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Zion National Park Chief Ranger Bonnie Schwartz rolls up a map December 2, 2007, showing the inholdings at the
park. There are hundreds of acres of private property in the park (known as an inholdings) and in National Park
system throughout the United States. Funding to purchase inholdings by the National Park Service has decreased
significantly since 1999. |
When pieces of national parks go on sale, U.S.
can't pay
Despite a slight uptick in 2008, federal funding for
privately owned land purchases has taken a hit in recent years.
By Ben Arnoldy
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Zion National Park, Utah - Hank and Mariangela Landau purchased a slice of heaven: 20 acres
surrounded by Zion National Park and its red-rock hoodoos and
towering sandstone walls.
The 2005 sale frustrated park officials, who had wanted to buy
the land for years but couldn't come up with the money. The
inablility of park officials to make the purchase guaranteed that
private citizens will control the land for the foreseeable future.
Within less than a decade, national park officials have seen the
federal budget for land acquisition slashed by 75 percent, making it
increasingly difficult for administrators to purchase roughly 1.8
million acres of privately owned land inside national parks. The
2008 budget offers $35 million – a slight uptick, but far less than
the nearly $140 million spent in 1999.
Parks instead have received more money to address a massive
maintenance backlog.
The dwindling acquisition budget is resulting in land slipping
away – either to private citizens or developers who permanently
transform the land.
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A car passes The Center for True North owned by Hank Landau and Mariangela Pino Landau that is located
on the Kolob Plateau in Zion National Park, Utah December 2, 2007. The private property in the park (known as an
inholding) was purchased by the Landau's in 2005. Funding to purchase inholdings by the National Park Service has
decreased significantly since 1999.
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"This is one of those precipitous moments. With the dip in the
Land and Water Conservation Fund and given the dynamics of the real
estate market, there is a lot at risk," says Alan Front, vice
president of the Trust for Public Land, a charity that helps expand
public holdings.
While newer parks face developers, administrators of older parks
like Zion fret more about newcomers who might upgrade old buildings
or remote parcels, driving up prices or marring the landscape.
"The worry is if we're not able to get the pieces [of property],
the landowner might develop it in a way incompatible with the park,"
says Bonnie Schwartz, Zion chief ranger.
Zion Park officials were "disappointed" they lost out on the
Landau property, though they say the couple, who converted an old
tavern on the site into a spiritual retreat center, are good
neighbors.
"We have tried to do everything in harmony with the environment,"
says Mrs. Landau, who researched what paint would blend with the
red-rock landscape. "We took photographs throughout the day because
the rock formations change colors," she says.
They have also given rangers access to communications equipment
powered by the center's solar panels and satellite dish. Mr. Landau
says he snuffed out two small wildfires and dug a new well that
firefighters can use.
The well, however, represents the sort of new impact that parks
try to prevent through planning guidelines distributed to neighbors,
says Schwartz.
"It's really a wish list of theirs, but the language makes it
sound that if you do build on land that you own you might be in
trouble and they'll come take it," says Mrs. Landau.
Though zoning authority resides with local officials, park
administrators can still utilize eminent domain.
"They are always mentioning condemnation," says Chuck Cushman,
head of the American Land Rights Association, a group representing
owners of property inside parks.
Yet park officials rarely invoke eminent domain. That's due,
Cushman says, to the lower land acquisition budgets keeping park
officials focused on trying to buy from willing sellers only. "What
we've tried to do is to keep the land acquisition funding below the
willing seller threshold," he says.
Private landowners, he says, generally take care of their land
just as well if not better than the national park surrounding them,
and abuses are the exception.
In calls placed to 10 parks across the West, a few park
representatives complained about development.
Officials at Glacier National Park in Montana cite a handful of
what they call "inappropriate developments." One owner used a
historic wagon road, leaving big ruts – and tensions.
An upgrade to a ramshackle cabin was problematic for officials in
Colorado's Rocky Mountain National Park.
"That was one instance where I felt like something had gotten
away. Had we been able to [purchase it] when it was just a rustic
cabin it might have been affordable. Now I don't think it will be
affordable," says Larry Gamble, head of the park's lands program.
Newer parks face greater threats.
"We still have some critical lands to acquire, and many of those
over the last five years have fallen through and been developed
because we didn't have land acquisition money," says Woody Smeck,
superintendent at the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation
Area near Los Angeles. Park officials still hope to acquire 27,500
acres.
A developer who outbid the park for a rare type of savannah
subdivided it for tract housing. "When I drive through that area I
think of what could have been," says Mr. Smeck.
Parks get some help from charitable land trusts that can buy land
and donate it or give "bridge funding" to willing sellers until the
park is in a position to pay.
"We are a conservation emergency room, and with the decline of
funding in recent years we've had to do more triage," says Mr. Front
of the Trust for Public Land.
The group stalled a major development at the Virgin Islands
National Park by putting up $30 million. The Trust also helped the
park secure 56 acres on Cape Cod, Mass., including the only public
camping area.
Help from the private sector – including tapping big donations
from major corporations – may be the only way to complete the
National Parks System, says Grace Lee, head of the National Park
Trust. Her group helped the parks purchase an old mine in
California's Sequoia National Park, among many other projects.
"The federal government can't do it alone – there will never be
enough money to pay for all the land needed to be protected," says
Ms. Lee.
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