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Blackwater update



For those of you keeping track of the Blackwater development debate


Judy Rodd, vice president of WV Highlands Conservancy (www.wvhighlands.org)
yesterday spoke in Washington DC at the National Park Trust Press
Conference.  The press conference was aired lived on C-Span and is mentioned
on their web site. Please note that the total on "Save the Blackwater
Canyon" signatures collected and delivered to DC is now over 20,000.  West
Virginia Public Radio also aired a story about the National Park Trust
report, which features Blackwater Canyon as a potential new park.


http://wvgazette.com/News/blackwater0826.html

National group pushes for Blackwater park
August 26, 1999
By Ken Ward Jr.
STAFF WRITER for the Charleston Gazette

A national conservation group has thrown its support to the movement to make
the Blackwater Canyon a national park.

The National Park Trust announced its endorsement Wednesday during a press
conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

"West Virginians have shown overwhelming support for the creation of the
Blackwater Canyon proposed park," the trust said in a report. "Over 13,000
West Virginians have signed the "Save the Blackwater Canyon" petition.

The Washington-based trust is a land conservancy dedicated to preserving
America's national system of parks, wildlife and historic monuments.

On Tuesday, the trust released a report which showed that more than 200,000
acres of privately held land within the boundaries of national parks are in
"imminent danger" of being lost to development or sale.

At Loon Lake in Alaska, a public university has subdivided land around a
pristine lake, one of the state's most important protected waterfowl areas.
Lots are for sale to the highest bidder, and Congress has prevented the
federal government from buying back the land.

In Grand Teton national Park in Wyoming, a family has subdivided its
holdings and is preparing to sell the property with the blessing of local
government officials who favor economic development.

The 200,000 acres exist because of a slowdown in funding that began in the
1980s, when the Reagan administration greatly cut back on purchasing private
land within the parks. Although purchases of private lands have increased in
the most recent years, the number of privately owned acres within the parks
has increased as well.

At the trust's press conference, Judy Rodd of the West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy said that Blackwater Canyon, private land within the boundaries
of the Monongahela National Forest, is another example.

In February 1997, John Crites of Allegheny Wood Products bought 3,000 acres.
Crites has been logging the area, and developed plans for a 600-acre
condominium resort.

"Since that fateful day in 1997, when the canyon was sold out from under us,
the citizens of West Virginia have spent countless hours in the battle to
protect this special place," Rodd said. "This is the same sort of fight that
led to the Grand Canyon National Park and many others.

"The citizens of West Virginia see that a national park will permanently
protect a special area and will bring economic benefits to the state," Rodd

said.
"We are asking the West Virginia congressional delegation to introduce a
bill in Congress asking for a special resource study of the Blackwater area,
the first step to the creation of a national park."

The National Park Trust has given the conservancy $8,000 to help educate the
public about the proposed park.