Got this in my email this morning. Something fishy about it. Anyone know of it? It seems not well thought out.
Rather than create a national park expropriating all the thousands of residents already living in the Pinelands, they decided to create a growth management plan that would use regulations and incentives to concentrate development in specified growth areas around the Pinelands’ edges, while severely restricting development options in the large intact forests of the Pine Barrens’ interior.
Why a bid to turn Pine Barrens into a national park probably won't happen
http://www.nj.com/burlington/index....seeks_to_make_nj_pine_barrens_a_national.html
Additions to the National Park System are now generally made through acts of Congress, and national parks can be created only through such acts. But the President has authority, under the Antiquities Act of 1906, to proclaim national monuments on lands already under federal jurisdiction. The Secretary of the Interior is usually asked by Congress for recommendations on proposed additions to the System. The Secretary is counseled by the National Park System Advisory Board, composed of private citizens, which advises on possible additions to the System and policies for its management.
Actually even the PPA agreed it was not a good idea, but that could be because if it actually happened they all would be out of a job
I agree. It's too populated to introduce a National Park in Nj and there are plenty of 501c(3)'s associated with Natoinal Parks. I was just pointing out that PPA's role would have to change and nobody likes change, at least if it's not on their own terms.That may not be the case as many NP's have 501c(3)'s associated with them. The big problem would be buying all the homes and businesses within the park boundary, but they would probably try to use the eminent domain laws.
I just went back over the thread. I'm not sure who said hunting would be illegal.Hunting is not banned in all National Parks. Grand Tetons NP has Elk hunting for example.
I would not lose any sleep worrying that it would happen. The reasons it did not occur decades ago are even more relevant today. The increased restrictions, such as no hunting, no private homes or businesses, etc, that come with NP status would create an uproar much larger than the MAP did.
There are provisions that can be made at the time a Park is designated by Congress. If that ever was to happen in the Pines or some portion of them it would be very important to get that set in stone from the beginning.
Although it may be allowed in certain units of the NPS, such as NRA's and NWR's, I am not aware of any National Park that has allowed hunting, other than Grand Teton NP for the express purpose of seasonal Elk management by hunters that are chosen by permit, limited in number and deputized as Park Rangers. It is due to the numbers of over-wintering Elk at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson. It is not up to Congress, but the superintendent of a park to make the determination and requires approval, a fairly complicated process. What you can and cannot do within the boundaries of a NP are highly regulated. Until fairly recently firearms possession was not allowed. Details are in the CFR, Title 36.
The largest National Park in the country allows subsistence hunting. Wrangell St-Alias. They do not want people going in and sport hunting wolves and grizzlies in the Park area, but the local people are able to hunt, fish, and trap to use as part of their diet. Where cultural concerns have been made, the NPS has been accommodating.
https://www.nps.gov/wrst/learn/historyculture/upload/Subsistence brochure.pdf