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Yurok seek land for a tribal park on the North CoastThe tribe wants the transfer of thousands of acres of public land, and hopes to purchase timber land, to create a site that could include water taxis, gift shops and eco-lodges.
December 26,
2010
FOLLOWED BY: Yurok Tribe pursuing acquisition of Redwood National Park land, Crescent City Triplicate
Steve Chaney, superintendent of Redwood
National Park, walks along the Flint Ridge Trail in a
1,200-acre parcel that the Yurok tribe is hoping to
acquire for a tribal park. (Brian
van der Brug / Los Angeles Times /
December
7,
2010)
Reporting from Redwood National Park
— California's largest tribe has set its sights on
obtaining a 1,200-acre slice of Redwood National
Park, part of an ambitious plan to cobble together a
new tribal park that could add eco-lodges, gift
shops and water taxis into backcountry along the
Klamath River.
The Yurok Tribe envisions that its park would be managed as part of the chain of national and state parks that necklace the Redwood Coast from Mendocino County to the Oregon border, some of the most spectacular and contested landscapes in California. The Yurok have lived along this rugged coast for centuries, although the tribe has lost much of its land base since its reservation was established in 1855. Tribal leaders see their aspirations to gain land as nothing less than essential nation-building, and are seeking congressional approval for the transfer of thousands of acres of public land from the park service, forest service and the Bureau of Land Management. The tribe also wants a boundary expansion.
Although Yurok officials emphasize that
all park projects will adhere to the highest
environmental and cultural standards, they have been
reluctant to provide much detail about how the system
they dub the "Redwood National State and Yurok Tribal
Park" might operate. The current arrangement between the
state and national parks that share some
responsibilities is itself unusual; there is no
precedent for a similar agreement including a tribe.
Among those who want more information is Steve Chaney, superintendent of Redwood National Park. He maintains that it could be difficult to integrate federal and state park management policies with the Yurok's vision, which the tribe has yet to reveal publicly. "At this point, we don't have a huge amount of information to react to, no idea what they plan," Cheney said. Pointing to an office shelf groaning with multi-volume federal land management guidelines, he added, "We've got a litany of things that tell me how resources are managed. Co-management has been talked about a lot but not defined. It's a buzz word." The Yurok reservation's boundaries were reestablished in 1988 through the Hoopa-Yurok Settlement Act and overlap with the national park at the mouth of the Klamath River. The overlap — a slice of foggy coastal land — is what proposed legislation would transfer to the tribe. The transfer was originally included in the 1988 Act but was eventually taken out by senators who called the proposal too controversial. The tribe is asking Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena) to introduce legislation that would transfer 1,200 acres of a woody knob of Redwood Park and 1,200 acres of redwood stands in the Six Rivers National Forest to the tribe. The Yurok are also seeking control of Redding Rock, an offshore sea stack that is part of the California Coastal National Monument. The Yurok's master plan would create a national scenic highway and a national marine sanctuary. But it is the national park land from Redwood that is creating the most concern. For this area, at least, the Yurok are willing to spell out guidelines for their proposed tribal park. The National Park Service transfer lands "will be managed in accordance with NPS policies," said tribal chairman Troy Fletcher. "For land that we purchase ourselves, we will manage as we see fit. Why is it for anyone else to define?" Fletcher, a tireless campaigner for the Yurok, said the tribe's unorthodox gambit to join with the state and national parks is making waves because it's "blurring the lines. We are into cutting-edge stuff. If you read the general management plan for the park, their goal is to manage the land the way it was 150 years ago. Guess who was managing the land 150 years ago." Thompson has not signed off on the wording of the bill, saying in a statement, "The Yurok tribe has been great to work with but there remains more work to do before any legislation will be ready to be introduced." An early draft of the proposed legislation authorized a $50-million allocation to the Yurok to purchase 47,000 acres of commercial timber land. The tribe later withdrew the provision, saying that the appropriation was politically untenable and that the Yurok leadership never signed off on it. But the tribe has other resources to which it can turn. The Yurok's seven-year land-acquisition project is driven by a sophisticated campaign that has yielded million of dollars in loans and grants from federal, state and private sources. The Western Rivers Conservancy is helping the Yurok raise the estimated $73 million required to purchase the timber land. Earlier this month the state water board awarded the tribe an $18.7 million loan to purchase a portion of the timber property. Some ideas of how a tribal park might work were set out by the tribe's well-connected consultant, Destry Jarvis, who had a long park service career. He is the brother of Jon Jarvis, the service's national director. Destry Jarvis' 2005 tribal park plan envisioned an array of possible activities such as water taxis and Yurok-guided trail hikes. The unspoiled Blue Creek watershed is a critical component of the park, according to the plan, and is part of the yet-to-be purchased commercial timber property. Yurok leaders met with the National Park Service's regional director and representatives of conservation groups last week, but those organizations have been surprisingly mum on the topic. The venerable Save the Redwoods League, which was among the groups that waged a 60-year battle to protect the state's big trees, declined to comment on the Yurok's plans. Ron Sundergill, senior director for the National Parks Conservation Assn., a parks advocacy group, said that although he'd like to see more details about the Yurok's vision for a tribal park before the group can endorse the legislation, he is confident of the tribe's direction. "I think their environmental ethic is quite strong," he said. " I'm hopeful that it will be what really drives them." Conservation groups spent decades fighting to preserve the state's redwood forests against unrestrained timber harvesting and successfully campaigned to set aside stands of the tall trees in a swath of state and national parks that follow California's far northern coast. The remote but beloved park lands have an international following. To Janine Blaeloch, director of Western Lands Project, which monitors the privatization of federal land, the moral issue of restitution for tribal lands taken away factors into any decision to give the Yurok the Redwood property. But, she said, "on the other hand, if what you care about is keeping public land public, this takes that away. I don't like to see that muddled. You and I and everyone else gets to have a say in how these lands are managed. "Public lands is an ideal that is under constant attack and constantly has to be defended," she added. "The thing I would worry about is this is the first shoe dropping, and what happens next? It could definitely set a precedent." ============================================================== December 28, 2010 by Anthony Skeens, The Crescent City Triplicate askeens@triplicate.com Yurok Tribe pursuing acquisition of Redwood National Park land The Yurok Tribe is pursuing legislation to acquire a couple thousand acres of national park and forest land within its reservation boundaries.
Yurok officials have
produced a draft legislation to transfer 1,200 acres of
Redwood National Park, 1,400 acres of the Yurok Redwood
Experimental Forest and Redding Rock, near the mouth of
Redwood Creek, to the tribe, said Troy Fletcher, policy
analyst for the Yurok Tribe.
The Redwood Park
acreage runs along the coast, north and south of the mouth
of the Klamath River. It encompasses the Requa Overlook and
Flint Ridge Trail.
“We’re at the concept
stage of things,” said Fletcher. “We need to do more. As the
decision ripens, we’ll be doing that.”
An early draft of the
legislation, published on the Public Employees for
Environmental Responsibility Web site, states there would be
co-management of the land between state and federal agencies
and the tribe. It also states the park land could be renamed
to Redwood National, State and Tribal Parks.
The tribe has been
working closely with Congressman Mike Thompson for several
years to come up with a bill that would transfer the lands,
Fletcher said.
Thompson hasn’t signed
off on a bill yet.
The national park land
that could be acquired would be operated under the same
guidelines as the National Park Service’s, Fletcher said.
The experimental
forest could be developed into a tribal park, which would
allow the tribe to provide resource protection and
interpretation about Yurok culture to the public, he said.
“We hope that it will
potentially provide a backbone for a Yurok tribal complex of
parks,” said Fletcher.
The potential
acquisition is still in the beginning phases and the Tribe
is seeking public input, Fletcher said.
“We certainly would
like everybody to embrace the concepts wholeheartedly,” said
Fletcher. “We understand a lot of people have passionate
feelings when it comes to national forest lands and we
appreciate that.”
There would be no
plans to develop either of the potential properties for
revenue based projects, Fletcher said.
“We’re not looking for
commercial revenue there, which I think, and rightfully so,
people are concerned about,” said Fletcher.
The National Park
Service would only support a simple transfer of lands to the
tribe if it was assured that existing preservation values
were supported, said Steve Chaney, superintendent for the
Redwood National Park.
In addition to the
potential transfer of land management, the Bald Hills Road,
from U.S. Highway 101 to the Klamath River would be turned
into the Yurok National Scenic Byway and a portion of the
Southern Siskiyou Wilderness Area would be renamed the Yurok
Wilderness Area, stated the draft legislation.
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