible, though Perez said that might raise its cost by 10 to 20 percent.

Sundeman had calculated that the building would actually be 43,529 square feet and cost $133 per square foot, which would make the cost approach $3 million for the first phase, and from $6 million to 7 million on following phases.

"That's going to wipe us slap out," he said. "I've never seen one of these government projects come in below budget."

But Browning said she calculates $100 per square foot for heated and cooled space and $75 square feet for warehouse, garage and other spaces.

"Only $2.5 million is budgeted at this time," she said.

Perez said he had tweaked the design and came out with 8,000 square feet in heated and cooled space, abd 15,000 square feet in other areas.

"Another building of about 400 square feet would hold chemicals and fueling areas," he said.

Board member Jeanne Moeller said the county held up the zoning for their parcel, breaking the terms of a written agreement, because some commissioners want to waste $19,900 in taxpayer money for an efficiency study of the district.

"So don't count on the county for cooperation," she said.

Perez said the conceptual designs will be done by the second week in October with the final design ready by the middle of February 2010. Permitting and bidding will be done simultaneously with the design process and construction can start in May 2010 with completion by February 2012.

Browning said, "We are back on the county's agenda on Oct. 20. There will be a joint meeting if there is no agreement (by staff). This is going to be a long journey. We're ready to save money and serve the community."


Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/092509/news_2013708.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

What St. Augustine, Florida Needs Is a World Class Museum

St. Augustine, Florida does not have one world class museum.

This is not to slight the aspirations of those who operate museums and historical sies here, including the Castillo San Marcos and Ripleys' Believe It or Not! Museum.

However, you know from your travels that there is better information, more cultural diversity and less ethnocentrism in an National Park Service visitor center or just about any presidential library.

One of the things that keeps St. Augustine from being a world class tourist destination is a classy museum and historical interpretation by those who do it best -- the National Park Service.

We need a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway. See links at right.

Jimmy Carter Presidential Library Worth the Trip To Atlanta

I saw the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum before it was modified, and it was wonderful. It's been newly enhanced. It is well worth the trip (see below).

Paranthetically, let me note that in the 1980s, I wrote a biography of President Jimmy Carter for young readers (Chelsea House Publishers World Leaders Series, with a forward by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.) -- a first edition is for sale on Amazon.com for only $1995.00. It is rated as a "Collectable."

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Carter celebrates 85th birthday, museum re-opening

Carter celebrates 85th birthday, museum re-opening
By Jamie Gumbrecht


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

5:01 p.m. Thursday, October 1, 2009

It took five months of dismantling and reconstructing, $10 million of private donations and tweaks that lasted into the early morning hours, but finally, the newly renovated Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum was ready to open Thursday.

Museum Director Jay Hakes, Mayor Shirley Franklin, Gov. Sonny Perdue, Vice President Walter Mondale and the Rev. Joseph Lowery were on stage to celebrate the occasion with Rosalynn Carter and her husband of 63 years, former President Jimmy Carter.

Behind them, the only presidential library in the Southeast, one with new interactive exhibits and information to update visitors about “the greatest former president that ever lived,” Lowery said.

Hundreds of people gathered for the reopening Thursday, and to celebrate Jimmy Carter’s 85th birthday. The Georgia native cut the ribbon on the new museum, listened to a crowd sing-along of “Happy Birthday to You” and welcomed everyone to wander the new exhibits for free for the day.


For those who visited, here’s some of what they saw in the new Carter museum.


What changed: The museum maintained almost all of its former content, but added information about Carter’s life after the presidency, then gave the space a new look and feel.


What hasn’t changed: The museum kept its popular Oval Office replica, which remained just as it was before, with a few new details to make it even more accurate.

What’s not to miss: Old timelines and historic artifacts are displayed in new ways, but new videos, a “24”-style exhibit about a day in the life of a president and a state-of-the-art interactive mapping table are meant to engage visitors like the old museum couldn’t.

If You Go

Jimmy Carter Library and Museum

9 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays, noon-4:45 p.m. Sundays. $8 for adults, $6 for seniors, military and students with ID, free for people ages 16 and younger. 441 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta. 404-865-7100, www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov.

Obstructionists Never Have A Happy Day



Obstructionists never have a happy day -- they only have yappy days.

Looking at the people who try to block health care reform reminds me that many of them purport to support the right to live. But as Barney Frank (D-Mass) says it best, they "believe life beings at conception and ends at birth."

Don't tell me you support the right to life if you think patients should die horrible painful deaths from medical malpractice due to doctors' neglect. Don't tell me you support the right to life if you think people should be denied essential care if, as in the words of one First Coast doctor, a board-certified misanthrope, who recently sentenced a local man to die because "you're dirt poor."

The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who discriminate and retaliate against those who cannot defend themselves.

Obstructionists to health care reform are little different than segregationists, without the sheets. They hide behind credentials. They're wrong.

"Physician, heal thysellf."

Guns In National Parks Is A Nasty Idea




Mean 'ole United States Senator James DeMint (R-SC) carved his initials in redwood trees and every other national park element when he amended federal law to allow guns in national parks. See Ken Burns' comments, below.

One of my Georgetown University Government professors had a bumper sticker on his office door: "I support the right to arm bears."



By allowing guns in our national parks, we're inviting redneck peckerwoods to shoot each other, and the wildlife.

By allowing guns in our national parks, we're inviting people to resolve conflicts in the same manner as old-time TV drams did: with violence.

By allowing guns in our national parks, we're making a mockery of the purpose of the national parks.

It's wrong.

DeMint's amendment should be set aside by the Courts or a future Congress.

Meanwhile, perhaps we should look into teaching the bears how to shoot back at gun nuts.

And as for the Castillo de San Marcos and Fort Matanzas, if any gun-toting Philistines show up there, we've got them outgunned: we have cannons and they work.

Christian Science Monitor:Ken Burns: Allowing guns in national parks is ‘foolish’

By Dave Cook | 09.28.09
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UPI/Kevin Dietsch/Newscom

Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns speaks on his new six-part series on the National Parks at the National Press Club in Washington on Sept. 28.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The decision by Congress to allow visitors to carry guns into national parks is “foolish,” PBS documentary producer Burns told an audience at the National Press Club on Monday.

Burns waded into the politically sensitive issue while PBS is currently broadcasting his six-part, twelve-hour series, “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea.” The New Hampshire film maker’s earlier works include widely-watched productions on the Civil War, baseball, and the Brooklyn Bridge.

A threat to species big and small

In May, Congress handed gun control forces a major defeat, voting to allow visitors to carry loaded guns in national parks and wildlife refuges. “[I] personally think it is foolish,” Burns said during a question and answer session at the Press Club. “All species of all kinds are threatened by guns in the parks,” he added.

Burns spoke of the parks’ impact on visitors in lofty – some might say overwrought – language. “The parks are the declaration of independence applied to the landscape,” he said in prepared remarks. The parks, he added, “continue to perform a kind of open heart surgery” on those who surrender to their beauty.

A huckster’s paradise

There is “not enough time” to list all of the places of beauty in the United States that are in danger of suffering from the commercialization that affects the area around Niagara Falls, he said. He called the Niagara area a “hucksters’ paradise” and “part of our national shame.”

The youthful looking Burns, dressed in blazer and blue jeans, said he hopes his latest series “could be a galvanic moment for the parks” and that it was his “fervent wish that more families would go” visit them as a result. He said he was especially eager to stimulate visits by African Americans and Hispanics “that do not yet feel the ownership of the parks” that other citizens do.

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Washington Post:Capturing America's Treasures On Film -- Ken Burns Discusses His Documentary on America's National Parks

Friday, September 25, 2009 1:00 PM



Emmy Award-winner and Academy Award two-time nominee Ken Burns was online Friday, Sept. 25, at 1 p.m. ET to discuss his newest film series, "The National Parks: America's Best Idea" (PBS, Sept. 27), and his many other documentaries, including "The Civil War," "Baseball," "Jazz" and "The Brooklyn Bridge."

A transcript follows.

____________________

Ken Burns: Ken Burns here. Happy to answer your questions today.

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Austin, Tex.: As a former park ranger with the NPS, I'd like to know what park or place you visited surprised you the most. What park provided you with unexpected insight?

Thanks -- I'm thrilled about this series.

Ken Burns: I can't think of a park that didn't provide me with those unexpected thrills. And I think that's the glory of the national parks, that as John Muir said, "It's still the morning of creation. Everything is happening right now."

_______________________

Washington, DC: Not a question, just a comment. Your Civil War series was extremely formative for me when I was growing up, spurring my interest in the time period and eventually my major in college. So, thanks!

Ken Burns: Thank You! The civil War is the most important event in the life of America. Everything that came before it, led up to it and everything after it, is in some small way at least a consequence of it. It's no wonder then, that it holds a universal and continuing appeal.

_______________________

Harrisburg, Pa.: What are your thoughts on the new Yankee Stadium as opposed to the original?

Ken Burns: Being a Red Sox fan, you may have asked the wrong person the wrong question, but it is clearly a huge monumental structure that reflects both the glory of the Yankees dominance in this sport and also the excesses of the current age.

_______________________

Anonymous: How did you first get interested in this topic? It fits well with the rest of your films, but it doesn't seem like an obvious choice.

Ken Burns: I've always been interested in films that reveal ourselves to ourselves and I can think of no better subject than the national parks; they are a prism through which one can see refracted the whole history of our complicated United States. The best of us, and the worst of us, is on display in this drama. We've made not a travelogue or a nature film, but a history of complicated ideas and extremely interesting individuals.

_______________________

Rangers: I enjoy your work a lot. This is not a film question. Why were you at the Texas Rangers baseball game at the end of July? I was visiting and you were there, too! Thanks.

Ken Burns: I was having my birthday party at the park with some friends after a day of meetings and the Texas Rangers kindly let me throw out the first pitch. I thought they were unaware it was my birthday, but my middle daughter called them up and blew my cover.

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New York: Ken, I saw clips of your national parks film on the Web site, and got chills listening to the speakers describing what the parks mean to them -- the best representations of democracy, places of love, magical tributes to past, present and future. And it dawned on me that your films aren't just fascinating for the stories they tell, but also for the people who tell those stories. How do you find these people, and what do you look for in deciding who to feature in your films? I can't wait for the broadcast. Thanks.

Ken Burns: The key word in your generous question is love. With regard to the national parks, we look for people who could not only tell us about the history, but were passionate about their own personal experiences in the parks. So in the end, our film is not just a history, but a way of understanding that these parks promote sometimes the most intimate transformations within us and between us and the people we love most.
_______________________

Jellystone: How long did you work on this project -- how many hours did you shoot total, and what was the hardest thing you had to cut?

Ken Burns: We have been working on this project for more than ten years. We shot for more than six of those years and amassed literally hundreds of hours of footage that would go into making our twelve hour series. Our cutting room floor is filled not with bad scenes but with hundreds of beautiful things that just didn't fit and the hardest by far was to take out those stories of individuals that are just as important as those we do highlight, but there just wasn't room to tell their story.
_______________________

Alexandria, VA: What are your hopes for viewers' reaction to National Parks? More visitors to the parks, more funding to upkeep of the parks, more emphasis toward preserving our natural spaces, etc?

Ken Burns: Yes, yes and yes. I would love nothing more than to have the parks overloaded with people and every superintendent trying to figure out how to accommodate them all. That's a good problem to have in a democracy.

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Washington, D.C.: I believe the parks face significant shortfalls for maintenance and improvements. In the current economic climate, what's the best reason for spending federal funds on the National Parks?

Ken Burns: That's an excellent question. We do suffer a backlog from neglect of the previous administration that some estimate to be over $8 billion worth of immediate maintenance for the parks. It may seem frivolous in these tough times, but spending money in the parks repays many times over the actual expenditure, not just in jobs, but in cohesion for our country. The same thing happened during the Great Depression when, paradoxically, the parks thrived as never before. They not only got FDR's stimulus money, but they got Americans flooding into their parks to feel, in the darkest of times, that we could continue together as a people.

_______________________


New York : A little off topic. Your Civil War series will endure for all time as the most memorable visual history of the conflict, but it has been criticized over the years for its treatment of some of the more difficult issues, which cannot be discussed without some acrimony, it seems. Unfairly or not, Mr. Foote was particularly criticized as being a sympathizer with the confederacy and later, segregation. I bring this up because recently we have seen town halls with people showing up with confederate flags, and racial signs which call to mind the racist Lincoln-hating signs of the time displayed in your film. If you were to make this film today, would this recent re-emergence of 'confederates in the attic' have affected the way that you dealt with some of these issues?

Ken Burns: I don't think so. I believe we were quite forthright and created enemies at the extremes of our political discourse and that's I guess a sign of a good documentary. Shelby Foote was not a racist, he was a southerner, with a southern perspective, but not a southern bias, and did in his books and in his novels decry the pernicious effects of segregation. As you know, all of my films tackle the very sensitive and controversial subject of race and I feel it is important to never pull any punches. We didn't then and we don't now. And if I were to make the film again, I'd do it exactly the same way, criticism be damned.

And I share your shock at the old symbols of the confederacy being used in the current debate taking place today. They remind us of how much work still has to be done to make a more perfect union.

_______________________

Arlington, Va.: If you were still making films in 2090 (and best of luck, you will be!), what developments in 2010-2009 would you be most interested in doing a film about?

Ken Burns: From your lips to God's ears! I think I would still be focused on the extraordinary election of Barack Obama as president of the United States. I think he represents the beginning of our third act in American history. The first act began with Thomas Jefferson, but his definition of all men created equal was limited. Our second act began on Nov. 19, 1863 when Abraham Lincoln delivered his celebrated Gettysburg address. In that speech, he essentially said, we really do believe that all men are created equal, but it would take another century and two more generations before our country would be able to elect an African American as president. That progress is one of the most significant things I've experience in my lifetime and I imagine we ill continually look back at his inauguration as one of the turning points in all of American history.

_______________________

Dover, De: Hi Ken,

If you had to pick one of your documentaries; which one holds the most signifigance for you or is your favorite?

Thank you for your time and wonderful work!

Ken Burns: Because I work with PBS, I'm able to make in each instance the film I wanted to make, so like my children it's hard to pick and totally unfair to pick a favorite. I suppose I'll always be known for The Civil War, but a tiny little film I made in the early 80s on the history of the religious sect the Shakers, is just as dear to me. Duke Ellington answered this question better than I just did. When asked which was his most important composition, our greatest composer said "the one I'm working on now."

_______________________

Hackettstown, NJ: Thank you for doing this series! Which of the parks is most in need of additional funding? Did you see cutbacks happening over the years you were doing the series?

Ken Burns: I think because of all the delayed maintenance in the parks, they all, if you look closely, are frayed around the edges. But I don't know if one park suffers more than the others. It would just be helpful for Americans to write their congresspeople and beg them to support their national parks. They are the crown jewels of our remarkable republic and could use a good dusting.

_______________________

Olney, Md.: Ken, Thank you so much for your wonderful, in depth documentaries. They are a major reason that I contribute regularly to my local station, WETA. I am a High School Social Studies Instructional Specialist in Montgomery County, Maryland and promoted your Parks documentary to all the Social Studies Resource Teachers across the county. I can't wait until Sunday night at 8 pm.

Our students and teachers thank you, please continue the great work!

Ken Burns: That's so kind, you know I work with the best network on earth, and I work at WETA, the best affiliate of that network and I am so thrilled you are not only a viewer, but also a supporter. A lot of people think NPS stands for the National Park System just as they think PBS stands for Public Broadcasting System. But the 'S' in both of them stands for service and that's what we try to do. Thank you for your support and kind words.

_______________________

Ken Burns: Goodbye, rushing off to new interviews and will meet you all on Sunday night on PBS. The series runs all week.

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Editor's Note: washingtonpost.com moderators retain editorial control over Discussions and choose the most relevant questions for guests and hosts; guests and hosts can decline to answer questions. washingtonpost.com is not responsible for any content posted by third parties.

Worldscreen.com Ken Burns' PBS Series on National Parks Headed to Cannes

PBS Distribution Brings Ken Burns Epic to Cannes
By Mansha Daswani
Published: October 2, 2009
BOSTON: PBS Distribution, jointly owned by PBS and WGBH, is heading to MIPCOM with Ken Burns' latest doc series: The National Parks: America’s Best Idea.

The series recently premiered to critical acclaim on PBS in the U.S. PBS Distribution's worldwide co-production and distribution arm, PBS International, will be showcasing the series to buyers at its newly redesigned MIPCOM stand. “We are thrilled to return to MIPCOM with our new stand design and look, our growing catalogue of wonderful films, and, certainly, Ken Burns’ latest masterpiece, National Parks,” said Tom Koch, the VP of PBS Distribution. “Since PBS Distribution launched, we have been able to attract many of the best filmmakers and are looking forward to finding even more.”

In September 2007, PBS and WGBH announced their distribution partnership and the new division launched in January of this year. “We’ve been overwhelmed with positive feedback about the new partnership,” said Betsy LeBlanc, senior sales manager at PBS International. “Buyers have always come to us first when looking for a PBS showcase program and now we have the connection, the name and a brand new store front from which to sell.”

Other highlights from PBS International include Saving Luna, 65_RedRoses, Earth Days and new seasons of PBS’s flagship lifestyle series and children’s series.

Folio Weekly: Backpage Editorial by Faye Armitage -- "SAVING ST. AUGUSTINE"

Folio Weekly: Backpage Editorial by Faye Armitage -- "SAVING ST. AUGUSTINE"

Backpage Editorial
Faye Armitage
Saving St. Augustine
St. Augustine’s small-town Spanish Colonial charm is in
danger of being ruined by schlock. We love St. Augustine
and must preserve the beauty of endangered Matanzas Inlet
sunsets, Anastasia Island beach mice, nesting leatherback
turtles, soaring families of bald eagles and frolicking schools
of manatees and whales. Florida’s First Coast deserves a first
class National Park for the 500th anniversary of Spanish
Florida (in 2013) and 450th anniversary of St. Augustine
(in 2015).
The late U.S. Speaker of the House
Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill and Edward
Boland of Massachusetts made history in
1958, courageously working to protect
Cape Cod’s charm forever. Boland returned
in 1958 from a trip to Cape Hatteras
National Seashore. Within a fortnight, the
two Massachusetts Democrats introduced
the Cape Cod National Seashore Act
(backed by John F. Kennedy only after he
became president).
Commercial interests thought that a
national seashore would be bad for business.
They were wrong. Today we scoff at
the quaint story of O’Neill and Boland
being hung in effigy and booed in the Cape
Cod towns of Wellfleet and Truro, where
citizens, in their annual town meetings,
voted against the bill.
Even JFK, the Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of “Profiles in Courage,” feared local
commercial interests in Massachusetts
when it came to proposing a national
seashore. JFK later came aboard as president,
to consider the National Seashore the
best thing he ever did for Massachusetts.
Today’s visitors to Cape Cod come from
around the world to partake of its charm,
marshes, woodlands, beaches and towns
that were saved thanks to the vision of
Congressmen O’Neill and Boland.
A St. Augustine National Park was first
proposed before World War II. The idea is
five years older than President Harry S Truman’s
national health insurance proposal.
And as with national health care, Congress
too often resembles a herd of turtles trying
to write a symphony. It’s somewhat understandable
that our two busy U.S. Senators
(and Representative John Luigi Mica)
haven’t introduced a National Historical
Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway.
Legislation moves glacially, except in emergencies.
We have one now.
Our local economy is in a state of emergency.
Businesses are dying. We’re ready for
Congress to stimulate our economy and
preserve our way of life by enacting a St.
Augustine National Historical Park,
Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway Act,
supported by a diverse group of citizens,
from octogenarian environmental activist
Robin Nadeau to former Republican
County Commission Chairperson John
Sundeman to St. Augustine Democratic
Club Chairperson Jeanne Moeller, among a
growing group of people concerned about
the declining quality of the tourist experience
in St. Johns County.
A National Historical Park would preserve
and protect St. Augustine’s historic
downtown with the dignity and experience
of the National Park Service, just as parts of
Boston, New Bedford, Philadelphia and
other historic cities are preserved. It would
step into the breach left by the Florida legislature,
Secretary of State, University of
Florida and city of St. Augustine, all of
whom have been unable to repair crumbling
buildings and historic monuments. A
national historical park would preserve
downtown streets and reduce congestion,
improving the tourist experience and making
it one that longer-staying (and biggerspending)
historic and environmental
tourists will enjoy.
A national historic park managed by the
National Park Service would portray history
and nature accurately, as done in Virginia’s
Colonial Williamsburg and the
Colonial National Historical Parkway.
There could also be a National Civil Rights
and Indigenous History Museum, aimed at
telling the region’s story of 11,000 years of
human history, honoring Native Americans,
African-Americans and the Civil
Rights movement here, which helped win
adoption of national antidiscrimination
laws in 1964. The struggles on St. Augustine’s
streets and beaches, including the
arrest of Massachusetts Governor Endicott
Peabody’s mother and Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., need to be retold and told well.
soldiers monument in St. Augustine’s Plaza
de la Constitucion, paying tribute to Civil
Rights Era activists whose efforts helped
break the Senate logjam and enact basic
nondiscrimination laws.
A national seashore and coastal parkway
designation would protect the coast from
uglification, as at other national seashores.
We have 61 miles of coast here, and the
transfer from county to federal jurisdiction
would save local tax monies and make environmental
protection a priority on beaches
where turtles land to give birth, and where
beach mice and other critters scamper.
In September, watch Ken Burns’ PBS
documentary “Our National Parks: America’s
Best Idea.” Think of how uplifting it
will be to be able to drive from Ponte Vedra
to Marineland as a tourist or resident,
secure in the knowledge that the beaches
will survive and not be turned into some
unreasonable facsimile of Miami.
Think of the economic efficiency and
environmental benefits of entrusting city
and county parks, seashore water management
district land and at least five state
parks (including Anastasia and Guana-
Tolomato-Matanzas National Estuarine
Reserve) to one world-class organization
(the National Park Service) to protect, preserve
and interpret, rather than allowing
the land to be ripped apart by greed.
Think of the good jobs that will encourage
young people to stay here, working as
National Park Service employees and contractors.
Think of historic interpreters and
environmental tour guides who are
rewarded with a federal showcase, inviting
the world to a world-class destination.
Let’s enlist Congress and the president
to help us tell our region’s rich history —
including the story of the Indians, African-
American slaves and Minorcan and Greek
indentured servants (who escaped to St.
Augustine from New Smyrna Beach, “voting
with their feet” against slavery by contract.
Indentured servitude was outlawed
along with regular slavery with the 13th
Amendment in 1865.
Think of how our tourist economy will
be stimulated and jobs created and preserved
by preserving the stunning vistas
that draw people here, not uglifying them
with massive high-rises, suburban sprawl
and unsafe homes built in wetlands.
Think of how fourth-graders now and
in the future, from all over Florida, will be
rewarded for their studies of Florida history
by helping preserve “the real Florida” — St.
Augustine and St. Johns County — forever.
It is up to us to learn from the young
and to protect Northeast Florida for families,
flora, fauna and the future. Visit
staugustgreen.com for more information
and let your neighbors and national and
local leaders know what you think. 

Faye Armitage lives in Fruit Cove. In 2008,
she ran against nine-term Congressional
incumbent John Mica, receiving nearly 150,000 votes.



A National Historical Park would preserve and protect
St. Augustine’s historic downtown with the dignity
and experience of the National Park Service, just as
parts of Boston, New Bedford, Philadelphia and
other historic cities are preserved

University of Denver Law Review: Robin W. Winks, The National Park Service Act of 1916: "A Contradictory Mandate?"

Robin W. Winks, The National Park Service Act of 1916: "A Contradictory Mandate"?, 74 Denv. U. L. Rev. 575 (1997).
Reprinted by permission of Denver University Law Review.

THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ACT OF 1916: "A

CONTRADICTORY MANDATE"?

ROBIN W. WINKS*

INTRODUCTION

Historians concerned with the National Park Service, managers in the Park Service, and critics and defenders of the Service, frequently state that the Organic Act which brought the National Park Service into existence in 1916 contains a "contradictory mandate." That "contradictory mandate" is said to draw the Park Service in two quite opposite directions with respect to its primary mission; the contradiction is reflected in management policies; the inability to resolve the apparent contradiction is blamed for inconsistencies in those policies.

