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How Would A Second Trump Presidency Affect The National Park Service And Parks?

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Though the U.S. presidential election is eight months away, those desiring a more conservative approach to government already have laid out plans they'd like to see implemented if Donald Trump wins, and many would affect the National Park System and wildlife within the system.

Now is the time to be planning for a transition to a more conservative government, say the authors of Project 2025, Presidential Transition Project, because waiting until inauguaration day is too late.

"To execute requires a well-conceived, coordinated, unified plan and a trained and committed cadre of personnel to implement it," they wrote. "The federal government’s complexity and growth advance at a seemingly logarithmic rate every four years. For conservatives to have a fighting chance to take on the Administrative State and reform our federal government, the work must start now. The entirety of this effort is to support the next conservative President, whoever he or she may be."

Under the blueprint, the authors — Paul Dans, former chief of staff at the Office of Personnel Management during the Trump administration; Spencer Chretien, former special assistant to President Trump; and Troup Hemenway, all members of The Heritage Foundation — would like to see "the radical environmental agenda" that they say started with President Jimmy Carter and continued under Presidents Clinton, Obama, and now Joe Biden rolled back. President Trump worked to reverse that agenda, they claimed.

"Thus, whether the statutory mandate was to promote economic activity, to ensure and expand recreational opportunities, or to protect valuable natural resources, including, for example, parks, wilderness areas, national monuments, and wild and scenic areas, efforts were expended, barriers were removed, and career employees were aided in the accomplishment of those missions" under Trump's presidency, reads a section of the introduction to Project 2025's chapter 16, which focuses on the Interior Department.

"Unfortunately, Biden’s [Department of Interior] is at war with the department’s mission, not only when it comes to DOI’s obligation to develop the vast oil and gas and coal resources for which it is responsible, but also as to its statutory mandate, for example, to manage much of federal land overseen by the BLM pursuant to 'multiple use' and 'sustained yield' principles," the section continues. "Instead, Biden’s DOI believes most BLM land should be placed off-limits to all economic and most recreational uses. Worse yet, Biden’s DOI not only refuses to adhere to the statutes enacted by Congress as to how the lands under its jurisdiction are managed, but it also insists on implementing a vast regulatory regime (for which Congress has not granted authority) and overturning, by unilateral regulatory action, congressional acts that set forth the productive economic uses permitted on DOI-managed federal land."

The chapter calls for the next conservative president to:

  • Remove the 10-mile buffer that blocks oil and gas development around Chaco Cultural Historic National Park in New Mexico for 20 years;
  • Reinstate President Trump's rules pertaining to the Endangered Species Act definitions for Critical Habitat and Critical Habitat Exclusions;
  • Reinstate President Trump's rules pertaining to the Migratory Bird Act;
  • Revoke National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rules regarding predator control and bear baiting, "which are matters for state regulation";
  • "Recognize Alaska’s authority to manage fish and game on all federal lands in accordance with ANILCA as during the Reagan Administration, when each DOI agency in Alaska signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game ceding to the state the lead on fish and wildlife management matters";
  • Review and downsize national monuments;
  • "[S]eek repeal of the Antiquities Act of 1906, which permitted emergency action by a president long before the statutory authority existed for the protection of special federal lands, such as those with wild and scenic rivers, endangered specials, or other unique places";
  • Reform the National Environmental Policy Act and "reinstate the secretarial orders adopted by the Trump administration, such as placing time and page limits on NEPA documents and setting forth—on page one—the costs of the document itself. Meanwhile, the new administration should call upon Congress to reform NEPA to meet its original goal. Consideration should be given, for example, to eliminating judicial review of the adequacy of NEPA documents or the rectitude of NEPA decisions";
  • Push meaningful reform of the Endangered Species Act, which "requires that Congress take action to restore its original purpose and end its use to seize private property, prevent economic development, and interfere with the rights of states over their wildlife populations";
  • Delist the grizzly bear in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems;
  • Delist the gray wolf in the lower 48 states;
  • Direct the Fish and Wildlife Service to "end its abuse of Section 10( j) of the ESA by re-introducing so-called 'experiment species' populations into areas that no longer qualify as habitat and lie outside the historic ranges of those species"; and,
  • Direct the Fish and Wildlife Service to: "(1) design and implement an Endangered Species Act program that ensures independent decision-making by ending reliance on so-called species specialists who have obvious self-interest, ideological bias, and land-use agendas."

