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Climate Change Documents Removed From National Park Websites

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In a move the National Park Service maintains is only temporary and necessary to make information available to those with disabilities, nearly 100 documents pertaining to climate change in the National Park System have been removed from websites around the system.

The 92 documents were related to the Park Service's Climate Friendly Parks Program and outlined action plans to be implemented to help the parks react to climate change. Among the documents removed were action plans for Glacier National Park, which scientists fear will lose all of its glaciers by 2030, if not sooner; Joshua Tree National Park, where rising temperatures could cause the park to lose all its namesake trees; and Everglades National Park, which is at risk from sea level rise.

The missing documents were reported last week by staff at the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative, a nonprofit organization that tracks federal websites "to trace how data, information, and their presentation change."

In addition to the missing documents, a link from the Park Service's Climate Friendly Parks Program to a page where "National Park Service staff can learn more about how to become a CFP Member and begin the process today on the My Green Parks website" was deactivated.

Previously, EDGI tracked how the Environmental Protection Agency has removed climate change information from some pages of its vast website.

Regarding the missing Park Service documents, EDGI staff also discovered that wording on a Park Service webpage that explained how parks could become involved with the Climate Friendly Parks program was slightly changed:

(1.1b) Changed introduction paragraph in “CFP Member Parks” section from: “The CFP Program features more than 120 member parks from every region across the Service. To read more about what these parks are doing to respond to climate change and move park operations in a more sustainable direction, select the member park below.”

To: “The CFP Program features more than 120 member parks from every region across the National Park Service. Many Climate Action Plans have been developed; a list [sic] parks with available documents is below. If you would like to be emailed a copy of any listed park's action plan, please contact the NPS Sustainable Operations Branch: e-mail us.

The EDGI concluded that while the documents were removed sometime between June 17, 2017, and December 20, 2017, "many of the removals definitively occured in early December 2017."

At the Motherboard website, staff asked the National Park Service about the missing documents and was told:

Under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the National Park Service, like all federal agencies, has a January 18, 2018, deadline to make electronic information and technology accessible to people with disabilities. As part of that process we are updating PDF documents on NPS.gov that are not yet accessible to all, including climate action plans for nearly 100 parks that were listed on a nps.gov webpage. Those non-compliant PDF documents are temporarily unavailable for download while we work to make them compliant with the revised accessibility standards. In the meantime the PDF documents will be provided by email upon request.

Former National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis in 2012 outlined how the agency would strive to reduce its carbon footprint to reduce greenhouse gas emissions associated with climate change.

"One of the commitments we made is to 'Go Green' and reduce our greenhouse gas emissions," Mr. Jarvis wrote in explaining the Green Parks Plan. "This Green Parks Plan outlines how we are going to live up to that commitment, reduce our impact on the environment, mitigate the effects of climate change, and integrate sustainable practices into every aspect of our operations. The Green Parks Plan articulates an overarching vision that will make everything we do more sustainable, from reducing energy and water consumption, to limiting the waste that we generate, to changing what we buy, to altering how we manage facilities."

Under President Trump the administration has been moving away from addressing climate change impacts. In his recent National Security Strategity the president removed mention of climate change as a global threat.

"The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive," President Trump tweeted in early November.

Comments

Ho, Ho, Ho.  I guess if it's not there, then it's not happening, right?  Like the old Dallas tv series, climate change affecting our national parks is all just a dream.  Oh, no, wait a minute.  I forgot, it's all a Chinese conspiracy.


Another win for President Trump! 


The man is nothing but pond scum, and only cares about himself and his rich friends.  The hell with protecting the environment.


We can only hope that diligent patriots in the shadows are keeping all of the scientific documents that the current thought police are trying to disappear, so that the records can be made whole again once this momentary madness passes.


Don't worry, Rick, it won't be hard to make them up again.

Merry Christmas Everyone!


When the EPA themselves say that ANY action we take will have a negligible effect on the climate, we ought to believe them.  Yes, if we don't mention the subject, things might get infinitesemally worse.  If we DO keep yapping on the subject, we might make our lives much more difficult, for nothing.


Elections are not too far in the future.  We need to remember this and act to make changes.  It's time to Make America Sane Again. 


The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese

 

Although this is so obviously and obscenely idiotic, at least the policy of banning words at the CDC seems not to have been true--or has at least been walked back because it, too, was absurd and dangerous.  Tough times for the parks.

 

Happy holidays.


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