Visitor Counter

hitwebcounter web counter
Visitors Since Blog Created in March 2010

Click Below to:

Add Blog to Favorites

Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

Subscribe via email to get updates

Enter your email address:

Receive New Posting Alerts

(A Maximum of One Alert Per Day)

Friday, August 5, 2011

Medway, Maine Officials recognize the pluses for the economy that a National Park can bring to Northern Maine.........As a result, they will work alongside Roxanne Quimby to get a Feasibility Study going so that within 5 years a MAINE WOODS NATIONAL PARK would come to be born!




From: Michael Kellett <kellett@restore.org>
Sent: Wed Aug 03 16:19:17 2011
Subject: Medway panel pushes for Maine Woods national park feasibility study, Bangor Daily News, 20110803
Medway panel pushes for national park feasibility study
By Nick Sambides Jr

MEDWAY, Maine — Several town officials have formed a committee that will work in tandem with environmentalist and entrepreneur Roxanne Quimby to push Congress to authorize a feasibility study of her plan to turn 70,000 acres adjoining Baxter State Park into a national park, they said Wednesday. The committee, co-chairman Bruce Cox said, will look to get all Maine residents behind the effort, not just those from the Katahdin region, but it will largely concentrate its efforts in northern Maine. The panel hopes that if a study is done and it shows the proposal is feasible, a park can be established well ahead of Quimby's five-year timeline, given the region's 21.8 percent unemployment rate.
"We have to get moving. This is too important to take a laid-back approach like that," co-chairman George McLaughlin said of Quimby's hope to make a gift of her land to the federal government in 2016. The National Park Regional Citizen Evaluation Committee will have several subcommittees with an overall goal of examining the 70,000 acres' qualifications for designation as a national park and understanding a park's potential economic and social impacts on the area and the state. It will also examine the National Park Service's ability to manage the park and work to jointly promote eco-friendly tourist and manufacturing jobs in the Katahdin region, according to the group's mission statement.
One of the group's first goals, McLaughlin said, is to arrange tours of the land to allow residents to see for themselves what potential the land has as a tourist destination. "We have a lot of questions we want to answer," said Cox, who is chairman of the Medway Board of Selectmen but whose work on the committee he is doing privately, not as a selectman. "We welcome all of your questions. We want people to be as well-informed on this as they can be."
The Legislature passed a resolve in June opposing Quimby's initiative, through which she hopes to create a Maine Woods National Park. The park would be nearly twice the size of Acadia National Park. Sportsmen would get another 30,000 acres north of Dover-Foxcroft to be managed like a state park, with hunting and snowmobiling allowed. Another 10 million acres of forestland nearby would be unaffected.
Park proponents said that Quimby's proposal would draw hundreds of thousands of tourists to a Katahdin region given its unemployment rate — nearly triple the state average — shuttered paper mills, a dying forest products industry and no other significant investors apparently willing to put money into the region. The park would be virtually self-sustaining with Quimby's promise to raise $20 million to add to a $20 million maintenance endowment she would create, they said.
Opponents have cited fears of damaging state efforts to revitalize the region's two paper mills, which if restarted could employ about 600 people; of granting federal government control and tax-exempt status to the 70,000 acres and hurting forest products industry lands; and of the park growing much larger than 70,000 acres.
Maine's two Republican senators, the Maine Woods Coalition, Millinocket Town Council and the Millinocket Fin and Feather Club have opposed or expressed skepticism about Quimby's plan.
Medway's school board, Board of Selectmen and several Katahdin region civic and business groups have supported doing a feasibility study. East Millinocket's Board of Selectmen has elected not to take a position on the issue, and that town's school board deadlocked on a vote supporting a study.
Gov. Paul LePage has yet to comment on his stance on Quimby's proposal. Mark Scally, chairman of the East Millinocket Board of Selectmen, said the governor told him that he is vehemently opposed to a feasibility study but that efforts to create one will have no impact upon the state's efforts to secure a buyer to revitalize the East Millinocket and Millinocket paper mills.

No comments: