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National parks podcasts

How might the 2020 presidential election impact the National Park Service? Former National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis, Kristen Brengel, senior vice president of government affairs for the National Parks Conservation Association, and Phil Francis, chair of the Coalition to Protect America’s National Parks, discuss that question.

:02 National Parks Traveler introduction
:12 Episode introduction with Kurt Repanshek
1:58 A round table discussion of the presidential election and its possible impacts on national parks with Jon Jarvis, Phil Francis, and Kristen Brengel.
24:16 Amaranth - Bill Mize - The Sounds of the Great Smoky Mountains
24:33 National Parks Traveler promotion
24:47 Western National Parks Association promotion
25:15 Wild Tribute promotion
25:43 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation promotion
26:06 Washington’s National Park Fund promotion 
26:41 Grand Teton National Park Foundation promotion
27:13 Friends of Acadia promotion
27:40 North Cascades Institute promotion
28:02 The round table discussion with Jon Jarvis, Phil Francis, and Kristen Brengel resumes.
48:16 Long Pond - Nature’s Symphony - The Sounds of Acadia
49:03 Episode Closing
49:21 Orange Tree Productions promotion
49:58 Splitbeard Productions
50:10 National Parks Traveler footer    

 

Comments

Your guests are not knowledeable on why the GAOA was enacted. It was ONLY because Corey Gardner convinced Mitch McConnel that he needed something positive to use in his reelection campaign. If your guests were in Colorado, as I am, they would understand how inundated we have been with Gardner claiming he supported the parks by getting the GAOA passed while his previous 5 years in the Senate and 4 years in the House he did NOTHING to support the parks.

Garner's hypocrasy was was seen last Friday. After nearly 30,000 acres of Rocky Mountain National Park had been burned by the East Troublesome and Cameron Peak Fires Colorado's Senator Michael Bennett and Representative Joe Neguse met with RMNP's superintendent, the leadership of Estes Park and the fire districts around RMNP who have been fighting the fire -- but NO Corey Gardiner. 

I find it unlikely that the OMB will release anything about the GAOA projects as it won't help the current administration's reelection efforts. 

You need to have guests from outside the beltway who can represenot what is happening outside the beltway. You should contact the Rocky Mountain Conservancy to get an accurate appraisal of what is happening in RMNP not those in the beltway who have no idea.

Thanks for hearing me out.


Interesting podcast.  While I respect your guests they have no clue on the current efforts underway in the NPS (and that have been underway in the NPS for the past several years) to keep the mission moving forward.  The NPS is alive and well -- just a matter of where you want to look.  The NPS EVS scores were not great under either of these NPS leaders who were on this podcast. 

The election is over and there will be better days ahead -- these former career folks on this podcast should remember that their hyperpartisan rhetoric and leanings is detrimental to the career people left behind.  Think about it - not everyone in the agency is a hyperpartisan and because career folks like this appear to be -- all NPS staff get painted with the same broad brush.   Pragmatism over purity is where real change happens in government -- and where career staff make the difference. 

There are plenty of NPS staff and partners who have kep the fire burning over the past few years - maybe these folks don't know how to find them.     

 

 


This podcast is like listening to Statler and Waldorf in the balcony of the Muppets show.  Maybe these guys should listen to what some of President Elect Biden's messages have been about coming together.  Thinking everything is some dark conspiracy makes this no better than right wing propaganda.  Dan Wenk being taken out was a sign of things to come?  Give me a break.  Can we stop with the martyrdom! Wenk left a disaster of a housing program at the park and everyone knows it.  Thank goodness that mess and embarrasment is being addressed with the current replacement of employee housing.      

I am glad there will be change.  But if we think a career NPS employee will bring about the change needed as a Director - we are in for a big surprise. We need non-agency centric perspectives to be mixed in with the career folks.  It is a winning combination that works elsewhere in the government. 


National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 321 | National Park Science At Risk

There has been much upheaval in the National Park Service this year, with firings, then rehires, and staff deciding to retire now rather than risk sticking around and being fired. There have been fears that more Park Service personnel are about to be let go through a reduction in force.

While Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has ordered the Park Service to ensure that parks are properly to support the operating hours and needs of each park unit,” that message said nothing about protecting park resources.

April 20th, 2025 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 320 | George Wright Society

George Melendez Wright was a brilliant young scientist with the National Park Service back in the 1920s and 1930s. You could say he was ahead of his time, in that he wanted the Park Service to take a holistic role in how wildlife in the parks was managed.

April 6th, 2025 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 319 | Kilauea's Unrest

One of the greatest shows on Earth has been going on now for several months in Hawaii, where the Kīlauea volcano at Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park has been erupting since late December. The Kīlauea volcano is the most active volcano on Earth.

March 30th, 2025 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 318 | Covering the Parks

There are more stories to be found in the National Park System than one could write in a lifetime. Or several lifetimes.

Sometimes those stories can be hard to spot. How many were aware of the factoid from Great Smoky Mountains National Park that Jennifer Bain dug up, that if you stacked up all of the park’s salamanders against its roughly 1,900 black bears, the salamanders would weigh more?

Talk about national park trivia.

March 23rd, 2025 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 317 | A Little Volcanic Levity

In this week’s podcast we thought we’d take a break from the unsettling news happening in and around our national parks and federal lands regarding park staff reductions and threats of reducing park boundaries to make way for mining.  

March 16th, 2025 Read More

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