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Updated: Big Bend National Park Proposing To Cut Mountain Bike Trail, PEER, NPS Retirees Raise Objections

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Big Bend's Lone Mountain would be circled with a hiking and biking
trail under a proposed Centennial Initiative project. Photo by Jeff
Blaylock, used with permission.

The very purpose and role of national parks is being drawn into question over a proposal by Big Bend National Park officials to cut a dual-use mountain bike trail into a hillside near Panther Junction.

In some aspects, the proposal underscores the gist of a Traveler column from last month, one in which we broached the subject of the popularity of having a national park nearby but the often-resulting opposition to many of the rules and regulations -- and even restrictions -- that come with such an entity on the landscape.

At the heart of the issue, as opponents to the mountain bike trail note, is the role national parks were created and the mandate given the National Park Service to manage them. While public enjoyment and recreation are certainly key to the parks, resource management is foremost the role of the Park Service.

Against that mandate, questions are being raised over whether Big Bend officials are holding to that mandate, or bending over to placate a special interest group that already has more than 300 miles of mountain biking opportunities in the park.

Big Bend officials are preparing an environmental assessment into a roughly 10-mile-long network of trails that would be cut into an undeveloped part of the park. Part of the project would include parking for a trailhead and a picnic area near the Panther Junction Visitor Center, and a second trailhead near Grapevine Hills Road.

While the park describes this trail as an added recreational outlet for park visitors, members of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees see it as little more than a "promotion of the mountain bike industry" and a move that facilitates "the regrettable trend toward parks becoming venues for extreme sports."

This project did not arise overnight. Indeed, back in 2007 it was seen as a "centennial project" by Interior officials under the George W. Bush administration. Back then, the International Mountain Bicycling Association was a strong proponent, and had promised to come up with half of the $12,000 cost then estimated for the project.

The proposed loop trail would start near the visitor center at Panther Junction, cross the Chihuahuan desert and wrap Lone Mountain while providing sweeping views of the Chisos Mountains, the southern-most mountain range in the country.

While Big Bend officials say the trail is simply another recreational outlet for park visitors, they do note that it's part of a deal IMBA struck with the National Park Service years ago to explore more mountain biking in the park system.

The purpose of the proposed project is to provide park visitors a trail-based recreational opportunity in an area of the park where none currently exists. The proposed action is in keeping with a 2002 Memorandum of Agreement between NPS and the International Mountain Biking Association that encouraged identifying mountain biking opportunities in the national parks, including new trail construction in appropriate areas. The primary objectives of the proposal are to: 1) create new recreational opportunities for park visitors, and 2) provide a trail-based recreational opportunity in the vicinity of Panther Junction.

   
That arrangement with IMBA is part of the issue cited by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility in their objections.

"The project is a collaboration between the south Texas national park and a private mountain biking group, raising disturbing “pay-to-play” questions about user groups carving out park lands for special purposes," the group said in comments it filed with the Park Service.
 
Most of the backcountry trail would be single-track – approximately the width of a bike, with one-way traffic moving counter clockwise.  Horses would be barred from the trail.
 
“Big Bend calls this a ‘multi-use’ trail but it is clearly designed for high-speed, high-thrill biking.  Any hikers foolish enough to venture on this path risk tread marks across their backs,” said PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that the EA dryly concedes “some visitors might not enjoy their experience sharing the proposed trail with mountain bikers.” 

“We are not anti-mountain biking," said Mr. Ruch, "but are concerned that scarce public dollars may be diverted to promote exclusionary recreation scratched out of national park backcountry.” 

In their comments on the proposal, members of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees said Big Bend officials seem to be "pursuing an agenda not supported by law, policy and common sense."

"The mountain bike trail construction proposal for Big Bend NP raises serious questions regarding the purpose of National Parks. Through law, Congress and the courts have clearly established that resource protection must always come before visitor enjoyment," Rick Smith, who chairs the coalition's executive committee, wrote to the park. "While there may often be a tug of war between those who place enjoyment first and those who place preservation first, the law clearly states which of the interests has priority. 

