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Op-Ed |National Park Service Undermines America's Best Idea

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Editor's note: The following column was written by Kent Nelson, executive director of Wyoming Wildlife Advocates.

In November 2014, in a stunning, out-of-the-blue reversal of decades of settled policy, the National Park Service ceded to Wyoming authority over wildlife on approximately 2,300 acres of state- and privately-owned "inholdings" within the boundaries of Grand Teton National Park.

At the time, several organizations, including the National Parks Conservation Association and Wyoming Wildlife Advocates (the organization which I represent), criticized this decision, declaring that it opened the door to hunting and trapping within the borders of one of the Park Service’s crown jewels.

Bison herd at Grand Teton National Park/Deby Dixon

If this herd of bison walks across inholdings within Grand Teton National Park, it could be hunted/Deby Dixon

And in fact, this quickly came to pass. The Wyoming Game and Fish Department, responsible for managing Wyoming's wildlife, almost immediately authorized hunting of elk and bison on park inholdings. Last fall three bison were taken by hunters on inholdings within the boundaries of the park.

Then, in 2015, WGFD redrew hunt areas for several species, and authorized hunting for moose and blue grouse on inholdings. Black bear hunting was also allowed.

The WGFD manages a wide array of species, most notably the big game species, but it also has authority to manage hunting and/or trapping of fur bearing animals and game birds.

The NPS decision enables the WGFD to authorize hunting or trapping on park inholdings of any, or all, of the species under its control.

That includes moose, deer, elk, cougars, black bear, bobcat, bighorn sheep, antelope, beaver, badger, marten, mink, muskrats, rabbits and snowshoe hares, squirrels, sandhill cranes, grouse, partridge, any migratory bird not protected under federal law, and more.

Also as a consequence of the NPS decision, certain other wildlife, including red foxes, coyotes, raccoons and porcupines, may be killed in unlimited numbers at any time by any lawful means on park inholdings.

Most appalling of all, WGFD will have the authority to allow hunting of grizzly bears and gray wolves on inholdings once their Endangered Species Act protections are removed.

So why then was this decision made and how can it be justified? After all, the laws regulations seem clear.

Under the Organic Act of 1916 the “primary responsibility” of the National Park Service is to “leave park resources and values unimpaired unless a particular law directly and specifically provides otherwise.”

In furtherance of this objective, Congress has reserved to itself the exclusive authority to make exceptions to the statutory mandate to preserve park resources.

The NPS itself has explicitly acknowledged this by stating in its Management Policies that “impairment of park resources and values may not be allowed by the Service unless directly and specifically provided for by legislation or by the proclamation establishing the park.”

And while Park Service regulations generally “do not apply on non-federally owned land and waters or on Indian tribal trust lands within National Park System boundaries,” specified regulations, including wildlife protection regulations, do clearly apply “regardless of land ownership, on all lands and waters within a park area that are under the legislative jurisdiction of the United States.”

The irony of this situation is heartbreaking: in Grand Teton National Park, known worldwide as a haven for wildlife, wildlife that people from around the world come to see might well be hunted. Some species already are being hunted within park boundaries.

This gives rise to the uncomfortable prospect that visitors who come to view our abundant wildlife will instead witness it being killed, quickly by a hunter's bullet, or slowly in a trapper's snare.

This is bad, bad news for our wildlife, our parks, and our tourism-based economy. The National Park Service’s decision to cede authority over wildlife on inholdings within the park is unjustified, unlawful, unconscionable and it must be challenged.

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Comments

Thanks, Kurt for all you continue to do.


Don't always agree with you Kurt but do always appreciate your efforts on this site.


something like 85% of Americans agree that our government is corrupted by money, 

Yet they reelect their Senators more than 80% of the time and their Congressmen more than 90% of the time.  That kind of makes your 85% number "smelly"


Kurt want an opinion on how to make this site better, get more active participants and have more of an active following... radiate that forum cancer that is ECBuck from your site.  These type of trolls drive away people from being active participants. I'm not saying everyone is perfect, and it should all be 'kumbaya" but this guy trolls the forum to the point where he controls just about every thread and 99% of the time it's done in a way to irritate.  I'm telling you, it's keeping people from wanting to participate here.


"Yet they reelect their Senators more than 80% of the time and their Congressmen more than 90% of the time.  That kind of makes your 85% number "smelly""

That's because they think it's not their representatives who are corrupted, but rather others who are.


Gary, there are many folks who disagree with the views of others on the site, and who take their responses to the extreme. If people don't like EC's point of view, or that of others, then they shouldn't respond to those comments. It's as simple as that.


While we're on the subject of our elected representatives, think of this: Every U.S. Senator and Representative, on average, spends four hours per day on the phone raising money. Do I believe it? I do. Because when I ran for mayor of Seattle, I received the exact same advice. Al, if you don't spend every afternoon on the phone raising money, you might just as well not be in the race.

Why do 85% of our reps get re-elected? Because they have already been elected, is the point. They know the game; they have the contacts. And most important, their names are already recognized by the electorate. Try putting together a campaign from scratch. Donald Trump can do it because he is a billionaire. Alfred Runte thought himself lucky when he got a hundred bucks.

The approval rating of Congress is actually just 10 percent. But who else are you going to vote for? Who else can afford to run remains the point.

Statistics and approval ratings tell only part of the story. Accordingly, I will make this prediction. If Donald Trump gets nominated, all bets are off. Why? Because he doesn't have to call a soul. Going into the election, and if in the White House, he will not have to answer to his contributors. Those fours per day will instead go to policy-making. At least, that is history's fondest hope.

Now, before anyone accuses me of favoring The Donald, remember that a good historian favors no one. But yes, four hours a day is TOO MUCH. It is time that such nonsense end.


Ha! You should get rid of the logical and common sense commenter ecbuck and keep the name caller, belligerent, and delusion Gary. The intolerance and hypocrisies of these lefty progressives is so laughable. Ec is only sane commenter here, you loose him, you loose ALL credibility. That's reality...


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