Wed Feb 05, 2014 11:44 pm
Managed tonight to get the site to load. After some digging, I found the stated purpose of this plan.
Copied from the planning site:
The purpose of the Saline Valley Warm Springs Management Plan/EIS is to:
• Provide a framework for natural and cultural resources management at the Warm Springs area;
• Provide a framework for administration and operations at the Warm Springs area;
• Provide a framework for managing visitor use at the Warm Springs area;
• Provide guidance for Death Valley National Park managers as they work with various stakeholders of the Warm Springs area; and
• Balance management of natural resources, ethnographic resources, and visitor use.
I also read the summary of preliminary alternatives. The very good news is that there is public access to the Chicken Strip in four of the five, and camping at the strip in 3 of the 5. Only the restoration alternative closes the strip. I see now what the OP referred to was the promulgation of special regulation. This is not a bad thing, this is a very good thing. Right now the Chicken Strip is in legal limbo. A planning process that chooses an alternative in which it would remain open would provide a very strong basis for making the current status solid. However, there is no law to that effect. The strongest thing you can have, short of an act of congress, that establishes the Chicken Strip as a legal place of operation is a regulation. I would recommend that somebody attend one of the meetings. The passage of regulation should strengthen the foothold, not weaken it. Most of those proposals involve authorization for the facilities at the Chicken Strip to be expanded or improved. They are trying to help, I can almost guarantee it.
I do think it would be fair to request clarification on whether there is any possibility that selection of an alternative that includes promulgation of regulation would result in closure during the interim between the final decision on the EIS and the successful promulgation of regulation. But I would look at those alternatives again. They are genuinely providing alternatives that try to accomplish their goals, and they have come up with a number that include putting the Chicken Strip on a forever standing, which would be really great.
Whatever you do, keep engaged, keep letting them know your preferences. I read through the scoping comments. Many pilots commented, and the value of those comments is shown in the fact that the Chicken Strip is figuring to continue in most of the alternatives.
Finally, understand that this is alternative development. They are looking to make sure that they have a full range of alternatives and that the breadth of the alternatives is adequate to encompass all reasonable options. This is a really good opportunity to look at whether the range of alternatives is satisfactory and whether it could be improved. One improvement could be to alter the recreation management alternative, which is the one in which the NPS would manage the strip and there would be no camping at the airstrip. Is this meaning there would be no overnight parking? Or does it mean that campers would have to camp elsewhere closer to the springs? Perhaps it would be an improvement to the alternative to authorize camping with no more than XX aircraft overnight (I have no idea what that number would be). This would make the camping experience more of an airplane camping option, but give them an alternative that would prevent unrestricted increases in the number of people doing this.
I think I'm over 4 cents worth now.