"Further, NPS Policies articulate this legal precedence into coherent direction for the agency to place resource protection as the primary role of the agency in managing our parks," he added. "In the case of this EA we believe that single-track mountain biking may be enjoyable for the participants but we do not believe it is necessary or appropriate for experiencing the value and purposes for which national parks are set aside by Congress and construction of a single use trail certainly does not conform to the resource protection deference over public enjoyment the park must honor."

Carving this stretch of bike trail, wrote Mr. Smith, "provides no additional means of appreciating park wilderness beyond that available on existing backcountry roads, particularly on roads with very low speeds and levels of vehicular traffic."

"There is nothing about single-track mountain biking that adds a unique opportunity to appreciate the natural and cultural resources of this national park. On the contrary, the rough, rocky terrain combined with hazardous vegetation detracts from that opportunity. In addition there are hundreds of miles of single track opportunities on nearby private and state lands where mountain biking is being actively welcomed and promoted."

PEER's other concerns include:

*  This would be the first trail constructed from scratch on undeveloped park land to accommodate mountain bicycles.   A pending rule change, also supported by IMBA would open millions of acres of national park backcountry, including recommended wilderness, to mountain bike trails;

*  Big Bend already has 200 miles of trails and roads open to mountain biking and there are another 900 miles of bike-accessible trails and roads on state and private lands surrounding Big Bend;

*  This trail would be expensive to maintain and vulnerable to high erosion.  Yet Big Bend, like other national parks, has a sizeable backlog of maintenance needs on existing facilities, and;

*  While the proposed trail is not in designated wilderness, the project would likely preclude the land from ever being designating as wilderness.
 
“The plan at Big Bend is without precedent in the national park system,” added Mr. Ruch, who is urging members of the public to send comments to Big Bend National Park before the comment period on the park's Environmental Assessment runs out April 2.  “This is part of the steady degradation of our parks into settings for thrill sports rather than preserves for enjoyment of natural and cultural features.”
 
Currently, bicycles are allowed on park roads, dirt or paved, as well as on trails in developed areas, such as the South Rim Village at the Grand Canyon.  Backcountry trails are generally reserved for hikers and horseback riders. IMBA began its campaign to gain access to national parks trails in 2002.

A copy of the park's environmental assessment is attached below. To voice your opinion on this project, head to this site.

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Comments

In response to boiling everything down to economics...just my thoughts, but I really hope we do not boils things like wilderness and national parks down to economics, seems to rob them of what little purity they may have to begin with, but maybe that is just to romantic of a vision.


I'll take REALITY!  Anyone think the Senior Executive Service isn't driven by economics is still watching Disney"s Bambi!


I am very familiar with this proposal and it caters to a select special interest group trying to set a precedent - not the general visiting public. The trail would be a mediocre at best, mountain bike trail and would not begin to compare with the abundant mountain biking opportunities outside the park. The park does not have the funding or personnel to maintain such a trail and  biking volunteers do not have the training or qualifications to maintain a trail inside a "Protected" National Park.


Allan,

Why would the trail be mediocre? 

The one argument that comes back over and over is that there are plenty of trails outside the park that cater to cyclists, and therefore, the NPS should keep cyclists off trails in the park.  I don't get the logic in the argument and does not address why bikes are kept off trails in the parks themselves.

My guess is that the park service and IMBA figure that it'd be "easier" to get a new trail approved than trying to turn existing trails into multi use.  If this message board is any indication, grown ups really don't want to share, and would be quite vocal about sharing an existing trail with cyclists.


Zeb, you keep returning to the issue of "sharing," yet there's nothing preventing mountain bikers from using these trails...without their bikes under current regulations.

To flip the coin, hikers often are forced off trails by some mountain bikers -- either while using the trail or because they don't want to even venture out onto them due to the bike traffic. I can tell you I avoid our multiple-use trails on weekends in the summer because I know I'll regularly be dodging mountain bikers.

