Paying To Play
Privatization of America's public lands is 'common sense' environmentalism for the Bush Administration
05.31.05
PART 1
"...the Bush plan sell[ing] off hundreds of U.S. Forest Service buildings and acres of land under the guise of shoring
up the agency's sinking budget] represents a massive change in our American notion of public lands, including our
impressive national forests. They were acquired and are held by the government in public trust, supposed to be protected
in perpetuity and passed in good health across the generations."
--Editorial, Albuquerque Tribune, May 3, 2005
In an era where the Bush Administration characterizes its environmental agenda as "common sense" environmentalism, a
slew of front-burner issues including global warming, drilling for oil in the Artic, new legislation aimed at lifting
the ban on offshore oil and gas drilling in the U.S., and increasing threats to the water we drink and air we breathe
got little or no attention during last month's Earth Day celebrations.
One issue that many don't see as necessarily an environmental issue, and that rarely gets enough attention, is the
growing trend toward privatizing America's public lands. Privatization is one of the most "insidious and
all-encompassing developments" that will ultimately force Americans to "pay to play," at recreation areas all across the
country, says Scott Silver, the Executive Director of Wild Wilderness, a Central Oregon-based environmental
organization.
The issue of privatization reared its head in an unlikely manner recently when, in addition to the usual requirements
being sought -- expertise in dealing with budgetary matters, and an ability to organize and set work priorities -- a new
one was tucked into a job posting for a new director of tourism for the National Park Service. The new requirement,
suggesting that the candidate be able to "create, nurture, and expand tourism programs that promote private sector
support," had "environmentalists worrying about creeping commercialization and added strain on already overburdened
parks," the Boston Globe recently reported.
"It smacks of heavy corporate involvement," Jeff Ruch, director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility,
told the Globe. "Marketing tactics could influence policy and lead to promiscuous partnering. That would allow wholesale
commercialization and 'Disney-fy' our national parks." In addition, Ruch pointed out, "With cutbacks in staff and
maintenance, you have to question why they want to invest in increasing visitation."
"The goal remains to give guests a good experience in national parks," acting tourism director Edie Sean-Hammond said.
"My successor will have to look at appropriate visitation -- in some parks there are places that have reached capacity
and how to deal with that."
Wild Wilderness' Scott Silver is an old-school activist who got involved with environmental issues by being on the front
lines of the fight to preserve free access to America's public lands. For more than a decade, Silver has been has been
combating, monitoring and tracking the growth, lobbying expertise, and political influence of the recreation industry.
In a two-part interview with Silver, I had the opportunity to discuss a wide range of environmental issues including how
his small organization got started and what it means to be a grassroots-based environmental group.
In Part 2, Silver talks about how privatization is changing America's public lands and the Bush Administration's
environmental agenda.
Bill Berkowitz: Tell me how you got involved in environmental activism.
Scott Silver: I gave up a career in science and moved to Central Oregon in the late 1980s. I'd always dreamed of someday living in a
small community in the Pacific Northwest, since wilderness travel and backcountry skiing were my passions.
Central Oregon has long attracted a great deal of tourism and recreational use, though back in the 1980s the nearby
Three Sisters Wilderness offered plenty of opportunities to get close to nature. During the summer months the wilderness
could get a bit crowded, but in winter, the experiences available to backcountry skiers were incomparable and solitude
was all but assured.
My introduction to environmental activism began in 1990 when the local US Forest Service was entertaining two proposals
that would have permitted commercial yurt-to-yurt ski touring within, and adjacent to, the Three Sisters Wilderness. I
was concerned that the wilderness would be filled with paying tourists and, to put it bluntly, I didn't take kindly to
the idea of finding a yurt village in my own favorite ski bowl.
BB: How did that battle develop?
SS: My best friend and frequent skiing partner, Dale Neubauer, set out to block these yurt-to-yurt proposals and we spent
months learning about forest planning by studying the Wilderness Act. We came to the conclusion that these proposals
were illegal so we began attending Forest Service meetings, referring to ourselves as "a couple of guys who appreciated
the value of wilderness."
