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This past May, the
Forest Service hosted in Sun Valley a National Forest "Recreation
Summit," one of a dozen meetings held nationally for public
exposure to the new Forest Service recreation agenda. Fears of
the commercialization of nature are now fully confirmed.
In a nutshell, the
new vision defines outdoor recreation as a marketable commodity
or product which the Forest Service, as a vendor in partnership
with private recreation corporations, will sell to the public,
its paying customers.
The following quotes
are directly from the new agenda:
"The Forest
Service will join commercial ventures, non-governmental organizations
and trade organizations in forming viable and sustainable nature-based
tourism industries."
"The Forest
Service will rely on strong relationships with the recreation
industry, travel and tourism providers."
"We will train
Forest Service personnel in business parameters such as marketing
research, profit and loss"; and "expand training of
staff in market analysis for a 'customer' focused Recreation
Technology and Development Unit."
This is a blueprint
for an alarming transformation of the Forest Service from public
service land management to a commercial business venture. This
is government running amuck!
A federal agency
would exploit public land as its own business asset while fleecing
the public in order to sustain and grow itself. And to that end
it would partner up with profit seeking corporations to develop
their business interests in the American public's most precious
natural playgrounds.
The Forest Service
would, in its words, "use a 'toolbox' of investment techniques
for long-term financial sustainability," including expanded
user fees; cost sharing leverage of dollars with private sectors;
and private sector investment in development.
The reference here
to "long- term sustainability" discloses the true Forest
Service agenda of sustaining itself. This huge aging federal
bureaucracy which has lost its lifeblood of cutting down our
National Forests, now would attempt to survive and reinvent itself
by preying on the American public's recreation dollars. There
is no more classic con game than selling someone that which they
already own, and it's a textbook example of big government getting
bigger.
Make no mistake,
"public service" is not the motivation here. Clearly,
the familiar money hungry triangle of industry, politicians and
federal agency is rearing its ugly head again to feed on the
American public's resources.
People who hunt,
fish, hike, camp or go boating in the national forests don't
need massive new commercial development to accommodate their
uses. More likely it would degrade the outdoor experience for
most users while pandering to product offerings by the motorized
recreation Industry .
Remember, the entire
concept of a commercialized Forest Service was conceived in partnership
with the "American Recreation Coalition" (and their
front men in Congress), comprised of America's biggest recreation
oriented corporations who hope to expand markets for their products.
The Walt Disney
company is a leading member of the coalition and continues to
host many meetings with Forest Service staff at Disney facilities.
Francis Pandolfi, former chief operating officer of the Forest
Service and a leader in the coalition, has asked, "Have
we fully explored our gold mine of recreation opportunities and
managed it as if it were consumer product brands? Selling a product
is very different than giving it away."
An example of how
corporate partnerships with the Forest Service would work can
be found in the American Recreation Coalition's recently announced
"National Recreation Lakes Act, HR 4299." Highlights
of the bill include: 20 National Forest lakes to be "managed"
by a council of government and private interests; provide $1
million per lake of federal funding for marketing; encourage
private sector development around the lake; expand recreation
user fees.
This June, the Sierra
Club, Oregon's Wild Wilderness and The Idaho Sporting Congress
will be protesting the commercialization of our national forests
and its most overt arm, the recreation user fee. You can participate
by refusing to buy a user fee pass. Remember, if you buy one
you are counted as supporting the idea.
Wisely, Idaho courts
have refused to enforce fines against we who voice our vote by
not buying a pass. Let your voice be heard.
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Will Caldwell, a
Ketchum artist, is president of the Idaho Sporting Congress.
From: Idaho Mt.
Express
For the week of
June 21 through June 27, 2000
http://www.mtexpress.com/2000/06-21-00/6-21oped.htm
Copyright ©
2000 Express Publishing Inc. All Rights reserved. Reproduction
in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written
permission of Express Publishing Inc. is prohibited.
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