The apparent contradiction is contained in a single sentence of the preamble to the act. That sentence reads, in addressing the question of the intent of the Service to be established by the act, that the Service is


to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein [within the national parks] and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.1

This paper is an attempt to determine the intent of Congress with respect to the Act of 1916. It is the work of an historian, not a legal scholar. The historian recognizes that the intent of the whole of Congress in passing an act, and the intent of the individuals who framed that act, do not perfectly coincide; that intent must nonetheless be interpreted as individual; that intent changes; and that the law of unintended consequences looms large in any legislation.

A MOMENT FOR CONTEXT

The National Park System of the United States is unique among the world’s systems of government preserves. Because of this uniqueness, reference to attitudes, legislation, or management practices elsewhere, even if legally admissible, is of little help in understanding the American National Parks. One says of "little help," however, rather than of no help, precisely because the system’s unique characteristics may be brought into focus best by a comparison with park systems elsewhere. Consider these aspects of the system’s uniqueness.

The Unique System

The National Park System of the United States is the world’s largest, both in the number of units (375 as of June 1997) and in total land area. Thus, legislation passed with respect to the Park System, beginning with the National Park Service Act signed by President Woodrow Wilson on August 25, 1916 (also referred to as the Park Service’s "Organic Act"), whether generic to the system as a whole or specific to an individual unit, has more extensive application than any other park system in the world. Such legislation influences, is affected by, and is of concern to all Americans.

The National Park System of the United States is the most complex, the most carefully articulated, and thus the most specific system in the world. There are twenty-one types of units (national park, national monument, national preserve, national reserve, national seashore, national lakeshore, national historical park, national battlefield park, national military park, national battlefield, national battlefield site, national historic site, national memorial, national wild, scenic, and/or recreational river, national parkway, national scenic and historic trail, national memorial, national recreation area, national scientific reserve, national capital parks and a miscellany of units grouped simply as "other") that are administered directly by the Park Service.2 Several units exist in forms of partnership and loose affiliation, and three programs (national historic landmarks, national natural landmarks, the national registry of historic places) are run by the Park Service with respect to properties that, in general, it neither owns nor administers. Despite the care with which these various types of parks are designated, and the high degree of specificity that applies to the laws creating specific units, all are governed by the Organic Act.

The National Park System of the United States is genuinely national, for there are units in all but one state and in all dependencies. In some nations, such as Australia, areas designated national parks are in fact administered by state and local authorities. In some nations, such as Canada, resources adhere to the individual province, so that national park legislation may be substantially compromised at a more local level, as in the province of Quebec.

The National Park System of the United States is the world’s most intellectually elegant system, for it has grown, and in more recent years has most consciously been added to, by the application of a National Park System Plan to which a series of Theme Studies is central. These Theme Studies, ranging over a number of subjects, both with respect to natural areas and to cultural and historical experiences of significance to the nation as a whole, have been conducted with care and imagination, with both Park Service professionals and informed non-governmental experts involved. While Canada, and to a lesser extent New Zealand, have imitated the Theme Study approach to the evaluation and designation of potential Park System units, neither has applied this approach so fully. While at times a unit may be added to the U.S. System through more local political pressure, the overwhelming body of units reflect a close awareness on the part of the Park Service of Congress’s desire to adhere to Theme Studies and to carry them out expeditiously.

The National Park System of the United States also has the warm support of the American people, who clearly cherish the system even when they do not fully understand it. This has not always been the case, of course, and any given unit may at some point have been the object of hostility, especially locally, but there can be no doubt that by the 1970s the system was embedded within a vigorous, growing, wide-spread public sentiment for conservation and protection of the environment. This sentiment has not abated, and the public brooks little compromise with what it understands to be the System’s mission. The same may be said of National Park Systems in few if any other countries.

To be sure, public - and thus legislative - awareness of this mission has changed across time. For example, the initial campaign for the creation of national parks was strongly supported by the tourism industry, most particularly by railroads and, soon after, by automobile associations. At the time of passage of the Organic Act of 1916, the railroad was a power in the land, the only feasible means of mass transport to the great Western parks, while the automobile was being admitted to parks in ever greater numbers. The goal of the Park Service created by the act was to "preserve, forever unimpaired, the sublime beauty, dignity, and nobility of national park landscapes;"3 the Organic Act was silent on issues of biological preservation as we would understand the term today. But then, so too was the Constitution of the United States initially silent on such issues as privacy or anti-trust goals, though language was present by which courts would, in this century, find implied constitutional intent.


Acts Subsequent to 1916

Whatever the intent of Congress in 1916, with the enactment of the National Park Service Act, Congress may change its intent by subsequent acts. The Act of 1916 is examined in its full legislative history in the material that follows. But first, a sense of context requires some comment on the manner in which Congress added to the intent of the original act.

That intent has been Congressionally modified by two types of acts. There are broad-ranging acts relating to natural resources which impact upon the national parks, and there have been specific acts, notably those of 1970 and 1978, that have extended the discussion of the purposes of parks. Of the first type of act, there have been four above all that apply to the national park system. The Wilderness Act of 1964 created a National Wilderness Preservation System, prohibited all commercial activities, motorized vehicles, permanent roads, or development of any kind within designated wildernesses, and provided that portions of National Park System units might be so designated. The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 designated segments of rivers as part of a system in which waterways were to be maintained in or returned to a pristine state. (Subsequently a designation of Recreational River was added.) The Clean Water Act of 1972 set as a national goal the elimination of all pollutant discharges into waters and making waters safe for fish, wildlife, and people. While the deadline mandated by Congress was relaxed, the act continues to apply within national parks. The Endangered Species Act of 1973 defined endangered and threatened species and required the government to draw up lists of these species and to acquire lands and waters necessary to their protection. As many national park units function as wildlife preserves, the act has direct application to the parks.

Additionally, a series of acts relating to natural resources broadly, notably the National Environmental Policy Act, the National Forest Management Act, and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, are also relevant to the parks. The last two acts require the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management to coordinate their resource management plans with other agencies, including the National Park Service. These acts quite obviously tilted the 1916 mandate toward a more compatible interpretation of the Park Service’s responsibilities. To be sure, none of these acts defined the key word "unimpaired" in the 1916 act, but taken together, they provided a functional definition that went beyond "preserve unimpaired" virtually to call for the restoration of the ecological integrity of the National Parks.

National Park Acts of the 1970s

Congress went some distance toward functional definitions in two park-specific acts in 1970 and 1978. In an amendment to national park legislation, Congress declared that National Parks "derive increased national dignity and recognition of their superb environmental quality through their inclusion . . . in one national park system preserved and managed for the benefit and inspiration of all the people."4 Clearly here Congress was holding National Parks to an "increased" or higher standard of protection, this higher standard was based on the maintenance or achieving of superb "environmental quality," and each park benefited by being included in a system that benefited all: that is, a threat to one was a threat to all. Further, Congress now called for preservation and management that would benefit and inspire "all the people," thus by implication ruling out management decisions that would redound to the benefit of only "some of the people": interest groups, local parties, one might argue even historically vested bodies that lacked clear national significance.

In 1978, Congress reaffirmed the Organic Act and declared that parks must be protected "in light of the high public value and integrity" of the park system in a way to avoid "derogation of the values and purposes" for which the parks, collectively and individually, were created.5 "High public value" is somewhat subjective and clearly changes over time; by the use of this criterion, Congress appears to have instructed the National Park Service to manage parks in relation to public sentiment and, in effect, sociological jurisprudence. By this standard in 1978 Congress gave a powerful mandate to the Park Service, a mandate which would prohibit actions that could have the effect of "derogation" of park values. Virtually all commentators at the time and since have concluded that the 1978 provision added to the Park Service’s mandate to protect ecological values.

Of course, the amendments of 1970 and 1978 apply to actions, not to inaction. That is, where an invasive activity, practice, or structure already existed, was the Park Service required to take action to eliminate it, or to mitigate its effects, or was the Park Service merely required to brook no future intrusions? In some measure the answer to this question requires site-specific knowledge, since national parks clearly are meant to be held to a higher standard than other, nearby, surrounding, or environing federal lands and one must know what those standards are, and thus what the specific threat, incursion, or compromising situation may be. Does, for example, an historic ditch that conveys water from, across, through, or into national parklands, for the benefit of private persons or municipalities, now require removal? That such a ditch requires mitigation there can be no question, under the expectation of parks being held to higher standards; that a local ditch, used for irrigation, would not meet park criteria is abundantly clear; that such a ditch impairs the "values and purposes" of parks also seems clear in the context of modern sensitivities and the legislation of 1970 and 1978. But neither act directs the Park Service specifically to remove such a ditch. Absent such instruction, a question is, may or should the Park Service do so?

Historic Structures within National Park Units

Today, more than half of the 375 units of the National Park System are primarily cultural/historical in their purpose, and there is likely to be greater growth in the future of such parks than there will or can be of natural/scenic reserves. Further, public awareness of historical structures, and public concern for their protection, has grown at least as rapidly as public awareness and concern for specified sites within the natural environment. It is not, therefore, a digression to comment briefly on how the Antiquities Act of 1906, and other legislation relating to historical preservation, would bear upon an historic object within a national park that had been set aside primarily for natural and scenic purposes. The example already proposed, an "historic ditch," may be used.

Might a ditch on park lands be an "historic object" in the meaning of the Organic Act, and thus entitled to consideration for protection on that ground? If the ditch were present in 1916, surely the answer is yes; if the ditch were constructed after 1916, the answer is far more ambiguous. However, on either side of the date of the Organic Act, management would not be required to protect the ditch either as a structure or object or in its historic use unless it clearly met certain criteria.

In August of 1916 the Department of the Interior was responsible for twenty-one national monuments and one archaeological reservation. Of these, nine were defined as being primarily of historical significance, and therefore these units may be taken to suggest what Congress meant at that time by an "historic object." Of these units, five were purely archaeological in their intent (e.g., Chaco Canyon, Grand Quivira). These ancient ruins would more commonly be referred to today as "cultural" rather than "historical." One unit, Dinosaur National Monument, was set aside for the fossil record, that is, for paleontology rather than history as commonly understood. Only three units provide any functional definition of what Congress may have had in mind when it referred to "historic objects" in 1916: El Morro, a great rock on which Spanish, Mexican, and American explorers had inscribed their names; Tumacacori, the ruins of a significant mission church near the Arizona-Mexico border; and Sitka, site of a Tlingit village in Alaska. These were quite major, visible, and substantial sites. Clearly an historic ditch, no more than an historic cabin, was envisioned by Congress in 1916 as automatically embraced by the act.

Whatever Congress may have had in mind in 1916, the Historic Sites Act of 1935 provided criteria for the protection, selection, or conservation of "objects" that qualified for the attention of the National Park Service, so that thereafter decisions with respect to the protection of historically-used structures, or other alterations of nature within a national park, could be made on the basis of relatively clear principles. The Act of 1935 built upon the Antiquities Act of 1906, and it specifically required that to be of significance under the Act a site, building, or object must:

1) Be associated with and now be the "primary tangible resource" that illustrates, recalls, or characterizes "individuals, groups, events, processes, institutions, movements, lifeways, folkways, ideals, beliefs, or other patterns or phenomena that had a decisive impact on or pivotal role in the historic or prehistoric development of the Nation as a whole." By this criterion, an irrigation ditch - to continue with the example chosen - would be worthy of protection provided it were the "primary tangible resource" illustrative of the process of irrigation, or of a folkway that hinged upon the practice of irrigation, provided that the ditch in question were, indeed, "primary," "tangible" - for which read, retaining its substantial integrity as a structure - and relating to the Nation "as a whole." Thus a ditch that served or serves local purposes would not qualify, while a ditch that served wide-spread purposes illustrative of national growth would qualify, provided it were the "primary" (best surviving or most important) example illustrative of irrigation.
2) A ditch might qualify provided it were a "masterpiece of type," or had a "pivotal influence" in the later development of its type of construction as an aspect of "technological or engineering design." Thus the Park Service could recognize different stages in the development of irrigation, and protect more than one ditch, provided each was an exemplar of a stage of development that transcended local use. This would require passing a test of integrity, or primacy, and finally of significance to the development of a particular application of engineering that had national impact.
3) A ditch might be protected if, in its structure, it provided "information" that was "essential to professional or public understanding of human development," such information not being obtainable by example elsewhere; and
4) The ditch would have to "possess an exceptionally high degree of integrity of form, material, and setting."


These criteria were subsequently expanded so that, in 1996, they number six. To the four stated above, one must add that such an historic place, site, structure, or object may be designated if it is a) representative of some "great idea or ideal of the American people" and/or b) is "associated importantly with the lives of persons nationally significant." 6

There are also negative criteria. Ordinarily reconstructed structures do not fall under the act. Nor do structures that have achieved significance within the last fifty years. Nor do structures, even though they may have integrity, which have been moved from their original locations, unless the structure is historically significant for reasons of architectural merit.

There are two programs under which a site already within a national park unit can be formally designated as historic: the National Landmarks and the National Register.

There are now nearly 2,200 National Historic Landmarks. While one might argue that historic structures within a national park’s borders automatically are entitled to special consideration, the fact that several structures that are inside park boundaries have been designated independently as National Historic Landmarks suggests that to guarantee preservation, or to cause the localized setting aside of criteria relating to natural preservation within a park that has been created primarily for landscape/scenic/wildlife purposes, such structures need be given the highest consideration only if they meet the separate Landmark criteria. In other words, historic structures that do not meet such criteria may be removed - or not - depending upon management decisions relating to the overall purpose of an individual park as stated in that park’s enabling act.

Within Rocky Mountain National Park, for example, twenty-three structures or sites (including the old Fall River Road) had been placed on the National Register of Historic Places as of 1988.7 There is no requirement that a structure be nationally significant to be placed on the National Register, for "properties significant to the nation, a state, or a community" may be nominated by states, federal agencies, and others. There are well over 50,000 places on the Register, including over 900 within units of the National Park System. In this way the Park Service has honored its obligation, as stated in the Organic Act, to recognize historic objects.

However, the continued presence of an "historic object" may militate against the primary purpose of a park unit, and unless that object is judged to be of National Landmark status, the Park Service may override the preservation of the historic object in the interests of the park’s primary purpose. Nor does placement on the National Register assure any form of protection, local, state or federal; indeed, some two percent of National Register places have been destroyed.

The "historic object" reference within the Organic Act of 1916 has bedeviled historians and non-historians alike. Within the original national parks, those "historic" objects overwhelmingly were fences and gates used to control grazing, ditches and other structures to effect irrigation, or cabins used by hunters, foresters, and recreationists prior to the creation of a unit. The question has arisen often - most dramatically in Grand Teton and Olympic national parks in recent years - as to whether any or all of these three categories of "objects" either require protection, or may receive protection, under the Organic Act. The conclusion is that such "objects" do not require protection, and that the burden of proof is on the advocates of such protection, given the criteria relating to national significance, integrity, and "exhibit" value.8

Contextually, in addition to considering the impact of post-1916 natural resource legislation, of acts specific to the national parks, and of acts relating to historical preservation, on the Organic Act of 1916, one must consider one other aspect of the intent of Congress: how the meaning of language changes. One need not belabor the point here beyond observing that in usage and meaning, terms like "conserve" and "preserve" have functionally changed across time. Thus, the use of such terms in legislation subsequent to 1916 may not have precisely the same connotations as these words had at the time.

CREATING A NATIONAL PARK SERVICE: THE ACT OF 1916

The National Park Service was created by Act of Congress in August 1916, and President Woodrow Wilson signed the Organic Act on August 25. The act was the result of some six years of discussion, intense lobbying by a variety of interest groups, and growing public concern. The leaders of the campaign to establish a Park Service were, in the House, Congressmen William Kent and John Raker, both of California, and in the Senate, Reed Smoot of Utah. Congressman Kent had the close advice of Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., son of the founder of American landscape architecture and creator of Central Park. Stephen T. Mather, a wealthy borax industry executive (who later would become the first full-time Director of the new National Park Service created by the act) was heavily involved, as were a number of recreational, outdoor, tourist, and automobile associations, of which the American Civic Association was the most important.

These advocates spoke of most of the thirty-seven parks that then existed, as well as the wide range of park proposals pending before Congress, in terms of scenic reserves, often invoking a comparison with Switzerland, which it was invariably argued had capitalized on its natural scenery more effectively than any other nation. Both railroad and automobile interests advocated more consistent administration of the existing parks in order to protect them more effectively, and also to make certain that accommodations and campgrounds were held to a consistent standard for the public’s pleasure. While the railroads wished to bring spur lines to the borders of the parks, they seldom argued for actual entry. Automobilists wished to see roads to and within the parks upgraded so that visitors could tour the parks in greater comfort. All spoke of "scenery" with respect to the principal natural parks, though with a variety of qualifiers, and all referred to the need for preservation of that scenery while also making the scenery accessible for the "enjoyment" of the public. Thus, any discussion of Congressional intent in 1916 involves some understanding of what was meant at the time by "scenery," as well as the specific references to it in hearings, debate, legislation, and the correspondence of the key legislators.

In 1915-16, during the Congressional session which enacted the Organic Act, there were twenty-one members of the House Committee on the Public Lands, eleven of whom had served on the Committee in one or more previous Congresses and had experience with earlier omnibus park bills. Of these members, some were silent throughout, speaking neither at hearings nor in debate. The papers of sixteen of these members have survived. Debate, and the members’ papers, make it abundantly clear that the key members in the House, with respect both to the Organic Act and to specific national park bills during this time, were Congressmen Kent and Raker, Congressman Irvine Lenroot of Wisconsin, who was a watchdog preoccupied with scrutinizing all bills for their financial impact on government spending, and Congressman Edward T. Taylor of Colorado, who was an advocate of the bill that created Rocky Mountain National Park in 1915 and who saw the two acts as closely related. While other members spoke on occasion, their concerns were to clarify matters relating to grazing, roads, or fire protection, and almost never did any Congressman other than these four speak to general principles of preservation and protection or to matters concerning water. Indeed, many key members of the Committee, who were active with respect to other matters that came before it, were silent on the Organic Act of 1916. Their papers are also silent in the hundreds of volumes of manuscripts in the Carl Hayden Collection at Arizona State University, for example, there are frequent references to nation parks from the 1930s forward, but the collection is, except for a single document, utterly silent on the act of 1916. To cite a second example, the papers of Congressman Addison T. Smith of Idaho, now in the Idaho State Historic Society in Boise, are "a dead collection" on any matters relating to the public lands.9 Thus, in the House one best focuses on Congressman Kent, whose bill, H.R. 8668, was ultimately enacted (with slight modifications) as H.R. 15522, and whose papers are voluminous.

The story is similar in the Senate. While several Senators spoke with respect to their final bill, S.9969, which was offered by Senator Smoot, almost no one took up broad questions of the language of the bill. An examination of the surviving papers of all members of the Senate Committee on the Public Lands and Surveys for 1915-16 reveals that only Smoot was closely attentive to the legislation. His papers, most particularly his diary, in the library of Brigham Young University, supplement his public remarks.

The preamble, or "statement of fundamental purpose" for the Act of 1916, was drafted by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., at the request of Congressman Kent. Thus Olmsted’s views, though he was not a member of the legislature are also important to understanding Kent’s intent. Fortunately, his papers survive at the Library of Congress (and, to a lesser extent, at the former Olmsted offices and studios in Brookline, Massachusetts).

The governing sentences of the National Park Service Act of 1916 read as follows:

The service thus established shall promote and regulate the use of the Federal areas known as national parks, monuments, and reservations hereinafter specified by such means and measures as conform to the fundamental purpose of the said parks, monuments, and reservations, which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.10

It is this language which requires explication, and it is the path to this language, beginning with the first suggestion that there should be a National Park service or bureau, that requires tracing if we are to understand Congressional intent.

Taft and Ballinger Recommend a Bureau


Beginning early in 1910 the American Civic Association had declared the need for a special bureau, most likely within the Department of the Interior, to administer the nation’s national parks, of which by then there were eleven, with a twelfth to be added in May. (There were also eleven units with other designations.) There also were by the end of that year seventeen national monuments, under the administration of the Department of the Interior or the Department of Agriculture, and the Association wished to see common principles of administration applied, certainly to the parks and perhaps to the monuments. In his annual report for 1910, the Secretary of the Interior, Richard Ballinger, recommended that Congress should create a "bureau of national parks and resorts" in order to assure future generations competent administration of the parks.11 This statement was immediately taken up by the American Civic Association though never again was there reference to "and resorts" in relation to a bureau’s prospective title.

This did not mean that some of the parks were not seen in some measure as resorts, of course, but rather that those groups lobbying for creation of more parks, and more consistent administration of them by a central bureau, preferred different terminology. The lobbyists often referred to the parks as "the nation’s playgrounds," as "havens of rest," as places where the public might enjoy solitude, recreation, and "a sense of good health." To some, however, "resort" carried a somewhat undemocratic connotation, while "playground" - which was universal, for the people - became the preferred term at the time. In all the lobbying, Congressional hearings, and debates to follow, emphasis remained upon ways of bringing benefits "to the people," and the only analogous discussion to "resorts" vs. "playgrounds" would occur in 1916, when the automobile was seen by some, as it was being admitted to the parks, to be an instrument of the rich. By the time the Kent bill was before Congress, most members spoke little of the parks being resorts, and virtually all used as preferred language, "the nation’s playgrounds," a term also used by the American Civic Association.

Secretary Ballinger was in the midst of a major scandal at the time he made his recommendation. The primary student of Richard Ballinger’s land policies, James Penick, Jr., has argued that the scandal that surrounded Ballinger in his last months, prior to his resignation on March 11 - usually referred to in standard textbooks as the "Ballinger-Pinchot" controversy, which Ballinger lost, at least in the eyes of the public (and of historians subsequently), to Gifford Pinchot, the dynamic director of the U.S. Forest Service - was not in fact a scandal so much as a clash between theories. Ballinger ran the General Land Office - the primary agency for disposing of the public domain - according to nineteenth-century principles while new theories of land management had, by 1907, won over a large public who believed that private individuals ought not to be able to control essential public resources such as water power. Penick astutely observes that "[t]he same generation which would soon sanction immigration laws to protect the genetic purity of the American population and would support a National Park Service to protect the heritage of natural beauty awoke somewhat earlier to the revelation that the material wealth had been acquired by a few men who used their great economic power to exploit the farmer and laborer."12 These people, associated with the Progressives though not necessarily Progressives themselves, felt the General Land Office had "abetted [a] great betrayal."13

"These people," largely middle class, wished to see the grand scenery of America preserved virtually as a patriotic act. They did not want any of the natural scenery within the national parks to be used to private ends. A shift "from the general to the particular" had occurred, so that there was an informed public ready to argue the merits of damming the Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park, for example, as there were those who were promoting a National Park Service to be concerned with the integrity of all parks.

On February 11, 1911, when President William Howard Taft sent his special message on conservation to Congress, he omitted any reference to "resorts" altogether, recommending the establishment of a bureau of national parks, as essential to the "proper management of those wondrous manifestations of nature," which were, he said, "so startling and so beautiful that every one recognizes the obligations of the Government to preserve them for the edification and recreation of the people."14 He thus combined the inspirational, educational, and recreational purposes of the parks in a lockstep that would become fixed in the minds of park proponents. On February 12, 1912, Taft spoke in public, listed some of the national parks (to which he added the Grand Canyon, which was then a national monument), and declared in "consideration of patriotism and the love of nature and of beauty and of art" it was essential to spend the money needed to "bring all these natural wonders within easy reach of our people."15 A bureau would improve the parks’ "accessibility and usefulness," he concluded.16 These were common themes at the time, for parks were likened to "nature’s cathedrals" through which the United States, a raw young country, matched in splendor the great human-built cathedrals of Europe (a commonplace comparison, especially for Yosemite), and in which nature imitated the colors of art (usually said in reference to Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon). Such messages made clear that the President regarded, and believed that the American people regarded, the parks as symbols of the nation and thus of vital importance. However, Taft’s words did nothing to define standards of protection, much less of administration. This would be left to Congress.

