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Questions & Answers for Hunters,
Anglers, Snowmobilers and Camp Owners
What is the proposed Maine Woods National Park & Preserve?
How would it be established?
The Maine Woods National Park & Preserve (MWNP) is a proposed 3.2-million-acre
national park and national preserve which would surround Baxter State
Park, most of Moosehead Lake and portions of the Allagash Wilderness Waterway
in northern Maine. The first step in establishing such a park/preserve
would be a comprehensive feasibility study to evaluate all the benefits
and costs of the concept. Then, if the park is authorized, it will be
created by public acquisition of lands within the authorized purchase
area from willing sellers at fair market value.
How would the proposed Maine Woods National Park & Preserve
affect traditional fishing and hunting opportunities?
It would help by protecting habitat and securing public access. Opportunities
for fishing and hunting in northern Maine are not as good as they used
to be. The Maine Woods National Park & Preserve would improve this
by providing more diversity. Rather than having virtually all of our woodlands
managed as an industrial “working forest,” lands within the
park and preserve would be protected from logging, herbicide spraying,
development and other activities destructive to habitat. In both park
and preserve areas, fishing would continue. In preserve areas, hunting
and trapping would continue without the worry that access might suddenly
be cut off by changes in private land ownership. In other words, MWNP
would expand the area of Maine where hunting and trapping are assured.
MWNP would also reduce conflicts with non-hunters by providing some areas
free of hunting.
How would the proposed Maine Woods National Park & Preserve
affect snowmobiling?
It would help by securing access. Today snowmobilers worry about being
cut off by private land owners. The proposed MWNP would allow snowmobiling
to continue in designated preserve areas.
How would the proposed Maine Woods National Park & Preserve
affect existing sporting camps and private camps?
It would help camp owners by providing longer term stability. Camps on
lease lots could continue within the MWNP, but they would probably be
eligible for long-term leases, rather than the increasingly expensive
short-term leases common now. On owned lots, if camp owners wanted to
sell, they could sell their lot so that it would become part of the park.
If they just wanted to keep their camps and pass them on, they could.
Moreover, camp owners would not have to worry about the forest around
them being degraded by industrial forest practices. They would have much
more assurance than they have now of being in a high quality natural environment.
How would the proposed Maine Woods National Park & Preserve
affect the economy of northern Maine?
It would help by revitalizing, diversifying, and stabilizing the troubled
economy of the region. A recent study showed that over-reliance on the
forest products industry has seriously weakened the economy of Maine and
the number of forest industry jobs will continue to decline even if logging
increases. While forest industry jobs dwindle, professional and service
sector jobs in Maine are growing, especially where environmental values
are protected. By contrast, the rapid industrial-ization of the Maine
Woods is putting Maine at a comparative economic disadvantage by damaging
the wildland values that can be the basis of a healthy economy. Under
existing federal programs, the MWNP could also pay more to state and local
governments in Maine than property taxes now provide. The MWNP would help
diversify the economy of Maine and the Northeast, while leaving four-fifths
of Maine’s commercial timberland unaffected.
Is the proposed MWNP really just a land grab promoted by out-of-state
environmentalists?
No. The MWNP is a conservative idea, in the best Maine tradition, to reestablish
some balance. It has become clear that Maine needs a better balance of
public-private ownerships; of managed and permanently protected lands;
of opportunities for consump-tive and non-consumptive recreation; of motorized
and remote, non-motorized sports; and of young and mature forest habitats.
Most of the Maine Woods is owned by absentee forestry corporations, real-estate
companies and family trusts which are being driven to treat the forest
as a business profit center. If citizens want to protect their sporting
traditions they need to actively support conservation proposals such as
the MWNP which will return some lands to the public. The MWNP would protect
the public interest by rolling back the poor management that has degraded
our woodlands in one of the most naturally spectacular regions of the
United States.
Why should sportsmen and sports-women support this Maine Woods
National Park & Preserve idea?
Thoughtful outdoor adventurers were the first advocates in this country
of the national park concept and have been some of the staunchest proponents
for protecting the wilderness values of the Maine Woods. For instance,
sportsman and artist George Catlin put forth the national park idea as
early as 1832. Henry David Thoreau proposed a national preserve after
a canoeing and fishing trip through the Maine Woods in 1853. In 1869,
wilderness adventurer Samuel Bowles urged that fifty square miles of Maine
lake and forest country “be preserved for public use... [as] an
honor to the Nation.”
In the 1890s, the Maine Fish & Game commissioner wrote of the need
for a preserve “under Mount Katahdin’s shadow.” In the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Maine Sportsman’s
Fish & Game Association and the North American Fish & Game Association
worked for the creation of a national park in the Moosehead-Katahdin region.
A 1997 article in The Maine Sportsman, headlined “Studying North
Woods Park Makes Sense,” described the advantages of the proposed
MWNP. In short, sportsmen and sportswomen would probably benefit more
than anyone from a public Maine Woods National Park & Preserve.
How do I get more information?
Contact RESTORE: The North Woods, 9 Union Street, Hallowell, Maine 04347,
telephone (207) 626-5635, mainewoods@restore.org.
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