While circulating a petition asking that the Three Sisters be protected, we decided that we needed a name and chose
"Wild Wilderness." Our mission would be to represent those in our local community who sought naturalness, solitude,
challenge and inspiration in their outdoor recreational experiences.
BB: How did the mission of Wild Wilderness change?
SS: We won that yurt-to-yurt battle and went on to tackle the issue of snowmobiling. Each season the machines got more
powerful, more noisy, more numerous and consumed more of the winter wild, so we found ourselves in competition with a
growing number of non-motorized winter recreation groups who were looking to expand their own trail systems into those
blank spots on the map used by our supporters. Over time we became champions of "undeveloped recreation" and fought a
growing number of proposals to commercialize, privatize and motorize recreational opportunities on our surrounding
public lands.
In 1997, Dale and I stopped by a local Forest Service office to pick up a pair of newly required recreational passes.
The year before, Congress authorized the "Recreation Fee Demonstration Program" which permitted land managers to charge
for access to, and use of, federally managed lands. We hadn't thought much about this program but we left their office
with a flyer that, quite literally, changed our lives and began the transformation of Wild Wilderness from a local
recreation group to what has evolved into America's most visible and vocal opponent of the corporate takeover of nature
and the Disneyfication of the Wild. That Fee-Demo program was the creation of commercial and motorized recreation
interests whose interest were 180 degrees different from ours.
BB: You have a lot of information on your Web site; when did you set it up and what were your plans for it?
SS: I was fortunate to have a good friend who taught web-design at the local community college and he suggested that Wild
Wilderness needed a web site so that people outside of Central Oregon could learn about these issues. With his help, I
built the site in the late 90s and it quickly grew so large that it became difficult to keep properly updated. Today, we
have an active e-mail network and we use that venue to keep our supporters, now in all 50 states, current on these
issues.
BB: Does Wild Wilderness lobby, demonstrate, call to action, etc. on environmental issues? Is it a membership organization?
SS: In January 1999, Wild Wilderness incorporated as a 501(c) (3) tax-exempt, non-membership, non-profit organization. We
organized national days of action in 1998 and 1999 that each involved dozens of protests in 10 or more states.
Incorporating was needed, primarily, to provide legal protection and insulation for Dale and myself. When the Walt
Disney Company threatened to sue Wild Wilderness in August of 1999, I was glad that their threats were directed at a
legal corporation and not at me personally. Ironically, we were able to parlay the threat by Disney into media coverage
in such disparate venues as the Earth First! Journal and Forbes magazine.
BB: Where does your funding come from?
SS: For all intents and purposes, we have no funding and do not waste any energy or resources doing fundraising. Wild
Wilderness operates with a budget of less than $5,000 a years and all the work, including my own full-time efforts as
Executive Director, is done on a volunteer basis. Over the years we've received small grants from Ben and Jerry's, Fund
for Wild Nature and Patagonia as well as unsolicited contributions from individuals who support what we are doing.
BB: Where would you place Wild Wilderness in the constellation of other environmental organizations -- smaller and larger
groups?
SS: We like to think of ourselves as perhaps the leanest, meanest and most influential small environmental organization in
the country. Ten years ago we were indistinguishable from thousands of local advocacy groups each fighting to protect
local areas from specific threats. Over the years, Wild Wilderness became synonymous with a fight to protect the
wildness from industrial tourism and motorized "wreckreation."
PART 2
"The Bush administration, in one of its biggest decisions on environmental issues, moved [on May 5]... to open up nearly
a third of all remote national forest lands to road building, logging and other commercial ventures."
-- Associated Press, May 5, 2005
"The National Park Service is now considering contracting out the entire operations of three national parks, according
to a memo from NPS Director Fran Mainella released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER)."
-- PEER Press Release, May 10, 2005
This is the second part of my interview with Scott Silver, the Executive Director of Wild Wilderness, a Oregon-based
grassroots environmental organization. Silver talks about public-private partnerships, the Disneyfication of our public
lands and the Bush Administration's agenda for the environment.
Bill Berkowitz: Things are changing at a rapid pace on America's public lands. What do you see as the biggest issues facing the public
these days?
Scott Silver: Twenty or thirty years ago outdoor recreation upon public lands was almost invariably low key, generally primitive and
never thought of as a money-making proposition by federal land managers. Outdoor recreation was considered a birthright
and a common good, available to all. People who hiked, fished, hunted, rode horses, camped and enjoyed other traditional
recreational activities, more often than not, were engaged in what we've called "undeveloped recreation," and because
those activities were undeveloped, the costs associated with providing those recreational opportunities were low.
Twenty years ago, the Reagan Administration and the recreation industry developed a new vision of outdoor recreation in
the great outdoors. Reagan's President's Commission on Americans Outdoors in 1987 set federal land recreation on an
entirely new path, one that would lead to the development of recreation into commodities -- goods and services that
should be marketed and sold to paying customers. The early battle Wild Wilderness fought to prevent hut-to-hut skiing in
our local Wilderness was emblematic of countless battles that are now being fought every day in all parts of the nation.
BB: In this era of shrinking budgets, why isn't the concept of public-private partnerships a good idea?
SS: Budgets are not shrinking, they are being shrunk. In 1982, President Reagan first tried to change federal laws so as to
permit the charging of fees for outdoor recreation. He directly linked that new fee authority to an immediate and
dramatic cut in the budgets for the National Park Service and other land management agencies. The intent was to de-fund
these agencies and force them to not only become self-funding, but to broadly embrace privatization.
User-fees were only one of the privatization tools that Reagan introduced. Partnerships, increased dependence upon
volunteers, outsourcing, reductions of services, and contracting out were additional tools.
Public-private partnerships need not be a bad thing and can, with the right partners and the right mission, be
beneficial. When they come about specifically to advance a privatization agenda, it is a terrible concept. When land
managers have their budgets starved and become desperate for money they tend to be more willing to engage in
partnerships that do not serve the mission of the agency nor serve the needs of the public at large.
PPV's that serve the narrowly focused needs of the private partner deprive the general public of the value of their
public lands. When a snowmobile club, for example, partners with the US Forest Service to create and groom a new
snowmobile riding area, they have no interest in protecting the interests of skiers, snowshoers and other current users
of the area. Given adequate public funding, land managers might reasonably manage a particular area. However, when they
are denied public funding and forced to operate using only privatization tools, the results can be disastrous.
BB: What do you foresee for the future in terms of the Disneyfication of our public spaces?
SS: First off, "Disneyfication" need not have anything to do with the Walt Disney Company. By the Disneyfication of public
spaces, we are referring to the conversion of wildness into commodity. Disneyfication involves making the unexpected
predictable and homogenizing experiences. The public is seen as customers.
In the specific case of the Disneyfication of public spaces, it happens that the Walt Disney Company is a major player
and represents a major threat. Ever since the Sierra Club successfully fought Disney's attempt to develop their proposed
Mineral King Ski Resort in the 1970s, Disney has explored new opportunities for expanding their traditional market into
National Parks. This summer, for the first time ever, Disney will begin operating tours in Yellowstone National Park.
Tours will cost between $5600 and $7800 for a family of four. "Mickey Mouse and other costumed characters would appear
only in very controlled settings, if they appear it all," the press has reported.
BB: How does privatization fit in with the Bush Administration's overall approach to the environment and public policy?
SS: When Ronald Reagan's budget director called for de-funding National Parks, it was part of a concerted effort to "Starve
the Beast" -- the "Beast" being the government. The Bush Administration is completing Reagan's agenda. Bush's tax cuts
for the rich and unbounded military expansionism all but ensure that there will not be adequate funding for the
maintenance of public spaces. Without adequate funding, this administration will be able to say -- with a totally
straight face -- that there is no money for education, Medicare, Amtrak, interstate highways, National Parks, etcetera,
and everything will, of necessity, have to be privatized.