President Taft’s concern had grown directly from the first major conference devoted specifically to national parks, held at Yellowstone in 1911. There, in a park policed by the U.S. Army, where different concessionaires charged different prices for transport from different entrances, where hotel facilities were deemed on the whole inadequate and automobiles were not yet permitted, a number of interested parties, including members of the House and Senate, spoke of the need for national parks to serve the nation’s health, preserve its great scenic wonders, and provide for recreational outlets for the people. Nature was compared to architecture, Providence (and at times God) were invoked, and most speakers believed that these wonders were intended for human "delight."17

The Hearing of 1912

The first substantive discussion of the purposes of a National Park Service or Bureau occurred during the House hearings on H.R. 22995 on April 24 and 25, 1912.18 During the discussion much was revealed concerning what, in the eyes of individual members of the House and in the mind of the Secretary of the Interior, Walter Lowrie Fisher, national parks were meant to be. The hearing moved expeditiously, with significant questions being fed to the Secretary by Congressman Raker, who clearly was committed to the creation of some type of professional service. Though the hearing was ill-attended - of twenty members of the House Committee on the Public Lands, only ten were present, and but half of these spoke - it brought forth several basic points.

After noting that the Secretary of Agriculture, James Wilson, approved of the proposed Park Service, while offering some amended language to the bill calculated to put greater distance between parks and national forests, the Committee called upon Secretary Fisher, who in his prepared statement gave six reasons why a bureau or service was desirable. (In subsequent discussion he elaborated upon some of these and added two additional reasons.) Interestingly, his first goal was to establish criteria for national park status and to hold to these criteria in the face of local pressure (in which he included political figures and associations).19 Reverting to this point later, Fisher observed that there were among the now twelve existing national parks three that were not of national significance (while he did not name them, correspondence at the time makes it clear he had in mind Platt National Park in Oklahoma, Sully Hill National Park in North Dakota - both ultimately demoted or abolished - and the Hot Springs Reservation in Arkansas). The twelve parks included duplications, were an "accumulation," and were not all of equal significance. A bureau would give the Department added strength in resisting future inappropriate proposals.20

Fisher also cited as justification for a bureau the need for coordination in policy and funding. Lacking a bureau, any experience gained in one park was of little practical use in another park (here he spoke of the need for an engineer who could formulate and apply common policies with respect to roads and bridges, and the development of such "incidental power" from the natural waterfalls as could appropriately be developed for lighting hotels and roads without interfering with scenic values). He cited the need for continuity and consistency in granting leases for accommodation, in order to avoid the chaos inherent in policies that ranged from no provision for granting leases through ten- to twenty-year leases (and one instance - Mount Rainier National Park - where the enabling act was silent on any time limit).21 Finally, a bureau could set administrative and management policy on a range of problems in order to assure visitors some common standard of experience, whether hotels, campgrounds, or transport. As something of an afterthought, Fisher added in closing that a bureau would make possible "scientific" determinations (he cited the question of the effect of the use of oil on roads within the parks) not then available.22 Under questioning, Clement S. Ucker, the chief clerk then responsible for the parks, pointed out that the intention also was to bring the existing national monuments and the Casagrande Ruin (as then spelled) Reservation in Arizona under the proposed bureau’s jurisdiction.23

Throughout testimony, Fisher, Ucker, and those Congressmen who spoke, reflected a desire to see the lands administered by the proposed bureau viewed as being unique, nationally significant, and a coherent whole rather than "accumulation." When discussing the "automobile question," Fisher noted that "to help the scenic beauty of the parks," they ought "to be kept properly" and asserted that there was "a park point of view": "The Forest Service, for instance, in its regulations, treats of the matter only from a timber point of view and not from a scenic point of view at all."24 One important goal of management was "not to destroy the scenic effect." Congressman Raker concluded, in response to a colleague’s observation that the parks were "simply large areas," that "you do not find any on earth that contains the scenic beauty and grandeur and necessity for preservation as in those national parks."25

What Is Scenery?

This hearing in 1912 was typical of discussion to follow. For the most part, both members of the House and witnesses from the executive branch restricted themselves to mid-level generalities. No one asked probing questions about precisely how scenic values were to be preserved or, indeed, what scenery was. Nonetheless, three generalizations emerged. Parks were to be held to a higher standard of preservation because of their grandeur and (with monuments) scientific values than were other federally-administered lands; this would best be achieved through a separate bureaucracy which would understand these different needs and values; and while roads, accommodations, and other man-made intrusions were necessary in order to enhance the recreational purposes of the national parks, such physical objects were to be subordinate to the preservation of the "scenery." Never, however, was scenery defined, for clearly all believed they understood its meaning.

There is no doubt that Congress wished to protect the scenery of the national parks. (Protection is not, of course, preservation, a word more commonly applied through the Antiquities Act of 1906 to national monuments, especially of an archaeological nature.) Though "scenery" is to some extent subjective, one should note that the word has certain agreed meanings which have not changed substantially. "Scenery" is "the aggregate of features that give character to a landscape" - a definition that allows for scenery to fall well short of "grandeur" and which thrusts a significant burden onto "landscape," which is defined (somewhat circuitously) as "a section or portion of scenery, usually extensive, that may be seen from a single viewpoint."26 This sense of "scenery" - that it represented a viewpoint, or perspective, that was wholly to be determined by humans - is reinforced when one notes the second definition, "the painted backdrops on a theatrical stage."27 When Peter Roget first prepared his now famous thesaurus in 1853, he noted as synonymous terms for "scenery" the words "view," "scene," "sight," "prospect," "outlook," "lookout," "vista," "perspective," and "landscape."28 (Other terms, such as "panorama" or "waterscape," are products of the twentieth century.) One may argue, then, that if one may assume those who used the term "scenery" in conjunction with "protection" knew the value of the words they chose, they intended that priority should be given to land that embraced several natural features (an aggregate) that were capable of being viewed from some point, whether road, trail, outlook, above or below, and that any alteration of timber cover, water course, rock face, or naturally occurring floral or faunal presence was to be avoided.

In 1911 the Century Company had issued a new Dictionary and Cyclopedia which had become the favored reference of Congress. In addition to invoking the words "aggregate of features or objects" and "character," this authoritative dictionary had added a definition of scenery which also included the notion of the "picturesque or pictorial point of view."29 Thus, no matter which dictionary one might consult, "scenery" is tied to "a place," or "features"; involves more than one "object"; and derives special value from the "aggregate" or conjunction of those objects, as viewed from some undefined but nonetheless human vantage point.

The Hearing of 1914

The National Park Service bill was introduced again at the 63d Congress, and as H.R. 104 it was the subject of another hearing before the Committee on the Public Lands on April 29, 1914, at which the idea of a "scenic point" was introduced by one of the speakers, Henry S. Graves, the Chief Forester for the Department of Agriculture.30 However, this hearing turned largely upon the practical question of whether a separate service would reduce expenses, be more efficient, and eliminate the need to use U.S. Army troops in some of the parks, a practice against which the War Department was protesting. Well attended, this hearing was particularly revealing on the army question but did little to advance general definitions of parks; there was no discussion of natural resources or of the meaning of protection. Congressman Raker again made the running, referring to the parks as "playgrounds," embracing the widely held language of the good roads, health, and recreation interests that were pressing both for a uniform service and for additional parks.31

President Taft's statements were placed on the record. He clearly felt there should be more national parks; equally, he wanted a bureau so that the parks "may become what they are intended to be when Congress creates them."32 He made no effort to suggest what that intention was, since quite properly this was a matter for the legislative branch. Raker was the only member of the public Lands committee who appeared to be concerned with the fact that there was no clear definition of the purposes of parks beyond being in themselves "great natural wonders" preserved for the benefit of the people, and he introduced to the hearing an address by Secretary Fisher made the previous year in which Fisher remarked that while he did not wish to intrude upon the terrain of such men as J. Horace McFarland, the President of the American Civic Association, or Senator Smoot, who had spoken strongly about the need for parks at the 1911 Yellowstone conference, he nevertheless found "there is no consistent theory of legislation with regard to the national parks."33 Fisher addressed himself to the concerns he had laid out in the 1912 hearing, adding two additional reasons for creating a park service: the need to protect the public and enhanced effectiveness in publicizing the parks. He commended the great railroads, and the Northern Pacific in particular, for their enlightened practices in promoting but not penetrating parks.34

Thus, little that was new emerged from the 1914 hearings, except for the revealing comments of Adolph C. Miller, assistant to the Secretary of the Interior, who after much praise for the soldiers who patrolled Yellowstone and Yosemite parks, and some battering by members of the committee who feared the growth of another expensive government bureaucracy, found that his most persuasive case appeared to be in demonstrating that the public did not like the presence of the army in the parks.35 "Military rule," said Denver S. Church, Congressman from California, "spoils the scenery and makes cold water taste flat."36 Miller did make it clear that the parks were faced with requests that a bureau could best resist, citing the case of an effort by the power and electric company operating in Sequoia National Park to change the location of their conduits and intakes, moving nearer a waterfall, that ought not to be permitted if a move was to the "detriment" of the "scenery of the park," a judgment best made on the spot by a trained individual.

The Department of Agriculture, which administered the national forests and the national monuments within forest boundaries, was a consistent supporter of the 1914 and 1916 national park service bills. Here the commonly held notion that Interior and Agriculture were in opposition to each other is quite untrue. Graves had been dubious about national parks prior to 1914, but he had changed his mind by then. He reasoned that a separate park service, could hold to higher standards of protection and scenic values, taking in only areas of truly national significance, would in fact protect the forest service in its holdings, since so many proposed parks were in Forest Service but were not of national significance. As Graves said, the Grand Canyon should be a national park - thus he helped make clear the criteria, at least of size and splendor, for inclusion in the system - while other areas (he named Mount Hood, Estes Park - the current way of referring to what would become Rocky Mountain National Park, or the Mount of the Holy Cross, all of "a special scenic character") might begin as national monuments administered by the Department of Agriculture and then, upon further study, become parks. In short, a vigorous, well-managed, and clearly-defined system of national parks would protect the forest department from poaching by local interests that thought the name "national park" would bring in more tourists and more quickly lead to good roads.37

Later, after a National Park Service was created, the NPS proved Graves to be accurate in his prediction. Between 1916 and 1932 over thirty-five national park proposals came before the Park Service, and its Director, or the Secretary of the Interior, declared with respect to twenty of these proposals that the areas in question were not worthy of national park status, leaving lands in the hands of those then administering them, usually the Forest service.38

The Hetch-Hetchy Factor

After 1913 discussion of national park bills, and of any bill to require application of uniform policies to parks, was constrained by bitter and recent memories on all sides of the great battle over the Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park. Many conservationists felt betrayed by President Wilson when, in December, 1913, he signed a bill authorizing the building of a great dam that flooded the Hetch Hetchy, thus infringing in the most basic and dramatic way on a park and most clearly contradicting any rhetoric to that point about scenic preservation and recreation being the highest values. Most of the players in the Rocky Mountain National Park and National Park Service bills were involved in these heated debates, and at times virtually coded remarks were made in hearings and in correspondence which, read in the context of the Hetch Hetchy, carried more pointed meanings than they may appear to do today.39 Certainly this was the case with Congressman Kent, who in favoring the dam had lost the affection of "the father of national parks," John Muir, and had gained the suspicion of the American Civic Association and the Sierra Club. For Congressman Raker, the situation was especially difficult, for it had been his bill that created the dam, and taken together with other efforts on his part to bring water to his northern California constituents, he did not, in fact, appear to most proponents of parks to be a firm friend. This may well account for his emotional commitment to the park service bill, and especially a somewhat remarkable outburst during the hearings of 1916,40 and surely contributes to the silence of many members of Congress on water matters, in particular, as they related to parks in 1914 to 1916.

Historians of public land policy for this period often detect four separate and distinct political groups which, depending upon the issue at hand, interacted in alliance. One, who called themselves the preservationists, were opposed to virtually any use of natural resources that would lead to their unnatural alteration. A second group, the "advanced progressives," advocated federal development as opposed to state or private enterprise. A third group, business-minded conservationists, were at the center of an emerging alliance between commerce and conservation; they wished to see private business, and sometimes the states, directly involved in both development and protection. It was this group that was most vocal on the national park issue, for they recognized that a magnificent protected area might be of great local commercial value (Some subsequent scholars have referred to those who espoused such an alliance, especially when they worked with the advanced progressives, as "utilitarian-conservationists.") A fourth group simply opposed any federal regulation of resources within the states, invoked arguments of states’ rights, and are usually referred to as the laissez-fairists.41

The significance of the Hetch Hetchy controversy to understanding the language used in discussing national parks subsequent to 1913 is that these four groups changed positions respective to each other during the affair, producing much bad feeling, and many who were involved in the bills of 1915 and 1916 had been burned over the Yosemite "violation," as some called it. Kent, for example, had been thought to be in the first group and then moved to the second; Robert LaFollette of Wisconsin had been so outspoken a member of the second, he was expected to be a champion of subsequent bills but remained largely silent on national park issues; Smoot, Lenroot, and Senator Henry Lee Myers of Montana belonged to the third group and would ordinarily have been opposed to President Wilson, but the war in Europe had muddied alliances, and they frequently proved to be the most powerful voices of moderate conservatism. Senators John F. Shafroth of Colorado and Clarence D. Clark of Wyoming were ideological laissez-fairists on most positions, and yet Shafroth would, after much soul-searching, support the Rocky Mountain National Park and Clark would defend a no-grazing provision for Yellowstone.42

Again, the person most alert to the damage the Hetch Hetchy type of controversy could do was William Kent. He had been a municipal reformer in Chicago who, despite having moved to California, with a home in Marin County, had remained active in Chicago politics until 1907. He disliked crowded cities and ordinarily favored any bill that would provide parks and playgrounds within the cities or would slow the pace of urbanization outside them. With the Hetch Hetchy he found himself in conflict, for he did not want to see a national park lessened and yet he believed that an assured supply of fresh water to San Francisco would so enhance health as to outweigh his convictions about the psychological and spiritual benefits of solitude and nature. As one scholar has remarked, "Kent was progressive except on the question of progress itself" while J. Horace McFarland, President of the American Civic Association, who opposed Hetch Hetchy, "was conservative except regarding conservation."43 Thus Congressional discussions of both the Rocky Mountain bill in 1915 and, more directly, the Park Service bill in 1916, were shaped by memory of the wounds inflicted upon each other only a few years before, and no one appeared to want to directly confront the question of whether, in the event of a conflict between good health through pure drinking water or good health through protected and open spaces, they would favor one over the other. Kent, having seen the divisiveness of the issue, appears to have deliberately avoided it.

Through their successive introduction, the Raker and Smoot bills to establish a national park service remained unaltered, save for one change in punctuation which unlike such changes in diplomatic documents, had no apparent significance. Congress intended to leave to the Secretary of the Interior the actual task of determining policies which, by their nature, would more clearly define what parks were to be. Section 4 of the bills consistently instructed the Secretary to "make and publish such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary and proper . . . for the management, use, care, and preservation of such parks, monuments, and reservations [this word was retained throughout to accommodate Hot Springs Reserve], and for the protection of property and improvements, game, and natural scenery, curiosities, and resources therein."44 This remained the language of H.R. 424, introduced on December 6, 1915, on which the Committee on the Public Lands held hearings on April 5 and 6, 1916.

The Hearings of 1916

The House hearings of April, 1916, dealt with two bills, H.R. 434 (Raker’s bill) and H.R. 8668, a new bill introduced by Congressman Kent. H.R. 8668 differed from H.R. 434 in that it contained the significant preamble quoted at note 2 above. The Chairman of the Committee on the Public Lands, Scott Ferris of Oklahoma, perhaps sensing that victory could be achieved in this session of the 64th Congress, let Kent virtually run the hearing, though Raker also was present. Since his first attempt to sponsor a successful bill, Raker had visited Yellowstone, several monuments and all the parks in California, Yosemite being in his district and Lassen and Cinder Cone monuments having been so prior to a revision of district boundaries. He entered a formal written statement into the record in which he told of his long-standing interest in the parks and endorsed the views of several men who had testified or offered statements at previous hearings, including Secretary of the Interior Fisher, Chief Forester Graves, and J. Horace McFarland.45 He also commended the work of Rowland B. Grant, a conservation writer, and described the park bill as his "pet project," as the matter uppermost on his mind. "[M]y whole soul is wrapped up in this legislation," he told his colleagues, in an emotional appeal to have the bill passed within the next few days.46

Congressman Kent was no less concerned with speed, however, and being a more seasoned politician and more popular colleague, he was both more active behind the scenes and more effective in the committee. Remarking that he had no desire to have his name attached to the legislation, and bowing to Judge Raker's primacy in having brought a bill to the House, he unsuccessfully sought to put aside the single issue which all agreed had sidetracked Raker's earlier bills: the question of costs. These hearings were better attended than any previous ones on the issue, and as Kent noted privately, with war in Europe and a national election fast approaching, it was now or never if this bill - any bill, his or Raker's - were to be passed. Kent believed his position was clear enough. What he wanted when he agreed to introduce a bill in place of Congressman Raker's was a document that was "as short and uncluttered as possible," knowing that this meant that language would not be provided to clarify all future areas of conflict and ambiguity. The resulting act was only two and a half pages long.47

The 1916 hearings substantially repeated the previous hearings, even to the extent of reading into the record the text of those hearings. The Secretary of the American Civic Association, Richard B. Watrous, as well as McFarland, spoke, rehearsing the history of previous efforts to create a service and invoking the spirit of John Muir, who had died two years before. Watrous more than any other commentator argued that parks were a "business undertaking," that public ignorance kept them from being the profitable enterprises they could be, and that Switzerland and Canada had well-organized park systems which led to large sums of money for their governments as well as for private enterprise.48 Speaking first, he set the tone for the hearing, which overwhelmingly focused on the twin financial questions, could the parks make money and would a bureau be costly, by reminding the Congressmen that during the recent international expositions in San Francisco and San Diego, to which many thousands of visitors traveled from the East, perhaps 75 percent of all tourists had chosen to go or return via the Canadian railroads because of the existence of national parks in the Canadian Rockies, parks that were well publicized by the Canadian Commissioner of National Parks, R.B. Harkin. Watrous quoted Harkin approvingly when the commissioner declared that parks "will pay not only in the strictly commercial dollars and cents way but they will also pay in a still more important way - by adding to the efficiency and virility of the nation."49

Thereafter the hearing focused upon the costs of maintaining the parks, especially the expense of building and maintaining roads and the merits of charging a fee to those who entered in automobiles, and on whether a bureau would make for such efficiencies as actually to save the government money. Congressman Ferris declared that the hearing would concern itself only with "the general subject," and when it appeared that the committee might again fail to report out a park bill, and especially when there was a possibility that some members would delay the bill by demanding more information on the question of tolls, Kent spoke up vigorously to cut off discussion on the issue until some future time when it would become apparent whether or not the automobile would be the standard means of transportation to the parks. He told the committee that the time had come to "get action" and that matters of detail could wait.50

In the hearings only two new points were made. For the first time the phrase "national park system" was used, involving the image of a systematic inventory of the nation’s grandest scenic landscapes and natural and scientific curiosities, all to be combined (with the ultimate transfer of national monument properties then under the jurisdiction of the Department of Agriculture) within one efficient and consistent administration.51 Secondly, for the first time the notion of the parks as great educational enterprises, places to which the public could come to learn about nature, geology, fossils or sedimentation, while also increasing their working efficiency, their health, and their patriotism, was set out clearly, in this case by McFarland and by R.B. Marshall, the Superintendent of the National Parks, a newly-created position.52 The "great parks are, in the highest degree, as they stand today, a sheer expression of democracy, the separation of these lands from the public domain, to be held for the public, instead of being opened to private settlement."53 McFarland read into the hearing the sentence Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. had framed as the preamble to Kent’s bill and declared that this statement must "remain as it is, unless it can be strengthened; it should never be weakened."54

Olmsted’s Statement of "Fundamental Purpose"

Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. is important to understanding the language of Kent’s bill. The son of Frederick Law Olmsted, the great creator (with Calvert Vaux) of Central Park, the person who had been one of the first to promote the idea of a Yosemite National Park, and the "father of American landscape architecture," the younger Olmsted had by 1916 long emerged from his distinguished father’s shadow and was both a famed designer of major parks in his own right and a member of the federal government’s Commission of Fine Arts. Olmsted shaped his language in conjunction with Kent, Raker, and others. The key provision Olmsted originally wrote for H.R. 8668 read:55


The fundamental object of these aforesaid parks, monuments, and reservations is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historical objects therein and to provide for the enjoyment of said scenery and objects by the public in any manner and by any means that will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.

This would be very slightly altered in its final form, to state (as we have seen) that the "fundamental purpose" of the parks was "to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."56 Each signifier here has undergone change since 1916; a linguist might argue that the change is somewhat differential between sections of the country, but none would argue that change has not occurred or that such change has not tended in one direction, toward a wider interpretation of the key words "conserve," "natural," "historic," "objects," "wildlife," and "unimpaired." As this last word set the only actual standard (as opposed to purpose), it has been seen as most open to attack, interpretation, expansion, and ambiguity.

What may we reasonably believe Congress, and those who framed the legislation, meant by "unimpaired"? To stalk this question, one must turn to the papers, first, of Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., and then to those of Congressman William Kent, for it was Olmsted who had insisted that there must be an overriding and succinct statement of purpose (today one would say "mission statement"). Since he expected and hoped for substantial public use of the parks, he was not content with leaving an area "unimpaired for future generations," but inserted the key words, "for the enjoyment of" those generations.

Herein lay an ambiguity and a potential source for future conflict. "Enjoyment" reasonably required access, and at the time roads, trails, hotels, campgrounds, and administrative facilities did not seem unduly invasive. The act cannot have meant that "unimpaired" was to be taken in its strictest sense, particularly since the act included specific approval for certain inevitably compromising actions: leasing for tourist accommodation was the most obvious example.

The Organic Act also contained a provision likely to affect natural resources in parks. By reaffirming an act of 1901 that authorized the Secretary of the Interior to permit rights of way in Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant national parks, for pipelines, canals, ditches, water plans, dams, and reservoirs "to promote irrigation or mining or quarrying, or the manufacturing or cutting of timber outside the parks," the act of 1916 showed that public use of the national parks might, when approved by the Secretary, extend to consumption of some of the park’s resources. Did the statement of "fundamental purpose" temper this section of the bill ?

One should not make too much of this provision. First, it applied by name to only three national parks, all in California, where water interests were powerful and historically entrenched within and around the three parks in question. That the act was silent on other parks may be taken to mean that the provision did not - or at least did not readily - apply to them, unless specific legislation with respect to a park mentioned such rights of way (the 1915 act creating Rocky Mountain National Park did contain such a provision). Second, to the degree that multiple use was peculiar to the mandate of the National Forest Service, other language in the Organic Act of 1916, and most particularly in subsequent amendments to that act in 1970 and 1978, clearly meant to provide national parks with a higher standard of protection than in national forests or, conversely, those acts were less permissive of the application of a policy of multiple use. Third, across time the conflict between any grant of authority to the Secretary to provide for multiple use and the language relating to "unimpaired" and "for future generations" was interpreted by the courts to stricter and stricter (that is, more protective) meanings of "unimpaired."

What did Olmsted mean at the time? We have a commentary by him, written in 1937, in which he provides a gloss on his meaning. In the midst of debate in Colorado over the Colorado-Big Thompson Project, a water diversion plan that would bring water from the western slope of the Continental Divide to the parched agricultural lands on the eastern slope, in part by the use of a tunnel that would pass through, or under, Rocky Mountain National Park, Olmsted wrote of what he deemed the "common sense" approach to the question of impairment. 57 An editorial had appeared shortly before in the journal American Forests, arguing that, were a decision made "to subordinate the principles of National Park conservation to principles of economic exploitation within the limits of the Rocky Mountain National Park," then the park would lose the central value by which it was worthy of national park status, and that the land should be withdrawn and transferred to the Forest Service as a National Forest. The editorial further suggested that any diminution of the park’s natural scene should lead to the transfer of the entire park, not merely of the portion visibly affected by the Colorado-Big Thompson irrigation project.

While Olmsted found this reaction excessive, it is instructive to note that he had clear criteria in mind by which he would define a rational position on the question of invasions of the park in relation to water needs outside the park. First, he argued that a stand on "absoluteness" was not "sane" in a "world of relativities," acknowledging that an absolutely unbending position would lose support for the park since the Park Service would appear to be opposing a goal that was "for the good of society." Second, he thought that an unduly "academic conception" (in this case, of landownership "as extending vertically from the center of the earth indefinitely upward into space") would be, and would be seen to be, non-rational. Third, he specifically argued that a tunnel a mile below the surface would not necessarily or invariably inflict harm on the park; rather, the test to be applied should be one of the "probable degree of its adverse influences." Fourth, not content with so general an argument, he proposed actual criteria, in keeping with the original intentions of the Organic Act, that should be applied when issues of this nature arose.