Comments

The drag shows and Political takeover of the nps has occurred under bidens reign. 

it will take years to undo 

biden literally changed the nps mission statement

get back to preserving and protecting public lands. No more "telling stories" that are political...


If enough Americans are stupid enough to vote for donald and he manages to slither back into the White House, it won't be just our parks and forests that suffer. 


What is truly unsustainable is the way the the National Parks have been funded since their inception.  We need another model.  While this article would seem to trigger a tidal wave of Trump Derangment Syndrome, let us not forget which administration brought about the Great American Outdoors Act in an effort to maintain what we've got.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIDxCbwKdQk&list=LL&index=79

 

https://www.nps.gov/subjects/legal/great-american-outdoors-act.htm


Well Kurt, that's quite a provocative piece!  I applaud you for posing the question.

 

As far as the basis for this piece--the proposal from former gov't employees--it is unlikely that Trump or most anyone else has noticed the proposal, let alone plan to adopt it.  So, while it's a good place to start this conversation, it is unlikely to ever get implemented let alone noticed.

As far as the DOI/NPS is concerned, the problems are so engrained and institutionalized that a change in presidents is highly unlikely to result in signifiicant changes over 4 years. 

The ONLY hope we have to reform the NPS is for Trump and a Republican House & Senate  to REPLACE the NPS with a new federal agency--US Parks & Rec (USP&R), with the following:

--end any civil service protections for USP&R employees

--have clearly defined employee promotion policies

--have the head of the USP&R to be a presidential appointee

--return controversial or special-interest focused parks to the state or locality

--prioritize the 10-20 most popular parks, and fully fund maintainance of them, but no more improvements

--in addition to staff scientists, employ appointed scientists at the discretion of the president 

--have presidential oversight and regulation of rec.gov

Those are just off the top of my head.

NONE of the needed reforms of the DOI/NPS will occur under Biden or the Dems.  The fact that a political hack who checked the right box is heading the DOI is proof that serious efforts at reform will not occur under the present regime.


 

True That! 

.


Doesn't matter who's at the helm of the Titanic; it's still gonna crash and sink.

What's the NPS "maintenance" backlog up to now? Did it go down under Obama or Biden?

What's the national debt now? 35 trillion? How many billions are the feds borrowing and spending everyday?

There ain't a lick of difference between the Democrat and Republican parties, 'cept how they want to use the power of the state to control us. Politicians don't give a rat's patootie about national parks, unless it's to create a park in their home district just to help them get reelected, thereby maintaining their power over us plebes. 

So talkin' 'bout how Trump will affect national parks is just polishing the brass on the Titanic. Time to wake up!


Thanks for this, Kurt.

I was working on land conservation and other environmental issues during the Reagan administration in the 1980s. I remember his anti-environmental appointees such as James Watt, Anne Gorsuch, and John Crowell. They did incredible damage to their agencies and to the earth.

If Trump gets elected it will be far worse. As Kurt's op-ed discusses, we will see a radical dismantling or undermining of environmental protection laws and regulations.

Trump started to do it in his four years in office, but he did not know enough about the levers of government and some people in the agencies had the integrity to resist these efforts. Even so, the Biden administration is still working to undo the damage.

Trump has already told us what he will do if he is elected in 2024. Among other things, he intends to be a "dictator" on day one (and no doubt every day after that) and "drill drill drill."

Anyone who thinks this would be anything but a total disaster for the environment of the U.S. and the planet is not paying attention or incredibly naive. The problems we how have with the NPS and other federal land management programs will seem insignificant in comparison.


Hi Michael, like my good friend Bob Marley said, don't worry! All that gloom and doom you're spreading is probably not going to happen. Maybe kick back, relax, and spark one, bro. We're only here for a short time, and you're dark, man! Enjoy life! Get outside! :)


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