Evan Tooley
Lisa Bohack
Period study
4 April 2016
Save The National Park
Thousands of years ago, a earth that was much different than the one we know today. A earth filled with distant creatures, who no longer roam the earth, a vast beauty filled with no boundaries or ownership, a world that is 4.53 million years old that has been changing ever since the bane of time. Single celled organisms ruled the earth up until 600 million years and human life has only been around for 200 million years a fraction of time compared to the time earth has been around. Mountains formed by tectonic plates moving, glaciers moving and growing over time, from one big continent, Pangea diverging into 7 distinct and severely different continents. How do
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In a report, Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, the senior Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee argues that it's a result of too many parks being made into national parks, since some parks are made national parks as political favors. The report also refers to the sub par budget for national parks, “the direct result of Washington's out-of-control spending addiction that puts off doing what is necessary for what is self-serving.”( Park advocates disagree with Coburn's views. “Congress has been loath to fund unsexy maintenance projects for many agencies,” says Linda Bilmes, a lecturer in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and member of the National Park System Advisory Board. Bilmes doesn’t view the park system as an example of runaway federal spending. “The National Park Service budget is tiny, and is smaller in real terms than it was a decade ago,” she says, noting that most park designations are made after years of study. “It's a very thoughtful process, with input from historians, scientists and other distinguished experts.” Current and former NPS leaders and park advocates strongly oppose Coburn's recommendations. “We don't think some parks are better or worse than others,” says Joan Anzelmo, a former park superintendent and executive council member of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees, which represents more than 900 former agency employees. “Many of the units that Sen. Coburn suggests should be dropped celebrate contributions from minority populations, such as the Port