Olmsted proposed five criteria. 1) The burden of proof - "and thoroughly well-considered and convincing proof" - must rest upon the advocates of "any enterprise for non-park purposes within the theoretical limits of jurisdiction of a National Park"; 2) the enterprise must be of "real social importance from a national [italics added] standpoint and is not to be practically attainable" elsewhere; 3) the enterprise must not "endanger the value of the park for its proper purposes to the slightest appreciable degree"; 4) the danger must be "so slight and of such a nature that the land if subject to it in advance would nevertheless have been wisely considered eminently suitable for selection and permanent maintenance as a National Park"; and 5) the non-park purpose must be "of so much more importance nationally than the purposes of the park" as to justify the lessening of the park. Olmsted concluded that, while he was open to reason, he did not find the arguments for the Colorado-Big Thompson Project complete or convincing.

Of course, Olmsted’s reasoning was not law (and this expression of his view came over twenty years after he had drafted the 1916 preamble). Congress and the President, in their wisdom, did in due course approve the Colorado-Big Thompson project.58


Congressman Kent’s Views

What did the principal formal author of the National Park Act of 1916, Congressman William Kent, say about it himself? Kent often is singled out as the "father of the National Park System," and his views deserve some extended analysis.59

Kent was a Chicago businessman who had bought a home in Marin County, California, in 1899 and moved there in 1907. He was adding to an already substantial fortune through land in California and in Nevada. A Progressive, he had stood with Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, and after 1912 he was a somewhat ambiguous independent supporter of Woodrow Wilson. Elected to Congress in 1910, he brought with him a reputation as a conservationist, and he quickly went on record in favor of public power. He wished to see the nation’s flooding rivers brought under control, advocated extensive irrigation projects for California’s Owens Valley, strongly supported public water power projects on the Suwanee, the Susquehanna, and the Mississippi rivers, and was an early proponent of the Tennessee Valley Authority. As he championed public power, he also opposed private power, and he was particularly ambivalent toward a bill put forward by his colleague on the Committee on the Public Lands, Congressman Scott Ferris of Oklahoma. This bill, H.R. 16673, came before Congress in January, 1915, to authorize the Secretary of the Interior to lease to American citizens "for purposes of constructing dams, water controls, reservoirs, transmission box lines" "any part of the public lands . . . including lands in national forests, the Grand Canyon and Mount Olympus national monuments, and other reservations, not including national parks" for a period of fifty years. Kent vigorously opposed this bill, pouncing upon its reference to the Grand Canyon, and even though Ferris added the provision that leases were to be granted only if they were not inconsistent with the purpose for which a national park or national monument was created, Kent remained adamant. Water, Kent maintained, should belong to the people.60

A second consistent strain in his thought was revealed in his persistent efforts to transfer to public ownership a large area of Mt. Tamalpais, in Marin County. Kent owned much of the mountain and an outstanding grove of coastal redwoods that nestled in one of its valleys, and beginning shortly after his arrival in California he had wished to see this land become a state park or, as later phrased, national monument - the first national monument having been created by executive action at Devil’s Tower, Wyoming, in 1906 - in part because the growing population of Marin County was creating pressure for more water, and he wanted both to protect the purity of the watershed and to assure the towns of the county an adequate public water supply. In 1908 he was successful in these endeavors, and his redwood grove became Muir Woods National Monument. From 1903 forward he spoke of the need for more national parks and the necessity to keep lands in or destined for parks out of local politics.

Thus Kent favored the development of water power through public means, the protection of watersheds, and the creation of national parks and monuments to preserve scenic and natural areas. At Muir Woods he was insistent on the highest standards of protection, and the early wardens, who were in his pay, even kept local societies that had been accustomed to walking in the park to "botanize" - the contemporary term for taking plants for educational purposes, pressing them in "flower books," and identifying them - from picking wild flowers. At Muir Woods, he wrote all was to be left natural, with no plants to be removed and no naturally downed trees to be cleaned up from the valley floor.61 He also proposed a park for Lake Tahoe, on which he was unable to obtain effective support.

As a member of Congress, Kent was not dogmatic on the water issue, save for his insistence on public power, and he was not invariably a supporter of undisturbed wilderness even in national parks. After all, he was among those who pressed for opening up Yosemite National Park to the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, for he felt constrained to put the water needs of his Bay Area constituents first.62 For whatever reason, he was silent on water issues when both the 1915 and 1916 park service bills were introduced, though in 1913, during an early discussion of Rocky Mountain National Park, he observed that scenic judgments were subjective and that he preferred a "mirror lake" to a mud flat.63

Kent’s views on what a national park should be had been made clear, however, across several park proposals. In 1913 he had offered up a national monument on the Middle Fork of the Feather River in northern California and a Redwood National Park on the California north coast and in January, 1915, he had come out strongly in House debate for the Rocky Mountain National Park bill, declaring that the preservation of scenery is a "most valuable purpose." He drew a distinction between national forest, national monument, and national park land, asserting that a national park must be held "in a state of nature" and that animal life must be "forever free from molestation."64 One may reasonably conclude that this was still his view only a year later, as sponsor of H.R. 8668.

Kent’s position thus seems clear. He promoted his own park bill because he thought it, and not Raker’s, would pass and also because it was the better bill. It contained Olmsted’s preamble and Raker’s had none. In close touch with President Wilson, Kent was cautioning him weekly on the need to keep the United States out of the war that had broken out in Europe, and he intended to withdraw from the Congressional race in the first district of California (though he postponed an official announcement until June to allow for an appropriate successor to test the waters) because of ill health. Thus, he also felt a sense of urgency in getting the bill to the President. For reasons of health, Kent’s focus on his bill clearly declined after it was reported out of committee in May, but he could well feel he had made his position abundantly clear already, and he knew that Senator Smoot would carry the bill in the Senate.

During this time letters poured in from a wide range of constituents, organizations state and national, and fellow members of Congress, praising him for his park bill. Examples of letters of commendation and support received in March of 1916 alone include the Washington State Federation of Women’s Clubs, Seattle Daily Times, Fortuna (CA) Women’s Civic Club, City Shade Tree Commission of York, PA, College Women’s Club of San Diego, the Henry Street Settlement in New York City, The Appalachian Club, Tramp and Trail Club, Erie (PA) Board of Commerce, Corona Club of San Francisco, Twentieth Century Club of Berkeley, California Development Board, Hebrew Educational Society of Brooklyn, Los Angeles City Teachers’ Club, Miss Haskell’s School of Boston, National Magazine, American Society of Landscape Architects, South Bend (IN) Chamber of Commerce, Highland Park Ebell of Los Angeles, and Herbert W. Gleason of Boston (a lecturer on parks).65

Kent was particularly concerned with standards, and with the rumor that the chief forester, Henry S. Graves, was opposed to his bill, and on this he sought out assurances. Graves responded to Kent on March 17, declaring that he fully favored the bill. The Department of the Interior was facing pressure for economic use of natural resources in the parks and chose to meet this by granting grazing privileges similar to the national forests. This would affect the forests too, and as we have seen, Graves wanted to see a national park service created so that a national park would be clearly distinct from a national forest, "almost wholly protective," set aside to preserve "exceptional natural wonders," "segregated," for "exclusively . . . recreation and scenic purposes." The goal was to "preserve these areas in their natural condition." Congress must, Graves concluded, be certain that national parks are "really distinctive" and then hold them to a higher standard than other public lands, with the proposed National Park Service to have "its own separate and distinct field."66

Nothing could have seemed clearer, and Kent and Graves were in agreement that precisely because a higher standard was to be applied to national parks, one must resist the growing demand at the local level to create parks primarily to attract tourists. Graves noted that there were fifteen or more bills pending to create new parks; many of the bills would not prohibit industrial use and would authorize grazing, mineral development, the sale of timber or the use of streams for water power. This must not happen, he said, and Kent agreed. Late in 1916, Kent was unhappy with power companies in the Mono Lake Valley for obtaining rights under the guise of irrigation, and for being allowed to effect a change in the Yosemite Park line, to the loss of two magnificent waterfalls.67

Had Kent intended any emphasis on recreational purposes for the parks - one of the purposes to which Graves referred - he surely would have said so, for at the time Kent was a Vice President of the Playground and Recreation Association of America. Had he believed that he could leave interpretation of the bill to the Secretary of the Interior, Frederick K. Lane, he surely would not have written to Woodrow Wilson on July 24, when the bill was soon to be on the President’s desk, advising him that Interior was abandoning sound policy. The Assistant Secretary, A.A. Jones, was not to be trusted, and Lane himself "had broken down to a considerable extent in his conservation policies."68

Until his death William Kent tracked the national parks. In 1922 he marked a passage in an article by Barton Warren Evermann, that "National parks should be maintained as natural parks and not be marred by artificiality of any avoidable kind."69 In 1925, when a Senate Subcommittee of the Committee on the Public Lands held hearings on the national forests, Arno B. Cammerer, Assistant Director of the National Park Service, appeared before it, and Kent noted his remarks with approval. Cammerer asserted that the parks "were established to be kept absolutely in their natural condition," except for roads and hotels: it was, he felt, preferable to lose land and change boundaries than to permit an incompatible act within a park.70 Reservoirs, for example, were clearly incompatible, Cammerer noted, pointing out that Congress had, by amendment to the Federal water power act of 1920, gone on record that before any ditches, reservoirs, etc., could go into any national park, they would have to be specifically authorized by an act of Congress. Kent appears to have felt that his basic principles had at last been clearly recognized.

A Contradictory Mandate?

Several commentators on the National Park Service Act of 1916 have concluded that the preamble, or statement of fundamental purpose, presented the Service with a contradictory mandate. There are three possible sources of contradiction: doubt as to whether the 1916 act applied to parks existing before that time; conflict between federal agencies; and ambiguities in the language of the act. The first two possible sources of conflict do not arise, for Congress was clear with respect to them. In the debates on the bill, Senator Reed Smoot of Utah, sponsor in the Senate, specifically said that the bill was intended to apply to the then existing parks.71 In the Committee Report accompanying the 1916 bill, Congress noted that there was not supposed to be any conflict of jurisdiction among the agencies.72 Thus, if the new National Park Service was handed a contradictory mandate by Congress, the contradiction arose from the language of the bill, and in particular from its statement of "fundamental purpose." Whether such a contradiction exists or not now requires further examination.73

These recent commentators ask, in one form or another, how a management policy can both accommodate use and preserve a natural area. These commentators, often in very similar terms, conclude that the Park Service was presented by the act with a "fundamental dilemma," that the Service was asked to attempt "harmonizing the unharmonizable," and that the dilemma is not capable of either logical or historical resolution.74 None of these authors appears to have examined the bills that led to the Act of 1916, the hearings, the debates - that is to say, the legislative history - much less having sought out and explored the private papers of the members of the Committee on the Public Lands.

To accept the conclusion that the preamble presented the Park Service with an inherent contradiction, that it is illogical, is to conclude that Congress had no clear intent, that it either did not know what it was doing when it posed a dilemma, that it did not care, or that there is no inherent contradiction in the preamble. While Congressional acts undeniably contain unclear language, and (when acted upon administratively) unresolved issues, it seems unreasonable to so summarily dismiss Congressional intent when the act was the product of well-informed men, especially Raker and Kent, both of whom had studied the issue with care, one of whom declared the act to be his "pet" and the other, by evidence of his correspondence, having spent much time upon it; when the act was the last of a series, each of which had benefited from the clarification of hearings; when the co-sponsor in the senate, Reed Smoot, confided to his diary that this act was one of the most important of his accomplishments;75 and when such careful and scholarly individuals as Frederick Law Olmsted and Robert B. Marshall had a hand in its language.

We have Raker’s testimony to the importance he attached to this legislation. Though his papers apparently have not survived76 in public hands, we know that Raker (and Kent) met regularly in 1916 at the apartment of Robert Sterling Yard, a journalist working for the United States Geological Survey in Washington, and that the final bill was drafted by these men, joined by three officers of the American Civic Association, McFarland, Richard B. Watrous, and Henry A. Barker; by Enos Mills, Huston Thompson (the Assistant Attorney General), Gilbert Grosvenor, editor of The National Geographic Magazine, Emerson Hough, a leading exponent of reforestation, and Herbert Quick of the Saturday Evening Post. Except for Mills, who was popularly dubbed "the father of Rocky Mountain National Park," which had been created by act of Congress earlier in 1915, these men were professional publicists, editors of travel and outdoors oriented magazines, or officers of similarly inclined associations. As noted earlier, McFarland and Watrous would testify at the 1916 hearings on the National Park Service Act. Yard had been editor of Century Magazine and of the Sunday magazine of the New York Herald, but he had recently come to Washington to be head of any future national parks information office, and he was writing a booklet on the parks. (Stephen Mather, future director of the National Park Service, had arranged for Yard to be employed through the Geological Survey, since there was as yet no park bureau that could hire him.77).

Once Kent agreed to sponsor a new parks bill, these men moved their meetings to his home on F Street in Washington, where they met "fairly regularly," according to the young Horace Albright,78 who was Mather’s assistant and a regular member of the group. He recalled Kent, McFarland, Marshall, and Yard as the core group, with Olmsted, Grosvenor, Quick, Hough, Barker, Watrous, and Mills present from time to time. Thus there was reasonable continuity of attendance at these meetings. It seems unlikely that such a group, even though they wanted a simple and uncluttered bill and wished it in a hurry, would allow a glaring contradiction to be part of the statement of "fundamental purpose" over which Olmsted labored, producing at least three versions. One must presume that the language was deliberate and that it is worthy of the closest attention.

Not present at the F Street meetings was Stephen Mather himself. Mather had brought Yard to Washington and had persuaded Albright to give up a career in the law to be his assistant; a rich man, he paid both out of his own pocket, an unusual but not illegal arrangement. Mather had taken pains to get to know the people who ran the national parks, by calling a national park conference for Berkeley, California, in March of 1915, and asking all park superintendents to attend. He also had invited most of the concessionaires from the parks and took with him from Washington several key players. One member of the House Committee on the Public Lands, Denver S. Church of Fresno, California, had attended. At Berkeley, Mather had spoken of the need for a park service and had shared with Albright his sense that many of the superintendents, being political appointees, were not up to their tasks, a deficiency a park service would remedy.

Mather also took the trouble to get to know the key members of the House and Senate committees. He was on social terms with Congressmen Kent, Raker, Carl Hayden, Addison Smith, and Louis C. Cramton of Michigan, all members of the Committee on the Public Lands, as well as with Senators Smoot and Norris. He talked with them about the need for a service, shared with them his philosophy of what the parks should be, and urged them to move forward as quickly as possible with a new bill. Kent did so at a time when Raker was ill, mindful of the fact that his California colleague was unpopular and maladroit on the floor of the House, as well as disliked by the House minority leader, James R. Mann, who came from Kent’s former district in Illinois. Thus the working group got behind Kent’s bill quickly, knowing that it had a far greater prospect of being reported out of committee than Raker’s bill did.

Finally, it was Mather who orchestrated the presence of powerful journalists at the planning meetings on F Street. He took a party into Sequoia National Park in July of 1915, including local newspaper editors, natural scientists, the head of the American Museum of Natural History, the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee, the vice-president of the Southern Pacific Railroad, photographers, magazine writers, and travel editors. Following this visit to Sequoia and the Kings River and Kern River canyons, Mather and Albright brought a number of national magazines into line, and then promoted meetings at the Yard and Kent residences. Given this careful preparation, it is also unreasonable to assume that Mather would have allowed a "logical contradiction" to emerge from Olmsted’s pen.79

Mather testified during the hearings of April, 1916. He frequently noted that an act was needed quickly, given uncertainties in Europe, and admitted that from his perspective the bill did not deal in detail with all matters of importance.80 He did not pronounce upon the language of the Kent/Olmsted preamble at the time, though in 1918 he agreed with Secretary of the Interior Lane that the parks "must be maintained in absolutely unimpaired form." If he believed this in 1918, he surely believed it in 1916, and it seems reasonable to conclude that, given the care with which he orchestrated the shaping and passage of the Organic Act, he believed that the statement of "fundamental purpose" supported his view.81

We also have the commentary of two men who were consistently present at the meetings in Yard’s and Kent’s residences. One was Robert Sterling Yard himself. Early in 1916 Yard compiled a lengthy booklet, Glimpses of Our National Parks, which he wished to get into public schools.82 He told Kent there was a great demand in Congress for this publication, with many members wanting 2500 copies while he could provide each with only 25, and he asked Kent to sponsor a rider to an appropriations bill that would make the booklet a public document. Glimpses would be transmuted by Yard first into a substantial book of photographs with modest text, National Parks Portfolio, and then, with greatly extended text, into The Book of the National Parks.83 In the last Yard wrote that "[o]riginally the motive in park-making had been unalloyed conservation"; indeed, he used the controversial language, that Congress had said it wished to "lock up" certain places.84 However, after the creation of great parks such as Yellowstone and Yosemite, local pride had led to the enactment of units "better fitted for State parks" (this was with reference to Sullys Hill, Wind Cave, and Platt national parks), so that "the modern period" had followed, the period of "definite policy" represented by the act of 1916, after which parks had to be of "distinguished company" and embrace "the nation’s noblest landscapes and sites."85

Horace Albright, likewise present at the creation, is the only one of those who helped to talk out the proposed bill who would later explicitly confront the presumed contradiction in the act. In his memoirs, published in 1985, he noted that contrary to some scholars’ accounts Olmsted did not write the full bill itself, though he was "responsible for the wording of the governing sentence," and that all present wanted the bill "to carry a clear definition of what the Park Service should be." They were aware of the "inherent conflicts between use and preservation," he wrote - he did not say "contradiction" - but they were facing the political reality that this issue could not be resolved by the organic act alone.86

National Park Services files at the National Archives reveal hundreds of letters written by many dozens of organizations and individuals in favor of the proposed National Park Service Act of 1916. These letters invariably focus, as we have noted, on scenic values, road access, the quality of accommodations, and the notion that the parks were the nation’s playgrounds. The most prolific correspondents were the officers and members of the American Civic Association; and, as we have seen, three of those officers, McFarland, Watrous, and Barker were present, the first almost always and the others less frequently, at the meetings in Yard’s apartment and Kent’s house when the bill was drafted and Olmsted completed his statement of "fundamental purpose." Thus their voices are also entitled to be heard on the allegedly contradictory mandate.

McFarland commended Olmsted’s preamble. "There is no better service we can render to the masses of the people than to set about and preserve for them wide spaces of fine scenery for their delight," he wrote.87 In truth, McFarland had first drawn Olmsted into the cause, and the language of both the House and, even more, the Senate bills from the first proposal in 1911 had been deeply influenced by McFarland’s views. Further, McFarland appears to have persuaded Secretary of the Interior Ballinger as early as 1910 that Olmsted was "the man who ought to do the thing that is in mind with relation to these national parks" - that is, prepare a statement of purpose.88 Ballinger had sent that portion of his 1910 annual report in which he proposed a national park bureau to McFarland for comment, and the American Civic Association had immediately begun a public campaign. At McFarland’s urging, Olmsted had submitted directly to the Department of the Interior his first attempt at a general statement to accompany the first draft bill. The statement in the draft read:

That the parks, monuments, and reservations herein provided for shall not at any time be used in any way detrimental or contrary to the purpose for which dedicated or created by Congress.

Olmsted said this was not adequate and added to the bare bones section the additional proviso that the parks, etc., should not be used in any way contrary to "promoting public recreation and public health through the use and enjoyment by the people . . . of the natural scenery and objects of interest" in the parks. Olmsted was particularly concerned that the word "scenery" be inserted in connection with "natural" throughout the document. Olmsted sent copies of this correspondence to McFarland.89

McFarland told Olmsted that he regarded him as "the wisest man in America" on park subjects, and that his "conception of what a park is . . . " was most important.90 He argued Olmsted’s view at the Yellowstone Park conference of 1911, in correspondence with Ballinger, and consistently each year thereafter, seeing to it that Olmsted was always in a prominent position to comment on, and thus help shape, the language of any subsequent bills. The Olmsted Papers, the Marshall and Mather manuscripts, and the files of the National Park Service are filled with letters from McFarland, showing that he remained carefully in touch with each development. Surely it is unlikely that McFarland would have allowed the final product of all this effort, the Act of 1916, to contain a "fundamental statement" of purpose which he thought was weak or contradictory?

Indeed, McFarland made his position clear in a heated interchange with Gifford Pinchot, the former head of the Forest Service, over the matter of the Hetch Hetchy. Pinchot had implied that the initial framers of the park service bill had a pecuniary interest in the parks and was reported to have said that Interior was "where all the crooks are." This was an echo of his furious feud with Ballinger, as well as a statement, about which he was equally direct, concerning his conviction that the national parks should be administered by the Forest Service, with parks to be "handled with the same government purpose which must control" the National Forests. He also belittled McFarland’s vision, suggesting that the American Civic Association simply wanted to apply the methods of a city park to vast areas of wilderness, concluding that McFarland did not know what a "park" was.91

Pinchot’s letter struck McFarland, who felt he quite clearly understood what a park was, as arrogant and ill-informed. National Parks could not be managed by individuals trained in "forest principles" only. The principles governing national parks were quite different - he did not invoke the "higher standard" argument in this response, as he would do later - and the National Parks would not be safe in the hands of such a man as Pinchot. He attacked Pinchot for having given up the "wonderful territory" of the Hetch Hetchy Valley, violating a national park, without ever having personally viewed the area. The implication was clear: that a Park Service was necessary to prevent any future violations of this nature.92

To Chief Forester Graves, who he regarded as more sympathetic to a park service, McFarland wrote that "a declaration of the real purpose of a National Park" was important in order to correct misconceptions about a park as a small or curried area. The purpose had to be "declared in unmistakable terms," and McFarland quoted Olmsted’s draft.93 Of two Senate bills then proposed, McFarland preferred the shorter one - this was Senator Smoot’s bill - both strategically and functionally, and he asked Smoot to insert in his bill, S.3463, the section on purpose. Again, is it likely that a person of such persistence, who regarded a general statement of purpose essential to any bill, and who preferred a short bill with such a statement, would have thought the final language used in the preamble to the Organic Act had created a logical contradiction?94

Other members of the House Committee on the Public Lands, and most members of the Senate, were silent on the purposes of the Act of 1916, speaking in hearings only to specific points, usually economic and financial, or in debate in favor of the act or on whether grazing should be permitted in parks. Edward T. Taylor of Colorado had made his views known the previous year during efforts to create the Rocky Mountain National Park, and he was largely silent on the National Parks Act, other than commenting favorably on the Colorado National Monument, created by executive act in 1911, which he hoped might become Colorado’s third national park, following Mesa Verde and Rocky Mountain. Congressman Nicholas J. Sinnott of Oregon spoke up only to express the hope that a proposed Park-to-Park Highway, which Stephen Mather promoted during the 1916 hearings, would extend from Mount Rainier through Oregon to California. While Congressman Irvine Lenroot of Wisconsin was active throughout, he did not comment on general purposes or standards, being primarily interested in the language that would assure the Secretary of the Interior the authority to grant or deny leases. Congressman Scott Ferris of Oklahoma, the chairman of the House committee in 1916, was most interested in his own bill on water resources. Congressman Robert LaFollette, usually vocal on any issue concerning the public interest, was planning to run for the presidency and appears to have attended only one of the hearings. Floor debate was short, to the point, and no new light was thrown on Congressional intent.

There is, as a final approach to the "contradictory mandate," the logic of rhetoric. Many of those involved in framing the Organic Act, and certainly the former judges, school teachers, and present Congressmen, were well accustomed to the use of rhetoric, or the study of the effective use of language. As rhetoricians, Senator Smoot and Congressmen Kent, Ferris,95 and Lenroot were highly regarded. The classical education of the time - and Olmsted and Raker had such an education - included rhetoric as a formal study. The principles of rhetoric held that, when listing two or more elements to an argument, the most important be stated first, and when speaking in public debate, a significant element of the argument which was not, however, the most significant, should be stated last in order to allow for an "Attic fall." If the principles of rhetoric were applied to the language of the preamble, then conserving "the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life" within a park took precedence over providing for public "enjoyment," and there was no contradiction between two elements of equal weight for the elements were not, in fact, equal.

