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March
29, 2000
Yosemite:
Embrace the Sublime
Source: Los Angeles Times
Yosemite
Valley may be the most wondrous natural feature in a nation blessed
by nature's bounty, but there are times when heavy traffic and jammed
parking lots seem to overpower the grandeur. Secretary of the Interior
Bruce Babbitt had it just right on Monday when he declared: "We
must restore a semblance of nature to this most sublime place in
our country."
Now
the debate begins. Babbitt's unveiling of a draft plan to reduce
auto congestion and development in the valley, the one-mile-wide
by seven-mile-long heart of Yosemite National Park, launches an
intense series of 18 public hearings fro now until mid-June. Federal
officials will revise the draft as necessary after collecting public
reaction. The plan currently calls for a two-thirds reduction in
parking spaces, fewer lodging rooms and employee housing and restoration
of 180 acres of meadows and wetlands.
The
most contentious effort is the restriction of day-use auto traffic
by cutting back parking and urging visitors to take shuttle buses
into the valley. Will such a transit plan catch on with visitors
accustomed to scooting from spot to spot in their own cars? Incentives
may be needed - a reduction in the entrance fee, perhaps - to entice
them onto the shuttles, at least in the beginning.
There
are already familiar protests on both sides of the issue. We hear
the same arguments that have deadlocked efforts to return the valley
to a more natural state for two decades. Some environmental groups
still want private vehicles banned from the valley altogether. Area
tourist interests fear the restrictions are too harsh and will scare
away business.
There
is no perfect balance between the Park Service's mandate to protect
the nation's natural places and the public's right to enjoy them.
This draft plan at least strikes a fair balance, and there will
be opportunities for fine-tuning in the years that implementation
will take.
There
is no gain in fighting over the last parking slot or whether the
pizza joint should go or stay. The point is to make it possible
for visitors to revel in the first morning light splashing El Capitan
and the alpen-glow gracing the sheer face of Half Dome, to hear
the quiet rippling of the Merced River to marvel at the dancing
veil of Yosemite Falls and the breeze caressing the pines and dogwood
- to do so without omnipresent traffic noise and in relative peace.
The proposed changes woiuld not restrict Yosemite to some select,
wilderness-appreciating few, but they would help make its sublime
beauty once again available to all.
To
take action: Hearings on the draft plan will take place in Costa
mesa June 5, Los Angeles June 6 and San Diego June 8. Locations
and times are available at www.nps.gov/yose/planning/yvp.htm
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