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Here's Your Window Into the Second Century Commission On National Parks

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Published Date

November 3, 2009

Back in September the National Park Second Century Commission released its recommendations on how best to prepare and manage the National Park System moving forward in the 21st century. With hopes of continuing the discussion, the commission is meeting Wednesday in Tennessee, and you can tune in to listen to some of the conversations.

During a gathering Wednesday and Thursday in Knoxville at the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee, the commission, which was funded by the National Parks Conservation Association, plans to discuss its findings with roughly 100 leaders from around the country. Part of those discussions will be broadcast over the Internet.

"The Second Century Commission has produced an important report on the future of one of America's greatest resources, the national parks," said Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., co-chair of the Second Century Commission. "The Baker Center is honored to be hosting, in partnership with the NCPA, the first conference and public discussion on these recommendations. These guidelines will serve as a basis for moving forward in how we all continue to appreciate, promote and protect these national treasures."

Jon Jarvis, the new director of the National Parks Service, will be speaking at the conference, along with many other members of the commission.

Attendance at the conference is by invitation only. However, the public is invited to view live webcasts from several portions of the conference:

• On Nov. 4, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. (EST), the public can watch Second Century commissioners present their recommendations about park system expansion; natural and cultural resources; education and engagement, and sustainable funding.

• On Nov. 5, at 7 p.m. (EST), Commissioners Denis Galvin, former deputy director, National Park Service, and Dr. Stephen H. Lockhart, chairman of the board of Yosemite National Institutes and medical director of Surgical Services California Pacific Medical Center, will lead public dialogue about how recommendations of the Second Century Commission relate to the parks in our region.

To access the web casts, go to http://tinyurl.com/yfku2r9.

Webcast information and the Second Century Commission reports are available from the Baker Center Web site, http://bakercenter.utk.edu/main/event.php?key=209. The webcasts will be archived on this Web site, too.

The public also is asked to participate in an online survey about the commission recommendations. Find the survey at http://tinyurl.com/yzelu4w. Data from the survey will be collected and stored in a database at UT Knoxville.

The Second Century Commission established committees to study various aspects of the National Parks: education and interpretation; science and national resources; cultural resources and heritage preservation; future shape of the national park system; funding and budget; and visitation and public engagement. The commission's report was assembled through five meetings at National Parks across the country, the work of these committees, public testimony and extensive public comment.

For more about the Second Century Commission, see http://www.visionfortheparks.org.

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Comments

The second century of the National Park System almost certainly be far more challenging than the last. Both as a nation and a planet we will confront the full brunt of climate change, energy resources limits, an economy that must transition from one of exponential growth to one of sustainability and the likelihood of less per capita disposal income. The management of the national parks will have to make major adjustments to adapt to the realities and demands of a much different world.


Editor's note: The following comment is, we believe, associated with news reports about computer hackers who targeted some prominent climate-change scientists, and what the resulting documents alluded to.

"Both as a nation and a planet we will confront the full brunt of climate change..."

Right.

ClimateGate has broken.

Michael Mann discusses how to destroy a journal that has published skeptic papers.(1047388489)

Tim Osborn discusses how data are truncated to stop an apparent cooling trend showing up in the results (0939154709).

Phil Jones describes the death of skeptic, John Daly, as “cheering news”.

Phil Jones encourages colleagues to delete information subject to FoI [Freedom of Information Act] request.(1212063122)

Phil Jones says he has use Mann’s “Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series”…to hide the decline”.

Mann tells Jones that it would be nice to ‘”contain” the putative Medieval Warm Period’. (1054736277)

A lot more from this source.

Read the hacked email from these charlatans.

"This is not a smoking gun; this is a mushroom cloud."


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