The Senate passed its bill on August 5. S. 9969, Reed Smoot’s bill of 1911, was recycled in slightly altered form. While he was opposed to the "socialism" of state promotion of water resources, Smoot was otherwise in agreement with Kent on conservation matters. He wished to see more national parks, in part because they preserved God’s handiwork, in part because they would bring visitors and better roads, and to that end he was pleased when it was suggested that Mukuntuweap National Monument in the remote southwest desert of Utah might become a national park, since he knew that dusty roads deterred traffic. (In 1919 Mukuntuweap became Zion National Park.) However, the Senate bill did contain one significant difference. At the insistence of Senator Clarence D. Clark of Wyoming, who was fearful that references to grazing would mean that permits might be issued for Yellowstone, the bill had no provision for grazing.

The need to reconcile the two bills meant further delay, though the public band wagon mounted by McFarland and others had helped to carry bills for three new parks - Sieur de Monts (later, Acadia), Hawaii, and Lassen Volcanic - while House and Senate conferred. Then the chairman of the Senate public lands committee, Senator Henry L. Myers of Montana, and the House chairman, Congressman Ferris, agreed to allow grazing in all national parks with the explicit exception of Yellowstone. At the last minute a powerful Congressman from Wisconsin, William Stafford, who opposed new bureaus on principle, sought to bottle up the bill that had emerged from the conference committee, and Kent was able to persuade him to stand down.96 Approval in the Senate quickly followed.97

Explication of Text, 1916-1976

A recent historian of the national parks, Alfred Runte, has argued that though Congress wished to create a "system" in 1916, there was still relatively little awareness that this system involved more than setting aside lands that had little or no prevailing economic value. Known as the "worthless lands" thesis, Runte’s argument is that Congress had not thought through such terms as "unimpaired" or "enjoyment" largely because it imagined the parks would not be the objects of commercial or industrial threats, since they were basically worthless in economic terms, and that impairment was thus not likely to occur, or if it did occur, such impairment would relate almost entirely to providing for "enjoyment," not to other issues.98

Certainly there is some truth in this statement. Wild lands were, by 1916, coming to be valued, but few people conceived that there would be any serious scarcity of them, and some people of exquisite urban sensitivities still held to the view to be found in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, that mountains were "horrid." Years earlier Frederick Law Olmsted (Sr.) had, while manager of the Mariposa Estate and a frequent visitor to the Yosemite Valley, advocated the construction in that valley of graceful arched bridges in the manner of Central Park in order to humanize the landscape; he hated "the wilderness & wild," he wrote to his wife. In the 1890s, Senator Richard F. Pettigrew of South Dakota said that Mount Tacoma (now Mount Rainier) "with its perpetual snow and . . . rocky crags" was a "worthless land."99

In this sense, and for the 1890s, Professor Runte’s "worthless lands" thesis is correct, though his argument tends to ignore the fact that by 1911 many in Congress attached economic value to park proposals for tourist purposes and that others understood that as technologies changed, as old minerals might be extracted at lower costs and new minerals be found, these "worthless lands" would take on economic value. There is no convincing evidence that by 1916 the majority of legislators believed that they were protecting lands that would be worthless for all time, and an abundance of evidence that virtually all considered that the parks had commercial value as tourist attractions.

Nonetheless, the notion of useless or worthless lands may help to account for why many in Congress felt no urgency to define the signifying terms within Olmsted’s draft. In 1915, Representative Edward T. Taylor of Colorado, then a ranking member of the House Committee on the Public Lands, spoke of the beauty of the proposed Rocky Mountain National Park, comparing it to Switzerland, and said that it had "no value for anything but scenery." He was careful to assuage the feelings of forestry and farming interests by stating that the park would contain "little timber of merchantable value" and that its elevations were too high for farming.100 Thus language was used in 1915-16 somewhat differently than we use it today.

While the crucial words from the preamble to the Organic Act of 1916 have traditionally been viewed as the statement of "fundamental purpose" already examined here, there is other language in the act that requires consideration. Let us read the preamble again:

The service thus established shall promote and regulate the use of the Federal areas known as national parks, monuments, and reservations hereinafter specified . . . by such means and measures as conform to the fundamental purpose of the said parks, monuments, and reservations, which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.101

Thus, the primary goal of the new Service is to "leave" the parks and monuments unimpaired, placing clear priority on protection as opposed to restoration of landscapes and by implication arguing for a presumption of inaction in the face of any request for what may be viewed as "impairment." Arguably any action taken prior to passage of the Organic Act that might be viewed as impairment represented an action that could be, in so far as possible, undone, reversed, or nullified.

But what of "shall promote and regulate" in reference to the parks and monuments? Here arises the true source of the dichotomy of purpose, between preservation and use, conservation and enjoyment.102 It may well be argued that the order in which these two objectives are set forth, as well as the sequence by which taken together they precede other terms in the statement, is significant, with "enjoyment" circumscribed by "unimpaired."103 The legislative history of the act would appear to support this view, and successive Directors of the National Park Service, and for the most part Secretaries of the Interior, as well as chairpersons of the relevant committees and subcommittees in Congress, have usually acted in such a manner as to suggest that the Park Service’s first priority should be preservation.

The "governing sentence" and the sections that follow are silent on questions of water or timber use, and one must infer intent from that which is said. In a circular letter to his colleagues on April 27, Kent supplied the amended bill as reported out following the mid-April hearings. He drew attention to its provisions.104 Cutting of timber was to be permitted only in order to control insect attack or disease or to conserve the scenery or the natural or historic objects: that is, one resource that was specified was to be altered only with a view to conservation purposes. While permits could be granted for use of the land, these permits were to be "only for the accommodation of visitors in the various parks," so that land grants were to be denied save to meet the needs of accommodation. "No natural curiosities, wonders or objects of interest" could be leased, rented, or granted on terms that would "interfere with free access to them by the public," which placed the public interest first while permitting rental or lease that presumably went beyond accommodation, to which grants were limited. The Secretary could grant grazing rights when they were not detrimental to "the primary purpose" of a park, which was enjoyment by the people and preservation of wild life and natural features. Section 6 declared that all acts or parts of acts "inconsistent herewith" were repealed.

The intent of Congress as expressed in 1916 must also be seen as modified in light of the acts of 1970 and 1976. The act of 1970 introduces somewhat revised language, for unlike the act of 1916, it does refer to "the people." The act arose in the context of a growing concern for recreational opportunities in the United States, recognized by the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, which reported to President John F. Kennedy in 1962.105 In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon’s "Legacy of the Parks" program held that the government should be "taking parks to the people," an idea which was supported on a bipartisan basis in Congress. The result was the Act of August, 1970, which in addition to reasserting the significance of the national parks, remarked upon their "in creased national dignity" both "individually and collectively," so that an infringement upon the dignity of one was an infringement upon the dignity of all. This, some commentators thought, meant that each park superintendent had the responsibility to act aggressively with respect to threats against his or her unit rather than awaiting a directive by the Director of the National Park Service.

Less commented upon, but important, is the language by which "the people" are invoked: the parks, which must represent "superb environmental quality," also acquire their significance by virtue of their "inclusion jointly with each other in one national park system preserved and managed for the benefit and inspiration of all the people." In addition to the explicit citation to the people, the act added to the linked criteria of 1916, unimpaired preservation and access for enjoyment, the new, if parallel, concepts of "inspiration" and "benefit." As these words are at least as open to subjective interpretation as were those of 1916, they gave rise to renewed debate.

However, "benefit" and "inspiration" need not be placed in opposition to each other. The context makes clear that "inspiration" refers to the re-creation of the spirit that comes from gazing upon or walking amidst a sublime scene, or from examining an historical remnant relating to an event or achievement presumably inspiring to most Americans; it may, of course, also refer to the "inspiration" that arises from the healthy use of recreational outlets, mastery over one’s body, or simply a sense of well-being. Indeed, since Congress proceeded to create, under the 1970 act, a number of new National Recreation Areas, including so-called "urban parks," at the least this reading seems essential. It does not follow, however, that "recreation" was given priority over "re-creation." The 1970 act clearly strengthened the Congressional mandate placed upon the Park Service to protect park units in the fullest sense of the word.

"Benefit" requires less parsing, though in conjunction with "the people" it does require a textual comment. As stated, this linkage had not been made explicit in previous legislation. By the linkage, Congress appears to have been saying that management principles must look to actions that would benefit "all the people" (indeed, the 1970 act used precisely this language) rather than decisions that would redound primarily to the benefit of a minority, be it local, an interest group, or an ethnic community. Thus guidance was given to the Park Service to exercise the broad powers it either possessed or would acquire over the next decade.

The act of 1970 also expanded the definition of the Park System to include "any area of land and water now or hereafter administered by the Secretary of the Interior through the National Park Service for park, monument, historic, parkway, recreational, or other purposes." While this provision was directed to the concept of national seashores, national lakeshores, and wild and scenic rivers, no distinction of this nature was made in the act itself, and thus the language is quite sufficiently broad to admit of all water and land resources within a park.106

In Section 8 of the Act of October, 1976, Congress directed the Secretary of the Interior to "investigate, study and continually monitor the welfare of areas whose resources exhibit qualities of national significance and which may have potential for inclusion in the National Park System." While this section did not, as some critics suggested, lessen the actual criteria for inclusion in the system, it did lead to many new additions; more important is the fact that it also gave the Secretary an essential advisory authority on resource issues outside the boundaries of any of the existing parks. From this it was a short step, through four key acts already on the books - the Wilderness Act of 1964, Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968, Clean Water Act of 1972, and Endangered Species Act of 1973 - to charging other government agencies with cooperating with the National Park Service.

In the 1970s, the Park System grew at a nearly unprecedented rate, especially under the impetus of Representative Phillip Burton of California. As Chairman of the House Subcommittee on National Parks and Insular Affairs, Burton required that twelve potential park proposals be reviewed each year. Thus Congress took over an initiatory role, not waiting for the Park Service to propose units. As Congress increasingly took primary responsibility for the creation of new units, in view of what it regarded as a default on this responsibility by the Executive Branch and the Park Service, dozens of acts were passed. While each of these was specific to a unit, some contained varied language concerning that unit, or on occasion units collectively. It is an interesting question (and a nightmarish one), therefore, as to whether in order to interpret or understand the intent of Congress today one needs to examine each of the nearly four hundred individual acts in search of language that would effect the collectivity.107

A NOTE ON SOME SUBSEQUENT LEGAL INTERPRETATIONS OR ACTIVITY OUTSIDE THE PARKS: WATER BY WAY OF EXAMPLE

The Organic Act establishing the National Park Service in 1916 provided that the National Park Service (NPS) was to "conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."108 This act was amended in 1970 and in 1978 - those amendments are found at 16 U.S.C. § la-1 (1994). The purpose of those amendments was to reiterate the NPS’s duty to maintain and protect parks in the spirit of the 1916 act. As we have seen, none of these statutes provides any scheme for how the NPS is supposed to fulfill the lofty objectives in the statutes.109

I have tracked how courts have interpreted these statutes. A vast majority of cases involve challenges to NPS regulation within parks. With a few exceptions courts overwhelmingly defer to the discretion of the NPS to regulate within the parks in carrying out the mandates of the legislation.110 This closing note will, therefore, focus on the more difficult question of power to control or affect activity outside the parks.

Some courts, even before 1916, have held that the Secretary of the Interior has a trust obligation to protect public lands. In Knight v. United Land Ass’n111 the Supreme Court said that the Secretary of the Interior is the guardian of the people of the United States over the public lands. The extent of this duty was highlighted in litigation involving Redwood National Park in the 1970s. The unique legislation that created the park in 1968 contemplated that problems would arise from external logging and gave the NPS the authority to acquire interests in land outside the park to minimize ecological damage within the park.112 The Sierra Club sued the NPS to force the NPS to exercise this power.113 Courts will usually overturn an agency’s exercise of discretion only upon a showing of abuse of that discretion. Nevertheless, after reviewing the evidence, the court ordered the NPS to exercise its power to acquire interests in land outside the park.

Although the court in the Redwood cases relied on the unique statute creating the park, the case nevertheless has implications for other parks. The court also invoked the general duties under 16 U.S.C. § 1 and a general trust obligation of the NPS to protect parks.114 The court noted that the NPS had failed to "exercise and perform duties imposed upon them by [ 16 U.S.C. § 1 ] and the Redwood National Park Act . . . and duties otherwise imposed on them by law."115 (After the Department of the Interior had submitted reports to the court, the court found that the Department was attempting to comply with the law.)116

After the Redwood litigation, Congress passed another statute for Redwood National Park. To clarify the confusion over the duties of the NPS generally, Congress added a rider to the statute to reinforce 16 U.S.C. § 1.117 The Senate Report accompanying the bill emphasized that the purpose was to refocus and insure that the basis for decision-making concerning the National Park System continues to be the criteria provided by 16 U.S.C. § 1 because the committee had been concerned that litigation with regard to Redwood National Park and other areas of the system may have blurred the responsibilities articulated by the 1916 Act creating the National Park Service.

Accordingly . . . The Secretary is to afford the highest standard of protection and care to the natural resources within Redwood National Park and the National Park System. No decision shall compromise these resource values except as Congress may have specifically provided.118


In 1980 the U.S. district court in the District of Columbia relied on this language to reject the notion of a separate public trust outside the statutory duties imposed on the NPS.119 On the other hand, the court found that the NPS had very broad discretionary power from several sources.


In Andrus, the Sierra Club sued to force the Interior Department to assert federal water rights in water courses affecting the Grand Canyon and Glen Canyon, both within units of the National Park System.120 The court agreed that in the event of a real threat to the water supply for scenic, biotic or natural purposes in those areas, the Secretary would be required to take action.121 The Court noted that the statutes do not provide a mechanism for how this action is to be taken, but found that the Secretary had broad (although not unlimited) discretion to take action, including but not limited to:
(1) asserting reserved water rights;
(2) acquiring water rights under 16 U.S.C. § 17j-2(g);
(3) denying land exchanges and rights of way; and
(4) bringing trespass or nuisance actions.122

The court deferred to the Secretary’s discretion and declined to force him to assert the rights the Sierra Club wanted.123

The NPS may also have authority under the property clause of the Constitution to control activity outside park boundaries as that activity impinges upon public property. In Minnesota v. Block,124 the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals found that Congress could make regulations outside the Boundary Waters borders because of the property clause. The same court later found that the NPS also had this power and could regulate delivery of canoes along public roads leading into NPS riverways in Missouri, even were the canoe-renting people never to enter park property.125 Under the property clause, Congress has power to protect public lands. The Eighth Circuit applied this doctrine to find that this power extended to regulation on or off public land in order to protect public land.126

There is thus tentative authority for the NPS to act outside its borders. Still, as the Andrus court pointed out, it is not entirely clear from NPS statutes alone how this is to be done. In addition to the methods suggested by the Andrus court, there are several other possible sources of authority to act, however.

Conservation and Environmental Statutes

Various environmental statutes may be able to be exploited to help the NPS protect resources such as water in the parks. Among the statutes to consider are (1) the Clean Water Act, (2) the Endangered Species Act, (3) the Wilderness Act, and the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.127

Implied Reserved Federal Water Rights

Another potential source of NPS power, depending on the circumstances, might allow the NPS to assert "implied reserved federal water rights" in land outside the park. This doctrine, developed in the courts, provides that when the government withdraws land from the public domain for a federal purpose (such as a national park or forest) the government impliedly reserves, as against future users, whatever water rights are needed to effectuate the purpose for which the land was reserved, but only the amount necessary to accomplish those purposes. The key is the intent of Congress for the use of the land at the time it was withdrawn from the public domain for a use such as a park or forest.128 This intent is applied vertically, that is, chronologically, and it is this intent we have sought in the body of this monograph.

The Supreme Court restated this doctrine in a case involving the NPS in 1976: "[When the Federal Government withdraws its land from the public domain and reserves it for a federal purpose, the Government, by implication, reserves appurtenant water then unappropriated to the extent needed to accomplish the purpose of the reservation."129 This right vests (i.e., you get it) on the date of the reservation and is superior to future appropriators. In other words, at the time the government creates a park or a forest, it gets the rights and no subsequent user can impair them.

Cappaert was a rancher who owned land near Devil’s Hole National Monument (now functionally part of Death Valley National Monument) in Nevada.130 President Harry S. Truman had reserved the monument in 1952 in part because of unique fish that lived in a pool in a cavern, and protection of the pool was specifically mentioned in his proclamation reserving the monument.131 The Supreme Court held that the NPS could stop Cappaert from pumping groundwater on his ranch in amounts that were diminishing the level of the pool and threatening the fish.132

The key issue in Cappaert was whether maintaining the level of the pool was necessary to the purpose of the reservation of the monument. Moreover, since the doctrine of implied reservation of water rights reserves only the amount necessary to accomplish the purpose of the reservation, Cappaert was allowed to pump some water so long as the level of the pool did not drop to such a low level that it harmed the fish and other scientifically valuable aspects of the pool.133

Compare United States v. New Mexico,134 where the Supreme Court held that the United States had not impliedly reserved water rights for aesthetic wildlife preservation, or recreational purposes when it created the Gila National Forest.135 The Court noted that the purposes for which national forests are reserved are to protect timber and watershed.136 The court contrasted the much broader purposes for which National Parks are reserved, citing the language of 16 U.S.C. § 1.137

What of National Parks created from National Forest land? The lands of Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP) were originally reserved as a national forest and were only later made a national park, in 1915. As seen in New Mexico, the purposes, and correspondingly the extent of water rights, are much narrower for national forests than for parks. Technically, it might be argued that only national forest rights were reserved at the time of initial reservation from the public domain. However, this question has been addressed and resolved favorably to the NPS by the Supreme Court of Colorado. In United States v. City of Denver,138 the court was asked to determine the extent of federal reserved water rights in the Colorado, Gunnison, North Platt, White and Yampa River Basins in Colorado.139 Relying on New Mexico and Cappaert, the court focused on the precise federal purposes (including the priority date) for which the lands had been reserved.140

With respect to RMNP, the court held that the priority dates for water rights related to forest purposes (i.e., protection of watershed and timber) dated from the creation of the national forest, but that additional, broader rights consistent with the purposes of a park obtained when the park was created in 1915.141 (The court found that the purpose of a national forest was a subset of the broader purposes of a park, so that simply adding new water rights onto existing forest-related rights would not be consistent with the purposes of a park.) The court thus implied a second reservation from the public domain when the park was created.142 The court sent the case back to the water court to determine the specificity of those rights.143

Third, the RMNP legislation of 1915 made specific reference to "homestead, mineral, right of way" and to "private, municipal, or State ownership"; that is, it made no reference in these contexts to another government agency, such as the Forest Service, thus implying that upon the designation of the land as a national park rather than national forest, the Forest Service no longer had authority within those lands. Much subsequent legislation has made this point abundantly clear. The act did refer to "rights of way in certain national parks and the national forests for irrigation and other purposes," but did not ascribe any authority with respect to those rights of way in national parks to any other body, and by virtue of specific reference to both national parks and national forests made it clear that the two were seen as mutually exclusive. The Secretary of the Interior was given the discretion to grant "easements or rights of way for steam, electric, or similar transportation upon or across the park," but no reference was made to having discretion to grant such rights of way or easements for the purposes of irrigation, thus suggesting that the Secretary had no such discretionary power in this area.

Conclusion

Where water is involved, one may not invariably separate issues of quantity from issues of quality, of course, since a diminution in quality may well require an increase in quantity to achieve the same purposes, if indeed, one may in any measure be said to have preserved the natural conditions if there is a significant change in either quantity or quality. It appears that the federal reserved water right doctrine would not be applied in a way that would make it meaningless - that is, if it is necessary to accomplish the purpose for which land was reserved to have clean, as well as sufficient, water, then presumably a right to clean water applies.

If any issue of water quantity (or quality) arises from conflict or interpretation with another federal government agency, the various court decisions that suggest national parks are to be held to a higher standard of preservation than lands administered by another agency would seem to apply. In the Committee Report accompanying the 1916 bill for the NPS, Congress noted that there was not supposed to be any conflict of jurisdiction among the agencies, but it is not clear what the Committee meant in practical terms. 144 Most of the legislation seems to contemplate that the NPS is to work in cooperation with other agencies, with no implication of any form of subordination.145

There is also the simple force of history, public opinion, and common sense. Whatever may have been read into certain words in 1916, those words now have relatively agreed upon meanings. The NPS is to "preserve" and "protect" - that is, make certain through management that a sufficient quantity of those elements natural to the landscape are retained unto future generations to carry out the purpose of the establishment of a given park unit; it is to apply this conservation to the "scenery" - that is, to the aggregate landscape as broadly perceived to the senses, and most particularly to the eye; it is to apply it to the "natural" objects - that is, to those individual constituent elements of the landscape that are "perceptible to one or more of the senses, especially something that can be seen and felt" (surely a definition applicable to water, to restrict this commentary to our one sustained example); and it is to apply it to "historic" objects as well - that is, to individual constituent elements that are historically part of the landscape to be conserved (and clearly a flow of water, a pond or lake, that form part of the historic landscape would thus be covered); as well as to "wild life" - which, were there to be dramatically altered stream flows, lake levels, or ground water would be seriously affected. Thus, quite without invoking that most famous portion of the legislation, which refers to leaving the resources of a park "unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations," one may readily argue that the purposes of a national park have preeminence over other federal agencies and goals absent specific legislation to the contrary.


CONCLUSION

Arguably the intent of Congress with respect to any single act cannot be perfectly devined or proven. The intent of Congress across a number of related acts, and as adumbrated by other acts that bear upon the related group, may more nearly be understood. This paper has attempted to judge that intent. It has argued that the language contained in the preamble to the National Park Service Act of 1916 is not, in fact, contradictory and that Congress did not regard it as contradictory; that to the extent that a contradictory interpretation can be imputed to the sentence to the preamble quoted in the Introduction to this paper, that contradiction can be eliminated by reference to the printed record of Congress at the time, to the private papers of those individuals most directly responsible for framing the language of the act, and to the prevailing canons of rhetoric in 1916. Further, it is argued that subsequent legislation, and numerous interpretations of related legislation by the courts (taking water as a resource by way of example) sustain the view that there was and is no inherent contradiction in the preamble to the Act of 1916. The National Park Service was enjoined by that act, and the mission placed upon the Service was reinforced by subsequent acts, to conserve the scenic, natural, and historic resources, and the wild life found in conjunction with those resources, in the units of the National Park System in such a way as to leave them unimpaired; this mission had and has precedence over providing means of access, if those means impair the resources, however much access may add to the enjoyment of future generations.


Endnotes:

* Randolph W. Townsend Professor of History; Chair, Program in Environmental Studies, Yale University.

16 U.S.C. § 1 (1994).
Omitted from this list of types of units are (a) units with slight variations in title which are, despite those variations, clearly of one of these types; (b) seven properties administered through the National Capital Parks but not in fact included in those parks, such as the White House, and (c) - quite confusingly - several national recreation areas, one "national volcanic monument," and three national monuments which, despite the use of titles generally specific to the National Park Service, are in fact administered by the National Forest Service or the Bureau of Land Management.

Richard West Sellars, The Roots of National Park Management: Evolving Perceptions of the Park Service's Mandate, J. FORESTRY, Jan. 1992, at 16, 17.

National Park System General Authorities Act, Pub. L. No. 91-383, § 1, 84 Stat. 825 (1970) (emphasis added) (codified as amended at 16 U.S.C. § la-1 (1994)).

Act of Mar. 27, 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-250, § 101(b), 92 Stat. 166 (codified as amended at 16 U.S.C. § la-1 (1994)).

See HISTORY DIVISION, U.S. DEP'T OF THE INT., CATALOG OF NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS (1987).

NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICERS, U.S. DEP'T OF THE INT., NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES, 1966-1988 (1989).
In fact, few irrigation ditches would be likely to qualify in future for protection under these criteria, since the Park Service has, for example, already designated its choice of eight National Historic Landmarks with respect to the sub-theme of irrigation under the broad theme of engineering. Roosevelt Dam in Arizona, the first major project completed under the Reclamation Act of 1902, was designated in 1963, and in the citation of designation was meant to stand for the entire Salt River Irrigation Complex; San Bernardino Ranch, also in Arizona, designated in 1964 commemorates and illustrates ranch irrigation through the use of springs; the Folsom Powerhouse in California, was designated in 1981 in recognition of the first use of high-voltage alternate current from a hydroelectric generating plant (1895); the Columbia Historic District, also in California, was designated in 1961, in part to include millraces and sluice boxes relating to gold mining; the Old Mission Dam, near San Diego, was demarked in 1963 to commemorate the first major irrigation-engineering project on the Pacific Coast undertaken by Spanish inhabitants; the Carlsbad Reclamation Project, dating from the 1880s, was designated in 1964 to commemorate the earliest extensive irrigation project built by private enterprise, and to honor the inhabitants of the Pecos Valley for their achievements; and Bonneville Dam and adjacent structures were honored in 1987 as the best example of a water diversion project. The Espada Aqueduct, in Bexar County Texas, was designated in 1964 as the only remaining Spanish structure of its type in the United States. It is now part of San Antonio Missions National Historical Park. With this articulation of sites illustrative of the theme of irrigation, it is difficult to imagine that a case could be made for the national protection of other structures or objects relating to the more-or-less routine transport of water in the 19th- or 20th-century West.

The Hayden manuscripts are typical of those of members of the House Committee. In 1915 he was involved in an International Irrigation Congress but saw no need to mention this subject when discussing the Rocky Mountain National Park Act that year, and his papers are silent except for a copy of Enos Mills' What We Owe to Our National Parks. In 1916 Hayden was fully engaged in speaking out on women's suffrage, the European war, and prohibition; if he ever spoke in public on the Organic Act, there is no record of it in his papers. When Hayden did refer to parks, the content of his papers is typical for the time: in 1913 he apparently agreed that an archaeological site near Phoenix should be saved because it was a commercial asset, and he apparently agreed with the Phoenix Board of Trade in its demand for auto roads along the Grand Canyon. The Smith Collection contains a clipping file on Good Roads and nothing on parks. The Papers of James Wickersham, in the Alaska State Library in Juneau, show diary entries for the months in which the Park Service Act was discussed, and though Wickersham comments on other bills to come before the Committee on the Public Lands, he is quite silent on the Organic Act. See Hayden MSS (on file with Arizona State University (Tempe) box 607, folder 20, and box 631, folders 13 & 14); Addison Taylor Smith Collection MS (Idaho State Historical Society, 22 finding aid ); James Wickersham Papers MS (Alaska State Library (Juneau) 107 Inventory and Diaries (photo)).

16U.S.C.§1(1994).

Bills to Establish a National Park Service and for Other Purposes: Hearing on H.R. 434 & H.R. 8668 Before the House Comm. on the Public Lands, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1916)[hereinafter Hearing1916].

JAMES PENICK, JR., PROGRESSIVE POLITICS AND CONSERVATION: THE BALLINGER-PINCHOT AFFAIR 24 (1968).

Id.

President William Howard Taft, (Feb. 11, 1911) in Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 4.

Taft's address on parks appears in A Bill to Establish a National Park Service and for Other Purposes: Hearing on H.R. 104 Before the House Comm. on the Public Lands, 63d Cong., 2d Sess. 6 (1914) [hereinafter Hearing 1914] (introduced by Congressman Raker).

Id.

The background to the post-1911 bills is explored in Donald C. Swain, The Passage of the National Park Service Act of 1916, WIS. MAG. HIST., Autumn 1966, at 4, 4-17.

A Bill to Establish a National Park Service, and for Other Purposes: Hearing on H.R. 22995 Before the House Comm. on the Public Lands, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. (1912) [hereinafter Hearing 1912].

Id. at 4-6.
Id. at 17
Id. at 7-9.
Id. at 10.
Id. at 12
Id. at 13.
Id. at 23
THE RANDOM HOUSE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1176 (Coll. ed. 1968) (emphasis added).
THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1979).
ROGET'S INTERNATIONAL THESAURUS § 446.6 (4th ed. 1911)
DICTIONARY AND CYCLOPEDIA VIII, 5385 (1911).
The papers of Henry S. Graves are in the Yale University Library Archives. Though rich and relatively extensive, (53 boxes), they contain no topical files on national parks. They do cover the period under scrutiny here, 1910-16, and they were searched on all points on which Graves is mentioned hereafter.
Hearing 1914, supra note 7, at 75.
Id. at 6.
Id at 7.
Id.
Id at 74-75.
Id at 75.
Id at 79.
These are spread throughout the National Park Service records in the National Archives seriatim.
Hetch Hetchy is put into perspective by SAMUEL P. HAYS, CONSERVATION AND THE GOSPEL OF EFFICIENCY: THE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATION MOVEMENT, 1890-1920 (1959).
Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 119-20.
On these groups we see in particular ELMO R. RICHARDSON, THE POLITICS OF CONSERVATION: CRUSADES AND CONTROVERSIES, 1897-1913 (1962).
These devisive woundings are discussed in Roderick Nash, John Muir, William Kent, and the Conservation Schism, 36 PAC. HIST. REV. 423, 423-33 (1967).
STEPHEN FOX, JOHN MUIR AND HIS LEGACY: THE AMERICAN CONSERVATION MOVEMENT 138 (1981). The Raker Bill to dam the Hetch Hetchy was proposed in the Senate by Nebraska's "fighting liberal," George W. Norris. See NORMAN L. ZUCKER, GEORGE W. NORRIS: GENTLE KNIGHT OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY (1966); RICHARD LOWITT, GEORGE W. NORRIS: THE PERSISTENCE OF A PROGRESSIVE 1913-1933 (1971). Lowitt points out that Norris favored protection of scenery but that he felt the beauty of the Hetch Hetchy valley would be enhanced by a lake with a dam the color of the surrounding mountains. Lowitt, supra at 23. This was in keeping with the view, popular early in the century, that a "water feature," even if artificial, enhanced a view.
Hearing 1914, supra note 7, at 3.
Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 93. On McFarland, see ERNEST MORRISON, J. HORACE MCFARLAND: A THORN FOR BEAUTY (1995) (see especially chapter 11).
Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 120.
On the framing of the bill, see HORACE M. ALBRIGHT & ROBERT CAHN, THE BIRTH OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE: THE FOUNDING YEARS, 1913-33 34-35 (1985). This is a primary source, being Albright's memoirs. He was present at the meetings in Kent's home. Albright appears to have been the first administrator to refer to a national park "system." See DWIGHT F. RETTIE, OUR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM: CARING FOR AMERICA'S GREATEST NATIONAL AND HISTORIC RESOURCES 13 (1995).
Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 5.
Id. at 8.
Id. at 76.
Id. at 56.
Id. at 54.
Id. at 53.
Id. at 54.
In 1911 Olmsted and McFarland had used this language:
That the parks, monuments, and reservations shall not at any time be used in any way contrary to the purpose thereof as agencies for promoting public recreation and public health through the use and enjoyment by the people of the said parks, monuments, and reservations, and of the natural scenery and objects of interest therein, or in any way detrimental to the value thereof for such purpose.
Letter from J. Horace McFarland, President of the American Civil Association , [hereinafter McFarland] to Richard Ballinger, Secretary of the Interior, [hereinafter Ballinger] (Jan. 3, 1911)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783, 61st Cong.) Ballinger had promptly accepted this language. Letter from Ballinger to Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. [hereinafter Olmsted] (Jan. 4, 1911)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783 61st Cong.).
16 U.S.C. § 1 (1994)(emphasis added.)
Letter from Olmsted to Bradford Williams (Oct. 22, 1937) (on file with the Library of Cong., American Soc'y of Landscape Architects.)
See C.W. BUCKHOLTZ, ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK: A HISTORY 188-91 (1983).
The Kent Papers are in the Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University. I have also examined his correspondence with his son Sherman Kent, later director of the Office of National Estimates at the Central Intelligence Agency (these papers are under restricted access at the Yale University Library), and inquired of the family, through Mrs. Sherman Kent, and through a grandson, whether any papers remained at the family home in Kentfield, California, to which the answer was no.
William Kent Papers ( on file with Yale University Library, R. Group 309, box 71, folder 125.)
Id (box 25, folder 499.)
Id (box 67, folders 83-85.)
Id (folders 86-91).
Id (Scrapbook B, microfilm reel 4, §§ 8-10).
Id. (box 24, folders 468-72).
Letter from Henry S. Graves, Chief Forester [hereinafter Graves], to William Kent, Congressman, [hereinafter Kent] (Mar. 17, 1916)(William Kent Papers, supra note 51(box 24, folder 470)).
Letter from Wallis D. McPherson to Kent (Dec. 14, 1916) (William Kent Papers, supra note 51(box 25, folder 507)).
Letter from Kent to Woodrow Wilson, President, (July 24, 1916) (William Kent Papers, supra note 51 (box 25, folder 493)); see also William Kent Papers, supra, note 51 (folder 500). Lane's views were, indeed, moving more toward commerce than conservation in 1916, but on the national park bill itself he remained supportive. The Sparse Lane Papers at the Library of Congress do not help us here, nor does THE LETTERS OF FRANKLIN K. LANE: PERSONAL AND POLITICAL (Anne Wintermute Lane & Louise Herrick Hall, eds. 1922). Having had a heart attack, Lane was not vigorous and would die in 1921. The only biography, KIETH W. OLSON, BIOGRAPHY OF A PROGRESSIVE: FRANKLIN K. LANE, 1864-1921 (1979), is silent on parks. An unpublished M.A. thesis that apparently shows access to additional materials, Henry W. Wiens, the Career of Franklin K. Lane in California Politics (1936)(unpublished M.A. thesis, University of California), has been reported lost by the Berkeley institution.
Dr. Barton Warren Evermann, Conservation and Proper Utilization of Our Natural Resources, SCI. MONTHLY, Oct. 1922, at 293, 294 (emphasis in original).
William Kent Papers, supra note 51 (April 1925) (pamphlet file (copy)).
64 CONG. REC. 12, 151 (1916).
H.R. REP. NO. 700, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1916).
Many standard books on the National Park Service, or in conservation or environmental history, devote a paragraph or so to the act, usually in much the same language. When one pursues these paragraphs through the references supplied, one finds a nearly infinite regression, each leaning upon the previous secondary statement, most virtually devoid of any independent examination. For the most part these accounts pass over the actual framing of the bill and raise no questions about Congressional intent, imply celebrating (in words attributed to Wallace Stegner) "the best idea America ever had." Perhaps half the secondary works conclude that the preamble to the act contains a "logical contradiction" (The words of Ronald A. Foresta in RONALD A. FORESTA, AMERICA'S NATIONAL PARKS AND THEIR KEEPERS 100 (1984)), or appears to. However, not one of these books or articles is based on an examination of the Kent, Olmsted, or other relevant papers, and Swain's 1966 article, supra note 8, on which most of the recent writings are based, is drawn almost wholly by from the papers of Horace Albright, secondary accounts, and a limited survey of Congressional Hearings or other manuscript collections.
Upon examination more recently, this conclusion is often cited to an unpublished Master's thesis, Daniel McCool, The National Park Service: The Politics of Appropriations (1980) (unpublished M. thesis, University of Arizona), which is in fact about funding rather than purpose; or from political scientists and sociologists whose primary inquiry is into the theory of management. A check of five frequently quoted articles shows that not one of the authors went beyond what they construed to be the common sense meaning of the language, which they found on the face of it contradictory. However, if one is to construe, deconstruct, or (as an historian) explicate a text, one generally may not do so without going behind the text.
Diary of Reed Smoot (July 11, Aug. 6, 1916)(Reed Smoot Papers, on file with Brigham Young University). See also his biographical sketch (which he himself wrote) in the 35 NATIONAL CYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY 63-64 (1949).
The Congressional Information Office has found no papers. This writer called all major depositories in California, the local historical societies of Susanville and Alturas (where Raker had his law offices), the alumni office of San Jose State University (from which he graduated in 1884, when it was a normal school), and a variety of repositories in Washington, DC, where he died in 1926, all without success.
ALBRIGHT & CAHN, supra note 38, at 24; see also ROBERT SHANKLAND, STEVE MATHER OF THE NATIONAL PARKS 100-01 (2d ed. 1954). I have examined the Mather Papers, in the Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley, but do not cite to them here since all relevant quotations and statements drawn from them in Shankland, or Albright and Cahn, are accurate, and citation to the more readily available source is preferable.
Albright & Cahn, supra note 38, at 35.
SHANKLAND, supra note 68, at 83-99; ALBRIGHT & CAHN, supra note 38, at 24-26; Swain, supra note 8, at 8-15; DONALD C. SWAIN, WILDERNESS DEFENDER: HORACE M. ALBRIGHT AND CONSERVATION 41-60 (1970).
Hearing 1916, supra note 3, at 11-25
On this early period see also JOHN C. MILES, GUARDIANS OF THE PARKS: A HISTORY OF THE NATIONAL PARKS AND CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION 12-16 (1995).
ROBERT STERLING YARD, U.S. DEP'T OF THE INT., GLIMPSES OF OUR NATIONAL PARKS (1916).
ROBERT STERLING YARD, THE BOOK OF THE NATIONAL PARKS (1919).
Id. at 24.
Id. at 24-26.
ALBRIGHT & CAHN, supra note 38, at 35. In particular, see Albright's exchanges with Huston Thompson. Horace Albright Papers (Feb. 23, 27, 1916, March 26, 1964 (typescript interview))(on file with University of California (Los Angeles)).
Letter from McFarland to Olmsted (Oct. 13, 1910)(Frederick Law Olmsted Papers, on file with the Library of Congress)[hereinafter Olmsted Papers].
Letters from McFarland to Ballinger (Nov. 10, 12, 16, 1910, Jan. 3, 1911)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783); Letter from Ballinger to McFarland (Nov. 11, 1910)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783);Letter from McFarland to Knute Nelson, Chairman, Senate Committee on the Public Lands (Jan 4. 1911)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783); Letter from McFarland to Ballinger (Dec. 22, 1910)(on file with the National Archives, R. Group 79, entry 6, box 23).
Letter from Olmsted to Frank Pierce, Acting Secretary of the Interior (Dec. 31, 1910) (Olmsted Papers, supra note 78). This document, retyped, also appears in Olmsted [sic] Portfolio (on file with the Bancroft Library, University of California (Berkeley)), and in the National Archives (R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783).
Letter from McFarland to Olmsted (Sept. 5, 1911)(Olmsted Papers, supra note 78); see also Olmsted Portfolio, supra note 80.
Letter from Gifford Pinchot, former head of the Forest Service [hereinafter Pinchot] to McFarland (Mar. 4, 1911) (Olmsted Papers, supra note 78).
Letter from McFarland to Pinchot (Mar. 6, 1911) (copy) (Olmsted Papers, supra note 78).
Letter from McFarland to Graves (Feb. 21, 1911) (R. Group 79, entry 6, McFarland file).
The bills were S.9816, S.3463, and H.R.32265, 61st Cong., 3d Sess. See Letter from McFarland to Reed Smoot, Senator (hereinafter Smoot) (n.d.) (R. Group 79, entry 6, box 783); Letter from McFarland to Olmsted (Jan. 18, 1911) (Olmstead Portfolio, supra note 80); Letter from Richard B. Watrous, Secretary of the American Civic Association, [hereinafter Watrous] to McFarland (Jan. 17, 1911) (Olmsted Papers, supra note 78).
Congressman Ferris was a lay preacher. See his use of rhetoric in his scant papers, held by the Museum of the Great Plains in Lawton, Oklahoma.
The papers of Clarence D. Clark, at the University of Wyoming, consist only of scrapbooks. On Clark, see Albert G. Anderson, Jr., The Political Career of Senator Clarence D. Clark (1953) (unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Wyoming). No Myers papers have survived save for fugitive letters in the papers of Montana Senators Thomas J. Walsh and Burton K. Wheeler at the Montana Historical Society in Helena and his death certificate at the Western Heritage Center in Billings, Montana. There is a sketch of his career in the Billings Gazette of November 12, 1943. All efforts to locate the papers of Senator William Stafford failed.

In addition to the major collection of Smoot papers at Brigham Young University, there are Smoot papers at the Library of Congress and at the Library of the University of West Virginia. An article, the title of which offers promise - Thomas G. Alexander, Senator Recd Smoot and Western Land Policy, 1905-1920, ARIZ. AND WEST, Autumn 1971, at 245, 245-64 - proved to contain only passing references to the national park bill. The best biography is Milton R. Merrill, Reed Smoot: Apostle in Politics (1950) (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Columbia University). The other Senators who served on the Committee on the Public Lands and Surveys, or who spoke on the floor of the Senate, were Colorado's John F. Shafroth and Charles S. Thomas, California's James D. Phelan and John D. Works, and Thomas J. Walsh of Montana.

The writer was unable to examine the papers of the Coloradoans, Edward T. Taylor, Charles B. Timberlake, John F. Shafroth, and Charles S. Thomas. The Taylor papers, at the Colorado State Historical Society and the University of Colorado, were examined for him and revealed nothing of relevance. Two collections might prove of value: the Thomas papers, which consist of 15,000 items, also at the Colorado State Historical Society, and the papers of Burton L. French, a Congressman from Idaho, who interested himself in the act though he did not attend the hearings. This last collection is at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

With respect to the NPS Act, the Papers of Woodrow Wilson, at Princeton University, are silent (Arthur Link to writer, telephonic communication).

WILLIAM C. EVERHART, THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE 19-20 (1972), states that before 1915 only a "scattered few members of Congress" could have spoken on the national parks for longer than five minutes. In 1916, debate in the Senate was almost nonexistent, but debate in the House showed that a number of members had formulated views on what parks should and should not be.
ALFRED RUNTE, NATIONAL PARKS: THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE (2d rev. ed. 1987). For discussion of the "worthless lands" thesis, see Richard W. Sellars et al., The National Parks: A Forum on the "Worthless Lands" Thesis, J. FOREST HIST., July 1983, at 130, 130-45. John C. Freemuth has posed the question whether mineral extraction would be permitted from under the water impounded behind a dam within a National Recreation Area, since such an area was not created because of its inherent commercial worthlessness, the reservoir so impounded - and thus proposed for possible violation - being an aspect of the worth of the area. See JOHN C. FREEMUTH, ISLANDS UNDER SIEGE: NATIONAL PARKS AND THE POLITICS OF EXTERNAL THREATS 54 (1991).
Quoted in GUSTAVUS MYERS, HISTORY OF THE GREAT AMERICAN FORTUNES 223-24 n.23 (1936); see also ROBIN W. WINKS, FREDERICK BILLINGS: A LIFE 291 (1991).
63 CONG. REC. 1,789-91 (1915).
16 U.S.C. § 1 (1994) (emphasis added).
On this point see THOMAS J. CAROLAN, JR., U.S. DEP'T OF STATE, THE POLITICAL DYNAMICS OF THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE (1980-81), especially pages 2-5.
The act refers to "enjoyment" by "future generations," not to "the people," which introduces an expectation of changing definitions of "enjoyment" by reference to the future. This makes legitimate an examination of changing perceptions relating to the signifying terms in the statement of purpose. Significantly, "the people" are acknowledged not to be static. Even were the term used in its customarily monolithic way, courts have interpreted "the people" - as in decisions involving the right to bear arms, for example - to mean the people as a group not as individuals, thus opening the way to barring certain individuals. The same is true of use of grandfathered privileges within a park: they might apply to "the people" but not necessarily to any given person.
William Kent Papers supra note 51 (box 24 folder 476).
See ROBIN W. WINKS, LAURANCE S. ROCKEFELLER: CATALYST FOR CONSERVATION (Washington's Island Press (1997)), on the significance of the Review Commission.
One may well argue that in creating national recreation areas, national seashores, national lakeshores, and other more clearly recreational units, Congress was intending to put distance between the National Parks, unqualified by any adjective, and other types of units, thus suggesting a preference for the strictest application of protection to the National Parks, so called, as distinct from the other designations.
This writer is attempting precisely this task for a work in progress, The Rise of the National Park Ethic (forthcoming).
16 U.S.C. § 1 (1994).
In 1946 Congress also gave the NPS the power (financially) to acquire rights in accordance with local customs or laws if "necessary or beneficial in the administration" of the National Parks and Monuments. 16 U.S.C. §17j-2(g) (1994).
See, e.g., United States v. Vogler, 859 F.2d. 638 (9th Cir. 1988) (stating that the NPS can require permits to transport off-road vehicles through park land in Alaska); Wilderness Pub. Rights Fund v. Kleppe, 608 F.2d 1250 (9th Cir. 1979) (stating that the NPS can allocate commercial and non-commercial boating on Colorado River); Town of Beverly Shores v. Lujan, 736 F. Supp. 934 (N.D. Ind. 1989) (stating that the NPS can pave parking area at Indiana Dunes, balancing natural preservation with public access). For an example of a case where NPS regulations were held invalid, see Wilkenson v. Dep't of interior, 634 F. Supp. 1265 (D. Colo. 1986) (holding that the NPS could not charge fee for travel through Colorado National Monument because roads through the park were a public right of way, being State Highway 340, a portion of the only allweather road to the settlement of Glade Park). I choose court decisions concerning water rights, as these, together with grazing and the extraction of minerals, were at issue in all early park legislation, and access to water is more nearly a universal question throughout all types of National Park System units than questions relating to grazing or mineral extraction are likely to be. I wish to thank Janet Satterthwaite for assistance with this note.
142 U.S. 161 (1891).
16 U.S.C. §§ 79c(a), (e) (1994).
Sierra Club v. Dep't of Interior, 376 F. Supp. 90 (N.D. Cal. 1974); Sierra Club v. Dep't of Interior, 398 F. Supp. 284 (N.D. Cal. 1975).
Sierra Club, 376 F. Supp. at 95-96.
Sierra Club, 398 F. Supp. at 293.
Sierra Club v. Dep't of Interior, 424 F. Supp. 172 (N.D. Cal. 1976).
See 16 U.S.C. § la-1.
S. REP. No. 528, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 13-14 (1977); see also H.R. REP. No. 581, 95th Cong., Ist Sess. (1977).
Sierra Club v. Andrus, 487 F. Supp. 443 (D.D.C. 1980), aff d sub nom. Sierra Club v. Watt, 659 F.2d 203 (D.C. Cir. 1981).
Id. at 445.
Id. at 448.
Id
Id. at 452. In Sierra Club v. Block, 622 F. Supp. 842 (D. Colo. 1985), vacated sub nom. Sierra Club v. Yeuter, 911 F.2d 1405 (10th Cir. 1990), the district court in Colorado agreed with the Andrus decision and rejected the notion of a public trust separate from statutory powers. Since that opinion was vacated for other reasons (see infra note 20), it has no force; however, it illustrates a trend in light of the 1978 amendments to reject the idea of public trusteeship while simultaneously beefing up the authority imputed to the government by statutes.
660 F.2d 1240 (8th Cir. 1981).
Free Enter. Canoe Renters Ass'n v. Watt, 711 F.2d 852 (8th Cir. 1983).
Minnesota, 660 F.2d at 1249; accord Free Enter. Canoe, 711 F.2d at 856. It is one thing to say Congress can do something, and another to say that the NPS can do it absent specific action by Congress. Nevertheless, see also Blake Shepard, Note, The Scope of Congress' Constitutional Power Under the Property Clause: Regulating Non-Federal Property to Further the Purposes of National Parks and Wilderness Areas, 11 B. C. ENVTL. AFF. L. REV. 479 (1984).
For a discussion of how some of these statutes might apply, see Mark T. Pifner, Quality versus Quantity: The Continued Right to Appropriate - Part 11, 15 COLO. LAW. 1204 (1986); see also John W. Hiscock, Protecting National Park System Buffer Zones: Existing, Proposed, and Suggested Authority, 7 J. ENERGY L. & POL'Y 35 (1986). In Sierra Club v. Block, discussed supra note 16, the Court found that the Wilderness Act created implied federal reserved water rights (this doctrine is explained below). The opinion attracted some attention from commentators, but as noted above has since been vacated as not "ripe" for adjudication in the courts.
For a discussion of the historical basis of federal reserved water rights, see A. Dan Tarlock, Protection of Water Flows for National Parks, 22 LAND & WATER L. REV. 29, 38-48 (1987).
Cappaert v. United States, 426 U.S. 128, 138 (1976).
Id. at 133.
Id. at 131-32.
Id. at 147.
Id. at 141. Neither Cappaert nor anyone else had any rights to the water before 1952. The Court thus did not address what happens when the government reserves land and there are already persons with rights over the appurtenant water. Note also that this case established that the implied reserved federal rights doctrine applies to ground water as well as surface water. Id. at 144.
438 U.S. 696 (1978)
Id. at 711.
Id. at 718.
Id. at 709.
656 P.2d 1 (Colo. 1982) (en banc).
Id. at 4.
Id. at 17.
Id at 30.
Id. This approach is similar to that used in the now vacated opinion in Sierra Club v. Block, discussed supra note 16. The Court ruled that even though the Wilderness Act withdrew wilderness areas from existing national forests, such areas constituted a "second" withdrawal from the public domain so that broader water rights relevant to a wilderness as opposed to a forest were created by the act. Block, 622 F. Supp. at 862. Indeed, the Block Court referred to City of Denver in its opinion. Id. In vacating the opinion, the 10th Circuit avoided ruling on whether the Wilderness Act implied any new reserved water rights, but referred to them as "alleged" rights. Yeutter, 911 F.2d at 1419. Essentially, the Court vacated the opinion because it thought it was too early to decide whether any public harm would result from the Forest Service's alleged failure to act, so that it could not be determined whether the Forest Service was abusing its discretion. Id. at 1414.
City of Denver, 656 P.2d at 36. Since passage of the McCarran Act, the United States may be brought in as a party to a state court water rights adjudication proceeding. Simply stated, the basic premise of Colorado water rights law is that a person who appropriates water for a beneficial use acquires rights to that water as against future users. For an explanation of how this works vis-à-vis federal reserved rights, see Navajo Dev. Co. v. Sanderson, 655 P.2d 1374 (Colo. 1982)(en banc). For example, Navajo notes that, if the government wants to acquire water rights beyond those implied by reservation, it must use state appropriation proceedings or must condemn the rights. Id. at 1379. Other cases to keep in mind are: Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States. 424 U.S. 800 (1976); Yeutter, 911 F.2d at 1419; United States v. Bell, 724 P.2d 631 (Colo. 1986)(en banc); see also Aaron H. Hostyk, Who Controls the Water? The Emerging Balance Among Federal, State, and Indian Jurisdictional Claims and its Impact on Energy Development in the Upper Colorado and Upper Missouri River Basins, 18 TULSA L.J. 1 (1982).
H.R. REP. No. 700, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1916).
See Julie A. Bryan, Comment, The National Park Service Organic Act Prohibits Turning the Doorstep of Canyonlands National Park into a Nuclear Wasteland, 7 J. ENERGY L. & POL'Y 95 (1986). A comment - indeed, any law school journal article at all - does not have the force of law, of course, though the argument may be found convincing to a court at the appropriate time.