As I said earlier, this is a thorny issue with no quick and easy solution. I'll admit that video imtnbke linked to showed off the joys of single-track rides, and I've enjoyed some great rides in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area in Idaho (which is managed by the Forest Service), as well as on other Forest Service lands in Wyoming and Utah, but I also am not completely sold on your arguments regarding national park trails.


Zeb, you keep returning to the issue of "sharing," yet there's nothing preventing mountain bikers from using these trails . . . without their bikes under current regulations. [¶] To flip the coin, hikers often are forced off trails by some mountain bikers—either while using the trail or because they don't want to even
venture out onto them due to the bike traffic.

  I plead guilty to finding most hiking rather boring. It takes a long time to see a given area. I think I've read Zebulon say much the same.

As for backpacking, it too is slow and conducive to dirty and blistered feet (I know from long experience). In addition, it has kind of a big footprint compared to mountain biking (though it's nothing compared to packstock outfitter trips). I recently received Backpacker magazine's annual gear issue. To read that is to be reminded on every page that no longer is there much that's primitive about backpacking! I'd argue mountain biking is lighter on the land than a multiday backpacking trip with all of its attendant equipment.

Kurt, I can't argue that some hikers find cyclists inimical to an enjoyable experience. I hear it from friends. I bet it's only in crowded areas, though, and in those areas the obvious
solution is what's done on the Tahoe Rim Trail and others, i.e., alternate-day separated uses. Or a permit system, as is done in the Desolation Wilderness at Lake Tahoe.
 
Someone mentioned that he hopes the glory of the outdoors won't be reduced to economic analysis. Not for nothing, I would acknowledge, was economics coined the "dismal science" many years ago. But my point about economics was a limited one: economic thinking involves considering tradeoffs and working out the best arrangement overall. Many people dream only of the perfect, and if they can't have that they forget about the possibility of achieving at least the good and leave the relatively bad in place.


I guess that the right-wing echo chamber has found its equivalent among the outdoors-as-moribund-museum crowd. (I apologize in advance for my sarcasm in this post; I know I should tone it down and I write this against my better judgment.)

The Coalition of National Park Service Retirees has issued its own denunciation of the Big Bend National Park plan:

http://www.npsretirees.org/images/stories/03.21.12_BIBE_mtn_biking_EA_co...

And, following it, there is an interesting memo that purports to state the objections of a cadre of Big Bend staff and volunteers who seem to have been able to compile dozens and dozens of "concerns"* (the current euphemism for complaints) that the new trail will not be "appropriate"** (whatever that most nebulous of all adjectives may mean in the mind of the reader).

Reading this list, one guesses that perhaps there's insufficient entertainment within the confines of Big Bend, which leaves too much time on the hands of certain staff and volunteers.

This summer I met a NPS employee at Big Basin National Park, Nevada. He was barely out of his teens but had already absorbed the internal culture. He looked startled and disturbed when asked if people could mountain bike the trails there. (No, of course not!) I recommended that he check out the bikeable trails at Red Canyon in Utah, west of Bryce Canyon, but he looked so alarmed at the prospect that I took pity on him and desisted. He might want to join the junior division of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees if it has such a wing.

______________________

* The word "concern" or "concerns" appears 14 times in the document. "Serious concerns" appears four times, and "very serious concerns" appears once. Given this level of expressed worriedness, I imagine the individuals involved will be tendering their resignations as a principled form of protest against the looming desecration of all that is sacred.

** The words "inappropriate" and "appropriate" or their variants appear in this document 13 times. Both are notoriously abused euphemisms that, while devoid of any precise meaning, offer a roundabout way of stating a value judgment in a manner that comes across as neutral and detached.


imtnbke

Though some of your comment goes a little over my head (a criticism of myself, not you), I do like your defining the words "Concerns" and "appropriate/inappropriate" as well as comments on their use. It was particularly interesting in that those words have been used on numerous occassions, and in association with, informing those such as myself why we should not do something. I don't ever get to use those words. Whats wrong with me ?

Ron 


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