Archive for April, 2010

Interior Secretary Salazar Announces Additional Fee-Free Days

Fort Marion National Monument

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar has announced a schedule of more free admission days to many of the public lands managed by the Interior Department.  All national parks, national wildlife refuges, and many areas managed by the Bureau of Land Management will offer free admission on June 5-6, August 14-15, September 25 (Public Lands Day) and November 11 (Veterans Day).  These dates are in addition to the previous Fee-Free period coinciding with National Park Week which occurred in April.

Special offers made available for these days will be posted on this site (see Fee-Free Offers above) and at www.parkpartners.org/Special-Offers-for-2010.html.

Senate Commerce Committee Hearing Addresses National Park Promotion

The United States Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing today on tourism and the national parks.  Sen. Amy Klobuchar of MN chaired the hearing and Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller opened the hearing with the following statement.  Participating in the hearing were:  Ranking Member Sen. George LeMieux (FL) and Sens. Tom Udall, Bill Nelson of FL, John Barrasso of WY, Mark Begich of Alaska and Maria Cantwell of WA. Witnesses included Ken Burns, Wyoming Tourism Director Diane Shober, Interior Principal Deputy Asst. Sec. Will Shafroth, a New Mexico KOA operator and others.

The focus was on encouraging people to visit their national parks and helping regional and national economies.  A fundamental gyst of the hearing is that committee members support promoting national parks, domestically and internationally, and that the Commerce Committee is interested in overcoming promotional constraints which the NPS faces, in appropriate ways.

CLICK HERE to see the entire hearing.

CHAIRMAN ROCKEFELLER’S REMARKS… America the Beautiful: Promoting Our National Parks as Travel Destinations
Apr 27 2010

WASHINGTON, D.C.—First, I’d like to begin by thanking Senator Klobuchar for holding this hearing. We all appreciate her commitment to creating American jobs through tourism – a powerful economic generator that should not be overlooked. I also want to welcome today’s witnesses. My friend Ken Burns’ documentaries never fail to move the people who watch them. We are enormously lucky he has trained his lens on our national parks. To all of our witnesses, thank you for your commitment to our national parks and for sharing your experience with us today.

Our national parks are national treasures. They teach us about nature and the environment and our vast, beautiful country. They also serve as an economic catalyst in many areas of our country, helping to sustain communities large and small. In West Virginia, the national parks alone generate more than $50 million in economic activity every year, supporting more than 1,700 jobs. Park visitors also support hotels, restaurants, gas stations, and many other small businesses, generating millions in tax revenue.

Today, I look forward to discussing how we can best promote our national parks. What can we do to improve visitors’ experiences? And how are national parks collaborating with the private tourism industry? What are we doing to reach people who may not have considered visiting national parks – including foreign tourists?

This year the Commerce Committee passed the Travel Promotion Act and President Obama recently signed it into law. The legislation establishes a public-private international advertising campaign to promote travel to the United States. That’s a great thing because these efforts could bring an estimated 1.6 million additional international visitors to the United States every year. And, when those visitors get here, I want them to take advantage of everything America has to offer. I want them to come to West Virginia and see Harper’s Ferry, or hike along the Appalachian National Scenic Trail. Or even go whitewater rafting down the Gauley River. It is the amazing experiences they have that will bring them back again and again.

So, I hope that, together, we can use market-based tools to learn about visitor trends, communicate with target audiences, and promote both good environmental stewardship and local economies. As our world goes online and grows more connected every day, we must be creative and find new ways to attract foreign and domestic tourists alike to our national parks.

Of course, the United States has major attractions in cities like New York, Las Vegas, and right here in Washington. But it is the hundreds of scenic, ecological and geological wonders in our national parks that help us better understand how Earth lives and breathes.

Postal Service Salutes Scenic American Landscapes

A new series of postcards issued by the U.S. Postal Service on April 20 gives tribute to America’s national parks, The Washington Post reported this week.  The postcards include impressive photographs of grand American landscapes.  The release of the stamped postcards and a book called “The Grandest Things: Our National Parks in Words, Images, and Stamps,” coincides with National Park Week, which runs April 17-25.  CLICK HERE to read more about the new postcards and to see images that appear on them.

Additional Fee Free Days Announced on Earth Day

To mark the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day and to celebrate the launch of the Obama Administration’s America’s Great Outdoors initiative, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today announced a schedule of free admission days to many of the lands managed by Interior.

All national parks, national wildlife refuges, and many areas managed by the Bureau of Land Management will offer free admission on June 5-6, August 14-15, September 25 (Public Lands Day), and November 11 (Veterans Day).  These dates are in addition to the previously announced free admission at all 392 national parks April 17-25 as part of the celebration of National Park Week.

“President Obama has made connecting Americans to the outdoors and our history a fundamental goal of the conservation initiative announced at Friday’s White House Conference on America’s Great Outdoors,” said Salazar.

“The Interior Department was proud to host that conference and will be even prouder to host Americans who want to get outdoors to visit their public lands.”

America’s public lands offer opportunities to engage in healthy, outdoor activities, whether for a few hours or a few days.  More details about fee free days and activities are available for:

·         National parks at  http://www.nps.gov/findapark/feefreeparks.htm

·         National wildlife refuges at http://www.fws.gov/refuges/

·         Bureau of Land Management areas at http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/Recreation/BLM_Fee_Free_Days.html

“What better way to celebrate this Earth Day than to make it easier for all Americans to experience the breathtaking landscapes, amazing creatures, and the stories that make up our shared  heritage,” added Salazar.  “By getting outdoors, we remind ourselves of our blessings and of the responsibility we all have to pass these lands on to our children and our grandchildren.”

NP Week: Hundreds of NP Week Events at NPS.Gov

Hundreds of National Park Week events, from Acadia to Yosemite, can be reviewed online at nps.gov.  The events include such varied happenings as guided hikes, junior ranger programs, service projects, interpretive programs, and even a moonlit canoe trip.  To find an event near you, CLICK HERE.

National Geographic Unveils Greater Sierra Nevada Geotourism Map Guide

The heritage, environment, culture and aesthetics of the Sierra Nevada come together in a new map and guide for the Sierra Nevada, released today by the National Geographic Society, the Sierra Nevada Conservancy and the Sierra Business Council.

The new “Sierra Nevada Geotourism Map Guide” is both an interactive website (www.sierranevadageotourism.org) and a print map.  The greater Yosemite National Park area comprises the first of four Sierra Nevada regions that will appear on the site.

What’s different about “geotourism” guides is that they focus upon genuine experiences and places recommended by locals and that most directly benefit local economies and cultures.  Often, these places lack national brand identity, though what they lack in recognition they make up in authenticity of experience, like the Happy Burger or Butterfly Cafe in Mariposa, Calif. along the western route to Yosemite National Park.

This is the fourth geotourism map guide from National Geographic.  Previous geotourism sites were created for California’s Redwood Coast, Greater Yellowstone and Oregon and Washington’s Central Cascade region.