University of New Mexico: Summary of National Park Service Act

NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ACT
16 U.S.C. §§1 - 18f-1, August 25, 1916, as amended 1920, 1921, 1924, 1926, 1928, 1930, 1931, 1933, 1935, 1936, 1939-1941, 1946, 1948-1953, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1960, 1964, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1990-1994 and 1996.
Overview. This Act creates the National Park Service within the Department of the Interior to administer the national parks, monuments and reservations. The Act sets out the details of the administration of the National Park System.

Findings/Policy. Congress declared that: the National Park System (System), which began with establishment of Yellowstone National Park in 1872, has grown to include superlative natural, historic and recreation areas in every major region of the U.S., its territories and island possessions; these distinctive areas are united through their interrelated purposes and resources into one national park system as cumulative expressions of a single national heritage; individually and collectively, these areas derive increased national dignity and recognition of their superb environmental quality through their inclusion in one national park system, preserved and managed for the benefit and inspiration of all the people of the U.S. The purpose of the Act is to include all of these areas in the System and to clarify the authorities applicable to the System. Congress further directs that the promotion and regulation of the National Park System must be consistent with its purposes for the common benefit of all the people. The protection, management and administration of these areas must be conducted in accordance with the high public value and integrity of the National Park System unless Congress specifically provides otherwise. § 1a-1.

Selected Definitions. National Park System: includes any area of land and water now or hereafter administered by the Secretary of the Interior through the National Park Service for park, monument, historic, parkway, recreational or other purposes. § 1c.

Service Created. The Act creates in the Department of the Interior the National Park Service (Service) under the charge of a director appointed by the Secretary of the Interior (Secretary). The Service is required to promote and regulate the use of the national parks, monuments and reservations in a manner that conforms to their fundamental purpose, which is to conserve their scenery, natural and historic objects, and the wildlife, and to provide for their enjoyment in a way that leaves them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations. § 1.

Authorization of Activities. The Act authorizes the Secretary to carry out the following activities for the administration of the System: provide transportation, recreation facilities, equipment and services for employees and their families located at isolated areas of the System; establish and appoint advisory committees for the Service; purchase field and special purpose equipment required by employees; contract for the sale or lease of services, resources or water within an area of the System, without jeopardizing or unduly interfering with the primary natural or historic resource of the area; promulgate and enforce regulations concerning boating and other activities on waters within the System; enter into contracts for living exhibits and interpretive demonstrations; provide employee meals and lodging as appropriate. The Secretary also is authorized to aid the states, through the Service, in planning coordinated and adequate public park, parkway and recreational facilities. §§ 1a-2 and 17l.

The Secretary may relinquish, to a state or U.S. commonwealth, territory or possession, part of the federal jurisdiction over System lands or interests, after submitting proposed agreements to Congress. The Secretary is required to pursue this arrangement wherever a System unit is located, with the goal of the U.S. exercising concurrent jurisdiction whenever practical. § 1a-3.

Additional Areas for the National Park System. The Act directs the Secretary to investigate, study and monitor the welfare of areas whose resources exhibit qualities of national significance and which may have potential for inclusion in the System. At the beginning of each fiscal year, the Secretary must transmit to Congress: comprehensive reports on each of the studied areas; a list of at least 12 specific areas in order of merit for inclusion in the System; a synopsis of current and changed conditions of the resource integrity of an area and other relevant factors; a list of areas on the Registry of Natural Landmarks and the National Register of Historic Places that exhibit known or anticipated threats to the integrity of their resources. Congress authorized to be appropriated $1,000,000 annually for studying potential new System units and $1,500,000 annually for monitoring the welfare and integrity of national landmarks.

The Act also requires the Secretary to submit to Congress by September 1981 a comprehensive National Park System Plan, to serve as a professional guide for the identification of natural and historic themes of the U.S., and from which candidate areas can be identified and selected to constitute units of the System. This plan must be revised and updated annually. § 1a-5.

National Park System Management. The Director of the Service, under the direction of the Secretary, is responsible for supervision, management and control of the national parks, monuments and reservations. In the supervision, management and control of national monuments contiguous to national forests, the Secretary of Agriculture may cooperate with the Service to the extent requested by the Secretary. § 2.

The Secretary is authorized to designate Department of the Interior employees to maintain law and order within areas of the System, and may designate other federal and state law enforcement personnel to act as special System police. Congress authorized to be appropriated $10,000,000 from the Violent Crime Reduction Trust Fund for the Secretary to use in reducing violent crime in the System. §§ 1a-6 and 1a-7a.

The Act requires the Secretary to transmit to Congress annually a detailed program for the development of facilities, structures or buildings for each unit of the System. The Director of the Service must prepare general management plans for the preservation and use of each unit, including: measures for preservation of the area's resources; indications of types and general intensities of development for public enjoyment and use of the area; identification and implementation of visitor capacities for all areas of the unit. The Service is required to implement a maintenance management system into the maintenance and operations programs of the System, and annually to report to Congress on the status of implementation efforts. §§1a-7 and 1a-8.

Review and Report on the National Park System. The Act requires the Secretary every three years to conduct a systematic and comprehensive review of certain aspects of the System and to report to Congress. The report must include: a comprehensive listing of all authorized but unacquired lands within the exterior boundaries of each unit of the System as of November 28, 1990; a priority listing of all unacquired parcels by individual park unit and for the System as a whole; an analysis and evaluation of the current and future needs of each System unit for resource management, interpretation, construction, operation and maintenance, personnel, and housing, together with estimated costs; any recommendations the Secretary determines necessary. By December 1991, the Secretary must develop criteria to evaluate any proposed changes to the existing boundaries of individual park units. §§ 1a-9, 1a-11 and 1a-12.

Regulation and Use of Lands. The Secretary must adopt rules and regulations as necessary for the use and management of the parks, monuments and reservations under the jurisdiction of the Service. Violation of these rules and regulations is punishable by a fine, imprisonment for six months, or both.

The Secretary may: sell or dispose of timber where cutting is required to control attacks of insects or diseases, or otherwise to conserve the scenery or the natural or historic objects in a park, monument or reservation; provide for the destruction of animals and plant life that are detrimental to the use of a park, monument or reservation; grant 30-year privileges, leases and permits for the use of land for the accommodation of visitors in the parks, monuments and reservations, provided that no natural curiosities, wonders or objects of interests can be leased, rented or granted on terms that interfere with public access; grant livestock grazing privileges within a national park, monument or reservation (except Yellowstone National Park), when this use is not detrimental to the primary purpose for which the park, monument or reservation was created. § 3.

The head of the department with appropriate jurisdiction is authorized to grant 50-year easements for rights of way on the public lands and reservations, to the extent not incompatible with the public interest, for: electrical poles and lines; poles and lines for communication purposes; radio, television, and other forms of communication transmitting, relay, and receiving structures and facilities. § 5.

The Act authorizes the Secretary to acquire, establish, construct, improve, maintain, operate, regulate and protect airports in the continental U.S. in, or in close proximity to, national parks, monuments and recreation areas, when necessary to the proper performance of the functions of the Department of Interior. The Secretary also is authorized to construct, reconstruct, and improve roads and trails, inclusive of bridges, in the national parks and monuments under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Interior. §§ 7a and 8.

Appropriations Authorized. Various appropriations are authorized for specified activities throughout the Act.

Editor's Note. The Mining in the Parks Act, addressing mining operations on National Park System lands, is separately summarized in the Handbook.

List of National Parks:

Acadia National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 341

Arches National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 272

Badlands National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 441

Big Bend National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 156

Biscayne National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410gg

Bryce Canyon National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 401

Canyonlands National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 271

Capital Reef National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 273

Carlsbad Caverns National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 407

Channel Island National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410ff

Crater Lake National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 121

Death Valley National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410aaa

Denali National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 347

Dry Tortugas National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410xx

Everglades National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410

Gates of the Arctic National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh

Glacier Bay National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh-1

Glacier National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 161

Grand Canyon National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 221

Grand Teton National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 406d-1

Great Basin National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410mm

Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 403

Guadalupe Mountains National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 283

Haleakala National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 396b

Hawaii National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 391

Hot Springs National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 361

Isle Royale National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 408

Joshua Tree National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410aaa-21

Katmai National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh-1

Kenai Fjords National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh

Kings Canyon National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 80

Kobuk Valley National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh

Lake Clark National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 404

Lassen Volcanic National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 201

Mammoth Cave National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 404

Mesa Verde National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 111

Mount Rainier National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 91

National Park of American Samoa, 16 U.S.C. § 410qq

North Cascades National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 90

Olympic National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 251

Petrified Forest National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 119

Redwood National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 79a

Rocky Mountain National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 191

Saguaro National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410zz

Sequoia National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 41

Shenandoah National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 403

Theodore Roosevelt National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 241

Virgin Island National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 398

Voyageurs National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 160

Wind Cave National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 141

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 410hh

Yellowstone National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 21

Yosemite National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 46

Zion National Park, 16 U.S.C. § 344

Other parts of the National Park System, such as national monuments, seashores, preserves, recreation areas, historical parks, wild and scenic riverways, and wilderness areas, are not included above.

NPS: Philosophical Underpinnings of the National Park Idea

Philosophical Underpinnings of the National Park Idea

Dwight T. Pitcaithley
Chief Historian
National Park Service

Copyright © 2001 by the Association of National Park Rangers. All rights reserved. This article is republished from Ranger, Fall 2001, with permission from the Association of National Park Rangers.



Wallace Stegner, that insightful observer of the American West, liked to remark that the idea of national parks was the best idea we ever had. He believed that the concept of national parks was inevitable "as soon as Americans learned to confront the wild continent not with fear and cupidity but with delight, wonder, and awe." Inevitable or not, the idea gradually took form from multiple threads. The artist George Catlin first articulated the idea of large western national parks in 1832, the same year Congress set aside the Hot Springs Reservation in central Arkansas, now known as Hot Springs National Park. On a trip to the Dakotas Catlin worried about the impact of America's westward expansion on Indian civilization, wildlife and wilderness. They might be preserved, he wrote, "by some great protecting policy of government . . . in a magnificent park . . . A nation's park, containing man and beast, in all the wild and freshness of their nature's beauty!"

Artist George Catlin first articulated the idea of large western national parks in 1832

Lawyer, writer and philosopher Joseph Sax has given us perhaps the most comprehensive and articulate assessment of the growth of the idea in an article titled, "America's National Parks: Their Principles, Purposes and Prospects."

One thread, according to Sax, was the growing belief, by the midpoint of the 19th century, that spectacular natural areas could be quickly and profoundly despoiled. Beginning in 1806, developers bought land adjacent to Niagara Falls for industrial and tourism purposes. By 1860, the famous falls were so congested with haphazard development that the area had become the prime example of how a scenic wonder should not be developed.


Photo courtesy of Association of National Park Rangers, Copyright © 2001.

The earliest and clearest articulation of a philosophy for the use and enjoyment of public pleasuring grounds came several decades after Catlin, but long before President Woodrow Wilson established the National Park Service in 1916. In 1864 Abraham Lincoln authorized the transfer of the Yosemite Valley to the state of California for "public use, resort and recreation." Frederick Law Olmsted was appointed chairman of the board of commissioners established to oversee the administration of the park, and he formulated a theory of use for this new type of land. The national park idea took root in an 1865 report that presented his views on how Yosemite should be developed.

Olmsted, the preeminent landscape architect of the 19th century, presented more than a theory of use, he articulated a philosophy of leisure based on nature's regenerative powers for an urbanizing society. He believed, this builder of Central Park in New York City and countless other urban parks throughout the country, that the essence of park land should be in establishing a contrast to the pace of the modern world. Anchoring his thinking at the conclusion of the Civil War and amid the burgeoning Industrial Revolution, Olmsted envisioned a need for ordinary citizens to maintain perspective in their daily lives by being exposed to, and encouraged to contemplate, the natural rhythms of the natural world.

Olmsted wrote during a period in American history when American society was eager to find ways to measure up to European society. Before the 1860s and 1870s, North America had nothing to compare to the Swiss Alps or the antiquities of Rome or the canals and museums of Venice. Americans who took the "Grand Tour" to experience the sights and culture of Europe did so because there was no equivalent in the United States. (It would be several decades before the wonders of Mesa Verde or Chaco Canyon would be revealed to the American public.) The grandeur and spectacle of the Yosemite Valley and the sequoia trees of the Mariposa Grove, however, were something else. Therein was scenery that could compare favorably with the best Europe had to offer.



Olmsted was not an advocate of wilderness, rather he thought it most appropriate that parks have restaurants and hotels and carriage paths and trails so that a leisurely appreciation of nature was possible. How else could men and women of leisure enjoy the sights and scenery of these grand places? These conveniences, however, should not interfere, visually or audibly, with the process of appreciation. This policy of recreation, in the words of Joseph Sax, "of testing the importance of one's daily tasks against some permanent standard of value," was at the heart of Olmsted's philosophy. It was contrast Olmsted was after, contrast of the rhythm and pace of a daily existence with the rhythm of the natural world. "We want a ground," he wrote, "to which people may easily go after their day's work is done . . . we want . . . the greatest possible contrast with the restraining and confining conditions of the town . . . we want . . . tranquility and rest to the mind. With this thought in mind, Olmsted constructed many of the nations most significant urban parks. It was not a stretch, then, for Olmsted to adopt the same philosophy of contrast for Yosemite. The Mariposa Grove was not as accessible to the working class at the end of the day, but the park did carry the concept of contrast to its logical conclusion.

Later, the founding fathers of the NPS made clean distinctions between the conservation of "scenery and . . . natural and historic objects" and the "enjoyment of the same." Although pleasure and enjoyment were seen as byproducts of recreational use of parks, enjoyment was also to be derived through education. "The educational, as well as the recreational, use of the national parks," Secretary Lane wrote to Stephen T. Mather in 1918, "should be encouraged in every practicable way." The connections between parks and learning, formal and informal, constitute another philosophical thread, and were recognized early as an important element in the purpose of parks.

Olmsted, as noted, wrote from the vantage point of mid-19th century America near the end of the American Civil War, at the same time, interestingly enough, as George Perkins Marsh was developing his pioneering work on conservation, Man and Nature. The country was different then. The nation's population stood at a mere 31 million. Most of the West, with the notable exception of parts of California, Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico, was still occupied only by scattered Indian peoples. By the time Congress established the NPS in 1916 the population had multiplied threefold, and by 1960 it had grown almost tenfold to 180 million! The spatial relationship between towns and cities and uninhabited sections of the country was different 100 years after Olmsted's report on the Mariposa Grove. Wild places were shrinking and becoming more precious. The sense of place with which Americans viewed Yosemite and Yellowstone was different. The manner with which Americans viewed their environment had also changed. The change was reflected in a flurry of legislation that affected the management of the National Park System as much as it recognized this country's commitment to environmental health. By the 1960s, population and development pressures throughout the country resulted in the passage of the Wilderness Act (1964), National Historic Preservation Act (1966), Clean Air Act (1967), Wild and Scenic Rivers Act (1968), National Environmental Policy Act (1969), and the Endangered Species Act in 1973. The country had changed and so would the NPS as it implemented these and other laws, and recognized the global implications of its actions.



Another factor affecting the philosophical framework of the Service present from the beginning, but expanded and clarified over time was the emphasis placed on the preservation of cultural resources. Even before the establishment of the NPS, Congress and the President (through the authority of the 1906 Antiquities Act) began to define a national policy of historic preservation as they recognized the nationally significant values of Casa Grande, Mesa Verde, Chaco Canyon, Gran Quivira, and Sitka among others. Subsequent legislation such as the 1935 Historic Sites Act, the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, and Archeological Resources Protection Act of 1979 further enhanced the Service's philosophical (and legal) underpinnings in the area currently identified as heritage preservation. (Additional philosophical expansions resulted from the creation of numerous preservation and technical assistance programs Congress authorized over time in the areas of historic preservation, recreation, and open space conservation.)

The philosophy of national park management is now more expansive, and certainly more complex, than it was in either 1865 or 1916, but it continues to revolve around the protection and preservation of cultural and natural resources. While it has not been entirely consistent on this point through the decades, the Service is mindful of its responsibility to manage resources with care and thoughtfulness sufficient to leave them unimpaired for future generations. That attentiveness to preservation and its co-mandate in the 1916 Organic Act, "enjoyment," has led the Service to revisit continuously the philosophy of managing national parks, and to ensure a clear understanding of the Service's legislative mandates. The latest version of the Management Policies (2001) represents the current evolution of that thinking and should be required reading for all interested in understanding the practical implications of the philosophical structure that guides the management of parks. As the Policies have tried to make clear, the philosophy of park management stems not only from key aspects of the Service's history — Olmsted's thinking, Yellowstone's founding, Stephen T. Mather's passion — but from the subsequent laws and proclamations passed by Congress and issued by presidents. The governing philosophy of the NPS is more complex these days because the society in which it operates is more complex. The population of the United States now stands at 280 million, almost 10 times that when Olmsted articulated his philosophy of leisure during the 1860s. And yet, the Service still provides a sense of contrast, of wonder, of awe, at cultural and natural sites alike.

Somewhere between the prose of Congress and the poetry of Stegner lies the philosophical soul of the National Park Service.

Congress and Wallace Stegner, not surprisingly, had different ways of capturing the values of the Service and System. In 1970, and again in 1978, Congress summed up its 100-year history of setting aside special places by stating that the parks that comprise the National Park System "are united through their interrelated purposes and resources into one national park system as cumulative expressions of a single national heritage; that, individually and collectively, these areas derive increased national dignity and recognition of their superlative environmental quality through their inclusion jointly with each other in one national park system preserved and managed for the benefit and inspiration of all the people of the United States," . . . and that all management activities "shall be conducted in light of the high public value and integrity of the National Park System and shall not be exercised in derogation of the values and purposes for which these various areas have been established."

A decade earlier, Stegner mused with his poet's heart on the preservation of wild space:

We need wilderness preserved because it was the challenge against which our character as a people was formed. The reminder and the reassurance that it is still there is good for our spiritual health even if we never once in ten years set foot in it. It is good for us when we are young, because of the incomparable sanity it can bring briefly, as vacation and rest, into our insane lives. It is important to us when we are old simply because it is there — important, that is, simply as idea . . . We simply need that wild country available to us, even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, a part of the geography of hope.

Somewhere between the prose of Congress and the poetry of Stegner lies the philosophical soul of the National Park Service.

Suggested readings

Wallace Stegner, "The Best Idea We Ever Had," in Marking the Sparrow's Fall: The Making of the American West. Edited by Page Stegner. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1998, p. 137.

Joseph L. Sax, "America's National Parks: Their Principles, Purposes, and Prospects," in Natural History (October 1976), pp. 59-87.

Dwight T. Pitcaithley, "A Dignified Exploitation: The Growth of Tourism in the National Parks," in Seeing and Being Seen: Tourism in the American West, edited by David M. Wrobel and Patrick T. Long. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2001.

The growth of the National Park System is detailed in Barry Mackintosh, "The National Parks: Shaping the System." The most current edition of Shaping the System is found only on the Web.

Dwight T. Pitcaithley is the chief historian of the National Park Service. He began his NPS career as a seasonal laborer during the summer of 1963. In 1976 he was hired as a research historian in the Southwest Regional Office in Santa Fe and later became the regional historian in the Boston regional office. He served as chief of cultural resources in the National Capital Region before becoming chief historian in 1995.

NPS: What Does the 1916 Organic Act Require of the National Park Service?

What Does the 1916 Organic Act Require of the National Park Service?

It is vitally important that National Park Service employees understand the purpose for which we manage the parks. That purpose is articulated in the 1916 Organic Act establishing the National Park Service. The Organic Act tells us that the purpose is:

"to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life
therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such
means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."

This web site provides information to help employees better understand how the Service interprets this most important provision of law, and how that interpretation will be applied to NPS decision-making. The Service's baseline interpretation of the Organic Act is found in Section 1.4 of the 2006 Edition of NPS Management Policies. It sets the standard by which the Service will protect park resources and values.

NPS: The Impairment Issue: Questions and Answers

Updated August 2007

The Impairment Issue: Questions and Answers

1. Why is the "impairment" issue so important?
2. Why are we now focusing so intensely on the no-impairment clause of the Organic Act?
3. Since similar lawsuits have been adjudicated before, why has the SUWA case been singled out?
4. Where does this now leave the rest of the NPS?
5. What does section 1.4 of Management Policies say?
6. How will we implement this new policy?
7. Does this mean that everything we do will be an impairment, and therefore we cannot do anything that will affect park resources or values?
8. Does this mean it is okay to pursue activities that adversely impact park resources and values, as long as we do not impair them?
9. Will implementing this new policy require complicated new procedures?
10. How do we distinguish an impact that is adverse from one that would constitute an impairment?
11. What role does the administrative record play in this?
12. What steps has the National Leadership Council taken regarding the impairment issue?
13. What role do resource managers play in making impairment determinations?
14. How will the Service help employees understand this issue and implement it effectively?
15. Does our increased focus on avoiding impairment mean that we are de-emphasizing visitors and the "enjoyment" part of the Organic Act?
16. How can we ensure Service-wide consistency in evaluating whether proposed actions would or would not cause impairment?
17. How should park managers deal with existing impairments, or conditions that would cause impairment if allowed to continue?
18. Will an activity necessary to avoid or eliminate impairment automatically have a high priority for Service-wide funding?
19. How should an EIS or EA address "no action," when taking no action would cause impairment or allow an existing impairment to continue?
20. Is the impairment of enjoyment prohibited?
21. Can an action be taken if you don't know an answer regarding impacts?
22. Should we make just one summary statement on impairment, or make an impairment determination for each topic?
23. Can an NPS staff member who is a subject matter expert make an impairment finding?
24. Can park resources be impaired through benign neglect?
25. Does the prohibition on impairment apply only to units of the national park system, or does it apply to heritage areas, affiliated areas, or any other parks?

