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Cumberland Island
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31
Dec 04
We
Citizens lose, Congress votes to destroy the Cumberland Island
Wilderness Click
here
Cumberland Island
Development - Undesignating the
existing Wilderness, allowing motorized corridors opening up vast areas to development...
Earlier this year you received information on the Cumberland Island National
Seashore Wilderness Boundary Act of 2003 (S. 1462), a bill sponsored by Georgia
Senators Saxby Chambliss (R) and Zell Miller (D) that will split this already
small Wilderness area in two by removing the existing Wilderness protection from
large corridors for vehicular access, and establishing motorized concession
tours.
In 1972 Cumberland Island was set aside as a National Seashore to "be
permanently preserved in its primitive state." Ten years later, the northern
half of the island was designated as Wilderness or potential Wilderness. Now, on
the eve of the 40th anniversary of The Wilderness Act, S. 1462 and companion
legislation introduced by Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA) are poised for congressional
action; either as a stand-alone bill or as a rider on an Omnibus package.
Take Action >> This bill is currently being discussed in the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee - which your senator is a member. It is very
important that they hear from you! In fact, many members and staff may be
visiting this park on a congressional trip in the coming weeks and your letters
will help provide them with important information to prepare them for the trip.
Please
Click here to
Take Action and learn more about this
important issue and write your senator today. Another
website to also Take
Action: Tell Congress not to gut Cumberland Island Wilderness!
Thank you for your continued dedication to protecting the wild places at
Cumberland Island and throughout the national park system.
Thank you for your time and dedication to helping enhance and protect our
national parks for present and future generations,
NPCA Grassroots Staff
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* National Park Lines is a publication of the National Parks Conservation
Association's Park Action Network. To learn how you and your friends can become
more involved in national park advocacy, contact our grassroots staff at
takeaction@npca.org
Visit us online at http://www.npca.org.
___________________**_________________
15 Aug 04
The Road to Wilderness
Destruction
Cumberland Island, an unspoiled beach of white sands stretches 17 miles along
its eastern shore, giving way to rows of sand dunes, uplands of saw palmetto,
forests of yellow pine and live oak, and flats of salt marsh and tidal creeks.
Cumberland's 40,000 acres provide habitat for over 300 bird species, American
alligators, and one of the largest nesting populations of loggerhead sea turtles
along the Georgia coast.
In 1982, Congress designated the northern half of the island as Wilderness with
a goal of phasing out activities that were antithetical to wilderness. As a
result of this foresight, today, more than 50,000 people annually visit
Cumberland Island and are able to enjoy a splendid wilderness experience.
Now, on the eve of the 40th anniversary of The Wilderness Act this September,
Georgia Senators Saxby Chambliss (R) and Zell Miller (D), along with Rep. Jack
Kingston (R-GA) have introduced legislation that will split this already small
Wilderness area in two by removing the existing Wilderness protection from large
corridors for vehicular access, and establishing motorized concession tours. By
de-designating roads from Wilderness protection, the bill would violate one of
the most central criteria in the Wilderness Act by segmenting the existing
wilderness area into smaller, disconnected fragments incapable of providing the
isolation and solitude that are the very reason for wilderness.
Currently, only a handful of island residents with valid access rights are
legally allowed to drive the primitive roads through the wilderness and
potential wilderness areas, and all development is prohibited. The proposed bill
eliminates these protections, and opens the wilderness, in perpetuity, to
government vehicles, commercial concession tours, and non-conforming uses.
The bill will de-designate hundreds of acres of wilderness. The Wilderness Act
was a uniquely non-partisan law that passed both houses by near unanimous
consent. In it, Congress declared a public policy of preserving an "enduring
resource of wilderness," a resource that was for "the permanent good of the
whole people." The bill sponsors should not be allowed to blatantly disregard
this goal. This bill will split this already small Wilderness area in two,
having impacts that will reach far beyond the Wilderness area on Cumberland
drawing into question the nation's commitment to the permanency of the National
Wilderness Preservation System.
Write your Senators and Representative today to urge them to oppose the
Cumberland Island National Seashore Wilderness Boundary Act of 2003 - S. 1462 in
the senate and H.R. 4887 in the house. Go to
www.fofgroup.org, click on ‘issues’, then Cumberland Island . This bill
will undermine more than 30 years of public and private efforts to preserve
Cumberland in a primitive state. Congress should soundly reject it.
Richard
Rothrock, Fernandina Beach
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