Privatization does not necessarily mean that ownership will transfer from the public to the private sector. It simply
means that management control will transfer to private interests and that current federal funding will be partially
redirected to the new controlling private interests and that users' fees, commercialization and sale of assets will make
up the difference.
BB: Can you give some examples of the public-private partnership in action? How are they working? Are they all bad? Is
there some shining example of successful partnerships?
SS: Public-Private Partnerships occur in all shapes and sizes; some are good and some bad. The Army Corps of Engineers
recently launched something called the "Recreation Partnership Initiative" which they describe in these words, "the
intent of the program is to encourage private development of public recreation facilities such as; marinas,
hotel/motel/restaurant complexes, conference centers, RV camping areas, golf courses, theme parks, and entertainment
areas with shops, etc." The Corps goes on to say that it is "excited about the possibility of providing these additional
opportunities for private sector development of public recreation facilities. These opportunities provide a win, win,
win situation. The private developers win because of the excellent opportunities they will have to make a profit. The
public wins because of the additional recreation opportunities made available to them and the Corp and the Federal
Government win because much needed public recreational facilities are provided at no cost to the Government."
Whether you'd agree with that assessment likely depends on your values. If when you think of public lands, you think of
camping in a tent, eating food you cooked on grill, paddling a canoe in a quiet lake and generally decompressing in a
natural setting, you will not like this partnership initiative. If, on the other hand, you're looking for an attractive
setting where you can have a corporate retreat, play some golf, rent a houseboat for a rocking party, and stay in world
class hotel accommodations, you might indeed see this initiative as a win-win-win.
To be honest, I can't think of a single PPV to hold up as a shining example. Even programs such as Leave No Trace and
Tread Lightly -- which began as government programs intended to promote good stewardship ethics -- were taken over by
the private sector in the early 90's and degenerated into Public Relations marketing tools designed to promote expanded
recreational access.
BB: What will all this mean for the average family that might want to go camping or hiking this summer?
SS: Recreation in the great outdoors is becoming increasingly scripted so that your average family will find less adventure
and greater predictability and they are going to find themselves forced to make choices as to what experiences they can
afford: More advanced planning will be required, reservations will have to be made, and decisions such as whether to
select the premium camping site by the river or the discount site by the toilet will become part of the planning
process.
Your average campers are likely to find themselves sleeping in a tent surrounded by motor-homes. Sounds of nature will
be replaced by sounds of generators, televisions, showers and toilets flushing. National Park Services, such as
interpretive presentations that once were free, may now carry a price tag. Hiking trails will be inaccessible unless a
fee is paid; the same thing with lakes, rivers and streams. Attractions that catch your eye and would otherwise draw you
to them will, quite literally, be off-limits unless you have purchased the required pass or booked in advance. Those on
tight budgets will likely find themselves deciding that standing by a particular stream and peering into the water is
just not worth the cost.
BB: Politically speaking, what is the relationship between the Bush administration and the pay-to-play recreation outfits
and organizations?
SS: The recreation and tourism industry, which was tight with George H.W. Bush, is even tighter with Dubya. Land management
leadership in the current Bush Administration is jam-packed with hard-core, pro-privatization ideologues. While the
terms "cooperation," "partnerships," and "volunteerism" flow, their meaning is more akin to "co-option,"
"privatization," and "voluntary outsourcing."
The agencies are only too happy to give their private-sector partners whatever they request because the federal managers
are looking to get out of the business of providing outdoor recreation. Ultimately, if things go according to plan, it
will be the outfitters, recreation organizations and entertainment companies like Disney who will be tomorrow's
providers of memorable outdoor experiences on what once were America's public lands.
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For more please see the Bill Berkowitz archive.
Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement. His WorkingForChange column Conservative Watch
documents the strategies, players, institutions, victories and defeats of the American Right.