NPS accused of pandering, harasssment
10/2002
Wrangell St.
Elias News
Slana, Alaska—When over 70 people show for a public meeting, you know
something important is being discussed. After all, Slana’s population
numbers only about two dozen.
Actually, people from Tok, Slana, Glennallen, Chistochina, Copper
Center, Gakona, Mentasta, Dot Lake, and Eagle River gathered in this
tiny Alaskan community to talk with representatives of the National
Park Service (NPS) about a subject that is very important to them—access.
The NPS had announced that several ATV trails in the area were causing
ecological damage to the parklands, and they were considering closing
these trails. Trail users said the trails had been used for years,
long before the area became a national park, so instead of closing
them, how about we just fix them up a bit?
Some, including former State Legislator Dick Shultz, saw the trail
closures as a direct attack on local resident and businessman Doug
Frederick. In a letter to Representative Don Young, Shultz wrote,
“During my ten years in the Alaska Legislature, I encountered many
frustrating and belligerent actions by both State and the Federal
Administrators, but none can compare to the recent actions by the
National Park Service in eliminating a longstanding business on the
Nabesna Road in Wrangell St. Elias Park.”
Shultz was talking about the Sportsman’s Paradise Lodge, built in
the late 1960's by Doug’s parents, Dick and Lucille Frederick. Although
the lodge access is by the Nabesna Road, they also have property at
Copper Lake, where, for decades, they have been taking fishermen.
Originally the Fredericks used a small Super Cub airstrip, until the
NPS disallowed maintenance on the strip. With that closure, came a
need for increased traffic on the traditional overland route by ATV.
Now, the NPS has not only closed that route, the only access to the
Frederick property, but has expanded the closed zone to 1,000 feet
either side of the trail, effectively eliminating access to the lodge
property.
“I have a caretaker over there and need to get supplies to him,” said
Frederick. “They told me if I tried to use the trail they would cite
me.”
Shultz pulled no punches in his letter to Young. “I have lived in
this area long before Park Status...I have watched promise after promise
be broken to the local users of fish and wildlife, and now this absolutely
high-handed, devastating news to the Fredericks,” he wrote.
“All of you in our Congressional delegation know the frustrations
of dealing with everchanging policies and managers who could care
less about the impacts to rural Alaskans and their livelihoods. Their
ultimate mission is elimination of all traditional uses including
subsistence,” Shultz continued. “In this particular case I have personally
flown over the trail in question. I can assure you the impact to the
environment is far less than that of a herd of caribou such as the
Mulchatna.”
Beside Shultz, Frederick has been talking to Senator Frank Murkowski.
Murkowski has a history of helping small businesses in the park when
the NPS gets heavy-handed with them. Several years ago, he came to
the aid of McCarthy’s two private campground owners when the NPS opened
a free campground across the road from one of the fee units. Right
after the senator’s aide paid a visit, the NPS discovered their campground
had a “bear route” through it, and would need to be closed—coincidentally
during the dates the commercial campgrounds were open.
Although many people at the Slana meeting testified against the trail
closures, and no one spoke in favor of them, it seemed to have little
effect on the outcome. According to those present, anger and dismay
grew more evident as the evening progressed. Most people called for
increased access into the Park, not less, lamenting that in the 13
million acre park there is very little road access. Many accused the
NPS of pandering to outside interests instead of listening to the
local subsistence users.
Frederick and Shultz tried to partnership with the NPS. They proposed
that the NPS provide materials to stabilize some of the trails, and
that locals would volunteer their time for the improvements. Sorry,
said Chief Ranger Hunter Sharp, no money in the budget for that sort
of thing.
Last week, Frederick received an email message from some friends who
had come to visit him, but found he was not at home. “We were stopped
by 2 rangers in bullet proof vests and assault guns, and harassed
for a long time,” said the friends. “They were pretty rude...I wish
there was something we could do about this.”
We tried to contact Ranger Sharp, but our request for information
has gone unanswered for two weeks now.