Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum"What I Witnessed At The Park Was Chaos And Destruction" - Shitstain's 2019 NPS Shutdown Revealed
By the time superintendent David Smith decided to close Joshua Tree national park on 7 January 2019, the list of problems was already long. Tire tracks wove through the wilderness mapping a path of destruction where rare plants had been crushed and trees toppled. Charred remains of illegal campfires dotted the desert, and historic cultural artifacts had been plundered. Trash piles were growing, vault toilets were overflowing and park security workers were being pushed to their limits.
It was week three in what would become the longest shutdown of the US government, and the famed California park was feeling the consequences of operating without key staff, services and resources. To protect the park and its workers, it would have to close, Smith thought. But the Trump administration, which demanded national parks remain accessible throughout the shutdown, wasnt willing to change course. In a controversial move, David Bernhardt, who had only recently been appointed acting secretary of the interior, called Smith and ordered him to keep the gates open.
By the end of the 35-day shutdown, irreversible damage had been inflicted on Joshua Trees ecosystems, its wild, remote landscapes thrust into the political turmoil unfolding thousands of miles away. Bernhardts decision and its aftermath are chronicled in hundreds of pages of emails between park officials, which the Guardian obtained through a records request. The correspondence sheds light on the pressure national parks faced during the shutdown, as well as how political considerations influenced decisions about their maintenance and protection.
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The holidays were peak visiting times for the California site. With just nine working staff members, a disaster seemed imminent, he warned. Already, he reported, two search-and-rescue operations had been needed the week before, both requiring helicopters because the park hadnt been able to adequately respond. Staff had told him that visitors were resisting direction, telling law enforcement rangers they could do whatever they wanted during the shutdown. Staff members were increasingly concerned about their own safety, especially as incidents of intoxication and physical assaults in the park began to rise. Staff who worked at Joshua Tree national park at the time said the experience was among the most difficult in their careers. What I witnessed at the park was chaos and destruction, said one park employee who, like others quoted in this story, asked to remain anonymous out of fear of retribution for speaking out.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/sep/28/trump-david-bernhardt-joshua-tree-government-shutdown-national-parks
LiberalFighter
(50,943 posts)Should be locked up. Too many get away with it.
Grins
(7,218 posts)hatrack
(59,587 posts).