___________________________________________________________

1. Why is the "impairment" issue so important?

Ninety years ago, President Wilson signed into law the NPS Organic Act. There is an important provision in the law that tells us the purpose for which we manage the national parks:

…which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.

This is our core mission in managing the parks. Since passage of the act, we have had recurring discussions among ourselves-and with others-over what it means. We have often characterized the Organic Act as giving us a "contradictory mandate" that requires us to perform a "balancing test"-balancing between resource protection and public enjoyment. But we have argued at other times that it is not a balancing test-that resource protection is paramount. In short, we have not had within the Service a common and consistent interpretation of our mandate under the Organic Act. This has led to inappropriate and, at times, illegal decisions being made with respect to park resources and values.

2. Why are we now focusing so intensely on the no-impairment clause of the Organic Act?

Arguments about the "contradictory mandate" have sometimes led us into the courtroom. One of the more recent court cases occurred at Canyonlands and Glen Canyon, where the parks had prepared a Backcountry Management Plan (BMP). Informally referred to as the "SUWA" case, it has caused us to scrutinize, perhaps more closely than we have in the 85 years preceding SUWA, each and every word in the Organic Act. The following is a very brief summary:

The administrative record showed that motorized vehicle use levels were increasing, and the use was adversely impacting park resources.
The draft BMP included a preferred alternative that would have eliminated ORV use on a 10-mile segment of Salt Creek.
The administrative record showed that Salt Creek was the only perennial freshwater stream in CANY.
The ORV user groups were VERY distressed by the proposed closure.
The park then adopted a plan that would allow some limited continued use under a permit system, while conducting monitoring and assessment activities that would determine whether the reduced level of use still caused harm to the area.
The park was then sued by the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (SUWA) on the ORV issue and several other issues. The ORV groups intervened in support of the NPS decision.
The park won on most of the issues, but lost on the Salt Creek issue.
District Court. In these kinds of cases, the court applies what the Supreme Court has established as the "Chevron 2-step test" (named for the case known as Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.) to determine whether an agency's reading of a statute it administers is correct. Under step 1, if Congress has spoken to the precise question at issue, then that controls the court-and agency's-interpretation of the statute. At that point, there is no need to go to step 2. However, if the statute is silent or ambiguous, the court defers under step 2 to the agency's interpretation so long as it is a reasonable interpretation of the statute. Our defense contended that Canyonlands was a "Chevron 2" case, whereby we are allowed to strike a balance between competing mandates of resource conservation and visitor enjoyment. The District Court ruled where there is "permanent impairment of unique park resources," then the Organic Act is not ambiguous: the activity cannot be allowed. The District Court ordered that the park could not allow motorized vehicle use on the 10-mile section of trail.

The Appeal. The ORV groups then appealed the district court's decision. This caused the Service to consider whether the court had properly articulated the standard for determining when the NPS is in violation of the Organic Act. The timing of the ruling allowed the Assistant Secretary's Office and NPS to consider the issue in the context of the revision of Management Policies (in which Chapter 1 outlines the legal and philosophical foundations of the national park system) and use SUWA as an opportunity to articulate an official DOI/NPS interpretation of the Organic Act. So we filed a brief to advise the court of the DOI's views on the proper interpretation of the Organic Act. This interpretation was different than the interpretation we had offered previously, wherein we contended that the law authorizes the NPS to balance between competing mandates of resource conservation and visitor enjoyment.

Since the policy interpretation offered by DOI was technically still in draft form (Management Policies had not yet been approved), the Court of Appeals did not consider the position we offered. But it also said that the District Court erred in its decision, and found that:

The Organic Act is a Chevron 2 case, not a Chevron 1 case.
ORV use is not explicitly prohibited by the Organic Act.
The court also said "we read the Act as permitting the NPS to balance the sometimes conflicting policies of resource conservation and visitor enjoyment in determining what activities should be permitted or prohibited." But the court added: "The test for whether the NPS has performed its balancing properly is whether the resulting action leaves the resources 'unimpaired' for the enjoyment of future generations."
The park is now re-working that portion of the BMP addressing Salt Creek Road in light of the court's decision. It has closed the road pending a new Environmental Assessment. The EA will consider the ongoing studies and monitoring which have taken place on the road since the district court closed the road in 1998. The EA will also include an impairment finding, as required by the Management Policies and Director's Order #12.

3. Since similar lawsuits have been adjudicated before, why has the SUWA case been singled out?

The SUWA case (or "SUWA v. Dabney") has become the focal point for the no-impairment issue mainly because it is the first case to find that the Service's actions in a park had violated the Organic Act. And, in doing so, it articulated a new standard for finding such a violation. It also became a focal point of the no-impairment issue because the court's decision coincided with our re-drafting of Management Policies, allowing us to focus on how we should interpret and implement the Organic Act's no-impairment standard.

In considering the SUWA case, we must resist the temptation to be overly judgmental. The decisions that were made there, and the political realities and tensions that the superintendent had to deal with, are mirrored all across the national park system. Making the right decisions under those circumstances is difficult at best. But because park-level decisions sometimes have Service-wide repercussions, we all must learn as much as we can from lessons of this sort.

4. Where does this now leave the rest of the NPS?

Even though the interpretation of the Organic Act we offered the Court of Appeals was not considered because it was not final, we continued to work on it, under the leadership of the Assistant Secretary's office. Initially, we adopted our interpretation as Directors Order #55. But that was superseded by section 1.4 (Park Management) of the new Management Policies, approved December 22, 2000. [This section was not substantively changed in the 2006 edition.] Thoughtful consideration was given to virtually every word in section 1.4, and the policy's wording was selected-or not selected-for important reasons, namely:


To leave as little room as possible for misinterpreting the course it sets.
To help ensure that we are consistent in the way we make decisions.
To show the courts we have thoroughly thought through the instructions given to us in the Organic Act. And
To convince the courts in future challenges that our interpretation is logical and reasonable, and should be shown deference.
5. What does section 1.4 of Management Policies say?

Section 1.4 tells us that:

The no-impairment requirement of the Organic Act and the no-derogation requirement of the Redwood Act amendment define a single standard for management of the parks, and the terms can be used interchangeably.
In addition to avoiding impairment, we have an ongoing responsibility to conserve park resources and values.
The fundamental purpose of all parks also includes providing for the enjoyment of park resources and values by the people of the United States.
"Enjoyment" means enjoyment both by people who directly experience parks and by those who appreciate them from afar, and includes more than recreation.
When there is a conflict between conserving resources and values and providing for enjoyment of them, conservation is to be predominant.
The Service has management discretion to allow certain impacts within parks, but not to allow impacts that would leave resources and values impaired (unless Congress explicitly provides for the impairing activity).
Whether an impact would harm the integrity of park resources or values is a decision left to the responsible NPS manager.
Impairment may occur from visitor activities; NPS activities in the course of managing a park; or activities undertaken by concessioners, contractors, and others operating in the park.
Park resources and values include virtually all cultural resources and all natural resources and processes, as well as opportunities to experience enjoyment of them.
Ongoing activities that might have led or might be leading to impairment must be investigated and, if there is or will be impairment, the impairment must be eliminated as soon as reasonably possible.
6. How will we implement this new policy?

For many in the Park Service, this interpretation is not really "new." They have operated under the assumption that the law means what it says-we cannot take actions that impair park resources. But section 1.4 formally adopts a single interpretation that everyone must live by. And the basic framework has been in place for a long time.

Since 1966, we have had the section 106 of NHPA requirement that-for any of our proposed "undertakings"-we take into account the effect it will have on National Register or Register-eligible sites.
Since 1969, we have had the NEPA requirement that we address the effects of our actions on the human environment.
For nearly as long, we have had procedures in place to address these requirements.
But section 106 and NEPA require merely that we fully analyze and disclose the adverse consequences of our proposed actions. As long as we take all the steps required under those laws, and do the best we can to mitigate or avoid adverse impacts, they allow us to pretty much do whatever we want. And that is why this clear, unequivocal interpretation is so important to us-it requires one more critical step in the decision-making process. We must ask the question: Is the impact of this action going to be so bad that it will impair park resources or values? If the answer is "yes," then we cannot take the action.

7. Does this mean that everything we do will be an impairment, and therefore we cannot do anything that will affect park resources or values?

No, it does not mean that. As stated in section 1.4.3 of Management Policies:


[T]he laws do give the Service the management discretion to allow impacts to park resources and values when necessary and appropriate to fulfill the purposes of a park, so long as the impact does not constitute impairment of the affected resources and values.

Furthermore, section 8.1.1 of Management Policies states:

The fact that a park use may have an impact does not necessarily mean it will impair park resources or values for the enjoyment of future generations. Impacts may affect park resources or values and still be within the limits of the discretionary authority conferred by the Organic Act.

We must recognize that there are many types and degrees of impact. Some impacts are beneficial while others are adverse. Some of the adverse impacts may be so adverse as to significantly affect the quality of the human environment. When they reach that level, NEPA requires that an environmental impact statement be prepared. When a significant adverse impact reaches the level of impairing park resources or values, it is prohibited under the Organic Act. If it is not so adverse that it would cause impairment, then the NPS decision-maker may approve the action.

8. Does this mean it is okay to pursue activities that adversely impact park resources and values, as long as we do not impair them?

No, it does not mean that. As stated in section 8.1.1:


Impacts may affect park resources or values and still be within the limits of the discretionary authority conferred by the Organic Act. In these situations, the Service will ensure that the impacts are unavoidable and cannot be further mitigated. Even when they fall far short of impairment, unacceptable impacts can rapidly lead to impairment and must be avoided. For this reason, the Service will not knowingly authorize a park use that would cause unacceptable impacts.

9. Will implementing this new policy require complicated new procedures?

No. As stated in paragraph 6, above, under NEPA and the NHPA we have been evaluating the impacts of our proposed actions for more than 35 years. And for more than 90 years we have been trying to avoid taking actions that would impair park resources. Under the Administrative Procedure Act, we are required to have a well documented record of the information we considered and the rationale for our decisions. [Note: the APA is only about 45 years old.] The only thing that is really new is that we will now explicitly certify in our environmental documents that the adverse impacts caused by our actions will not cross the threshold into impairment. This certification must be included in the Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) or the Record of Decision (ROD). [This is addressed in more detail in the handbook that accompanies Director's Order #12.]

10. How do we distinguish an impact that is adverse from one that would constitute an impairment?

This is the most difficult task we now face. Section 1.4.5 says the impairment that is prohibited:

[I]s an impact that, in the professional judgment of the responsible NPS manager, would harm the integrity of park resources or values, including the opportunities that otherwise would be present for the enjoyment of those resources and values. Whether an impact meets this definition depends on the particular resources and values that would be affected; the severity, duration, and timing of the impact; the direct and indirect effects of the impact; and the cumulative effects of the impact in question and other impacts.

...An impact would be more likely to constitute impairment to the extent that it affects a resource or value whose conservation is:


Necessary to fulfill specific purposes identified in the establishing legislation or proclamation of the park,
Key to the natural or cultural integrity of the park or to opportunities for enjoyment of the park, or
Identified in the park's general management plan or other relevant NPS planning documents as being of significance.
An impact would be less likely to constitute an impairment if it is an unavoidable result of an action necessary to preserve or restore the integrity of park resources or values and it cannot be further mitigated.

Rarely will there be clear-cut evidence that impairment will occur. Superintendents and other decision-makers must apply their professional judgment to the facts of each case, taking into account technical and scientific studies and other information provided by subject matter experts within and outside the service. The Service is continually trying to develop, on an interdisciplinary basis, criteria and understandings necessary to carry out this responsibility efficiently.

11. What role does the administrative record play in this?

When a decision made by an NPS manager faces legal challenge, the courts rely on the administrative record as evidence that the Service adhered to applicable law(s) and regulations, followed proper procedures, and reached a reasonable decision. The administrative record is the paper trail that documents the Service's decision-making process and the basis for the decision. It consists of all documents and materials directly or indirectly considered by persons involved in the decision-making process. This includes all documents, regardless of whether they favor the decision that was finally made, favor decisions other than the final decision, or express criticism of the final decision.

Among the materials included would be a finding that there would not be impairment, and any documents that helped lead to that conclusion. If there are documents that contend the decision that was made would lead to impairment, then there must be other evidence refuting that contention, and an indication of how the decision-maker weighed the competing evidence. As one court has described its review process:

Generally, an agency decision will be considered arbitrary and capricious if the agency had (1) relied on factors which Congress had not intended it to consider, (2) entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, (3) offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or (4) is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.

12. What steps has the National Leadership Council taken regarding the impairment issue?

The NLC held a seminar March 20, 2001, on the impairment issue, with Dr. Robin Winks as the featured speaker. At the conclusion of the seminar, the NLC:


Committed the NPS to meeting our statutory responsibility to avoid impairments.
Committed to a long-term effort to obtain the resource information necessary to make well-informed decisions.
Reaffirmed that adverse impacts to park resources should be avoided whenever possible, even when they fall short of causing impairment.
Acknowledged that subject matter experts play a vital role in helping superintendents make well-informed decisions; but ultimately, superintendents must apply their own best judgment, taking all factors and information into account.
Committed to providing superintendents and others with training, supplemented by distance learning materials (including an "impairment" website), to understand the no-impairment policy.
Identified the need to develop additional materials to help all employees better understand the section 1.4 policy and, specifically, to help managers understand how to distinguish an adverse impact that may be acceptable from an impact that is an impairment.
Acknowledged that the complexity of this issue is such that there is no instant Service-wide "fix"; the wisdom and judgment necessary to make consistently good decisions may take an individual's entire career to acquire.
Encouraged employees at all levels to engage in formal and informal discourse on this subject.
13. What role do resource managers play in making impairment determinations?

Resource managers and others with specialized natural or cultural resource expertise play a critical role in helping decision-makers identify alternative courses of action and analyze the environmental consequences of those alternatives. Resource managers should ensure that the results of scientific study are made available to the decision-makers so that this important information may be fully and properly utilized in the decisions, as required by law. A full understanding of the environmental consequences leads to well-informed decisions.

One aspect of environmental analysis is to determine whether an impact is so severe as to constitute an impairment. Resource managers and subject-matter experts should participate in impairment-related discussions, and decision-makers should carefully evaluate their advice and recommendations. But it is the superintendent's role, not the staff expert's, to make the decision, even if it is not a decision that staff agrees with. Staff experts are not authorized to make final impairment determinations, only to suggest whether there appears, or does not appear, to be an impairment. The decision-maker should view staff recommendations within the broader context of all factors that must be taken into consideration, and include their final determination in the conclusion section of the environmental document or in the record of decision. If there is disagreement or uncertainty about the nature or severity of impacts, the decision-maker should seek additional opinions and thoroughly document the administrative record as to how they took staff advice-and other sources of information-into account in reaching their decision. "Alternative Dispute Resolution" techniques may also be used if the decision-maker believes it would be helpful.

14. How will the Service help employees understand this issue and implement it effectively?

Several steps have been taken in that direction:

This series of questions and answers has been prepared.
A web site has been established [http://www.nps.gov/protect] where employees can obtain informational materials on impairment.
There is a coordinated effort to reach out to superintendents at appropriate meetings and conferences.
Training is provided in each region on the subject of environmental analysis and conservation planning. This includes the analysis of potential impairments.
An impairment element has been incorporated into planning meetings and conferences.
The Office of Policy and the Environmental Quality Division provide impairment-related training at various meetings and conferences.
Additional informational materials are being developed for the explicit purpose of helping employees identify when a proposed action would likely cause impairment.
15. Does our increased focus on avoiding impairment mean that we are de-emphasizing visitors and the "enjoyment" part of the Organic Act?

No, it does not mean that. While the NPS Management Policies emphasize the need to avoid impairment, there are other statements that clearly reflect our ongoing responsibility and commitment to provide for public enjoyment of the parks. For example:


"National parks belong to all Americans, and all Americans should feel welcome to experience the parks."
"The fundamental purpose of all parks also includes providing for the enjoyment of park resources and values by the people of the United States."
"Providing appropriate opportunities for public enjoyment is an important part of the Service's mission."
"The Service will maintain an open and inviting atmosphere that will afford visitors ample opportunity for inspiration, appreciation and enjoyment of the parks."
For many decades the Service has provided opportunities for enjoyment without impairing park resources and values, and we will continue to do so.

16. How can we ensure Service-wide consistency in evaluating whether proposed actions would or would not cause impairment?

We will try to make sure that Service-wide guidance is reasonably clear and unambiguous. We will also post case studies to use as examples. A database containing good examples of environmental impact statements and assessments will be developed as a reference source. The examples will be available on the www.nps.gov/protect web site. Regional Environmental Coordinators will help in this effort by sending good examples to the Environmental Quality Division. WASO staff in policy, planning, and program disciplines will monitor environmental documents to promote consistency. All NPS staff-especially those who prepare environmental documents-can help by contributing to the database, by consulting the database for insights on what types of impacts have been viewed as impairing or not impairing park environments, and by sharing their questions or concerns with the No-impairment Coordinating Committee.

17. How should park managers deal with existing impairments, or conditions that would cause impairment if allowed to continue?

Existing conditions or ongoing activities that may cause impairment may be revealed while analyzing a no action alternative in an EA or EIS. Or they may be revealed through less formal means-for example, through routine resource monitoring, or through casual observation. Section 1.4.7 of Management Policies speaks to how we should deal with ongoing or impending impairment: "[T]he decision-maker must take appropriate action, to the extent possible within the Service's authorities and available resources, to eliminate the impairment. The action must eliminate the impairment as soon as reasonably possible, taking into consideration the nature, duration, magnitude, and other characteristics of the impact to park resources and values…." To determine the relative urgency of corrective action, the superintendent should ask questions such as: How extensive is the impairment? Will a delay in resolving it cause progressively more harm? What are the alternatives for arresting it or preventing it? What financial and other resources are available for dealing with it? The existing impairment should be addressed through the park's resource management planning process.

Sometimes impairment may be present before the NPS assumes responsibility for managing a park. The park's legislative history should be reviewed to see if it contains some indication of whether Congress intended that the Service would take remedial action, or that the apparent impairment would be tolerated or "grandfathered." The NPS no-impairment policy takes into account the provision of the 1978 "Redwood amendment" which recognizes that the conditions that create an impairment are sometimes "directly and specifically provided by Congress."

18. Will an activity necessary to avoid or eliminate impairment automatically have a high priority for Service-wide funding?

When a project is proposed that might cause impairment, steps must be taken to avoid or to mitigate so that the impairment will not occur. The need to take those steps does not automatically ensure high funding priority; the project must be viewed in its entirety as it competes for Service-wide funding. If the costs of avoiding impairment are unacceptably high, an obvious solution is to revise the project or activity to eliminate the action that would cause impairment, or abandon the project altogether. In the case of existing or ongoing impairments, section 1.4.7 of Management Policies requires appropriate action, to the extent possible within the Service's authorities and available resources, to eliminate the impairment as soon as reasonably possible. Managers should therefore use their existing funds or, if necessary, apply for Service-wide funding to cover the cost of remedial action.

Because of the serious implications associated with the term "impairment," project justifications must not state or imply that there is or will be impairment unless the real or potential impairment has been documented in an approved environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, and addressed in an appropriate decision document.

19. How should an EIS or EA address "no action," when taking no action would cause impairment or allow an existing impairment to continue?

Taking no action would usually mean that ongoing conditions or trends would continue on their normal course. If ongoing conditions have caused, or will cause, impairment, then that must be documented in the EA or EIS. Section 1.4.7 of Management Policies requires that we take appropriate action, to the extent possible within the Service's authorities and available resources, to eliminate the impairment as soon as reasonably possible. The EA or EIS should describe what the "appropriate" remedial action(s) would be, and any funding, timing, legal or other constraints that would influence our ability to take the remedial action. The Service's ultimate course of action must include a remedial action, unless remedial action is not possible (e.g., where a particular structure or feature has been damaged beyond repair), in which case the reason it is not possible should be explained

Managers should use their existing funds or, if necessary, apply for Service-wide funding to cover the cost of remedial action. In some cases, it may not be possible to eliminate an existing impairment.

20. Is the impairment of enjoyment prohibited?

No, at least not in the same way that impairment of resources and values is prohibited, for it is the impairment of the "opportunity" to enjoy park resources and values that is prohibited. When "enjoyment" is directly dependent upon park resources or values, the loss of enjoyment may be an indication that a resource or value has been impaired. Future generations should be able to experience the same enjoyment that a park visitor can experience today (although a park's resource attributes may naturally evolve to be different from what they are today). If the future visitor cannot experience enjoyment because the resources or values have been degraded, then it may mean that impairment of the opportunity for enjoyment has been allowed to occur.

A somewhat related issue is that the casual visitor may not have sufficient knowledge to recognize when park resources have been degraded. For example, a park visitor may be favorably impressed to see wildlife or wildflowers in a park, not knowing that they were exotic species which, perhaps, displaced native plants and animals. A park's interpretive program should help visitors learn to distinguish a healthy park environment from what merely appears to be healthy.

21. Can an action be taken if you don't know an answer regarding impacts?

Yes, it is often okay to say "I don't know" and still take action, provided that you document a rational and reasonable explanation for why you did it. However, if the missing information is essential to making a reasoned decision, or if the information is relevant to reasonably foreseeable significant adverse impacts (which would include an impairment) and the cost is not prohibitive, then CEQ regulations say we must first get the answer to the question if the cost of doing so is not exorbitant. You cannot indicate that potentially significant impacts are "unknown" and still sign a FONSI. In Glacier Bay, the court rejected our argument that we could take the action and monitor after the fact, even though we didn't know the impacts of the action. If you cannot make a rational and well justified decision without the information, then you should change your proposal to avoid the action causing the unknown impact. Director's Order #12 gives guidance on what information we need.

22. Should we make just one summary statement on impairment, or make an impairment determination for each topic?

Director's Order #12 says to do it topic by topic, and then in the cumulative impact analysis. Generally, we should be saying for each topic or resource type that it's likely or not likely to be impairment, and then make the comprehensive statement at the end. It is possible that there would not be impairment for any individual topic but, cumulatively, the integrity of the park would be compromised and thus constitute impairment.

23. Can an NPS staff member who is a subject matter expert make an impairment finding?

No, the impairment determination rests with the superintendent, subject to approval by the regional director. Staff members should be encouraged to freely offer their expertise in identifying impacts, including possible impairments, and it is generally appropriate to include their points of view in the impact analysis. (Their written views, even if not included in the EA or EIS, would always be a part of the administrative record.) If the staff expert believes there may or will be impairment, their views should be considered as a recommendation to the superintendent, not an absolute finding of impairment. NPS policy recognizes that staff experts are not always aware of all the facts of a situation or the full context in which a decision must be made.

24. Can park resources be impaired through benign neglect?

Under regulations issued by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation to implement section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, intentional neglect which causes the deterioration of a property significant in American history (which includes pre-history) is considered an "adverse effect." As a world leader in historic preservation, it is NPS policy to always seek to avoid harm to significant historic resources. But that is not always possible, due to lack of funding, conflicts with competing and equally valid objectives, or some other compelling reason. When a park superintendent decides not to schedule a historic resource for preservation, rehabilitation or restoration, that decision should be identified in the park's GMP or other planning documents, along with the justification for the decision. If a resource is not critical to the integrity of the park, then its loss or degradation would not likely be an impairment.

NEPA and section 106 processes must be followed in documenting adverse effects on historic resources. Park managers must always try to mitigate an unavoidable loss, which can sometimes be done by thoroughly documenting the resource (e.g., measured drawings). The park should keep records of any requests made to fund stabilization or preservation efforts.

25. Does the prohibition on impairment apply only to units of the national park system, or does it apply to heritage areas, affiliated areas, or any other parks?

The Organic Act's prohibition on impairment applies only to units of the national park system. It does not apply to heritage areas, affiliated areas, or other parks that are not part of the national park system. As defined in the 1970 General Authorities Act, the national park system includes "any area of land and wa