"Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public trust"

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"Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public trust"

Postby GD4Up » Mon 19 Aug, 2013 8:36 pm

Not sure if this has been more widely reported but I saw the letter in The Age this morning and saw it was online in WA

http://www.theage.com.au/national/national-park-plans-betrayal-of-public-trust-20130818-2s547.html#ixzz2cPRTvvB

http://www.watoday.com.au/comment/the-insidious-threat-to-our-natural-heritage-20130818-2s4uk.html

Australian national parks are very special places. They contain the outstanding examples of our natural and cultural heritage remaining after the major settlement and development phases of our past.
Australia's first national park, Royal National Park south of Sydney, established in 1878, was the second in the world (the first being Yellowstone in the United States). Our national parks are recognised internationally by world authorities not only because of their diversity and quality of the natural systems they protect, but also because of the way they have been managed over the past 135 years.
Until now our national parks have been securely protected under state legislation, having been created after thorough scientific assessment and extensive comparative studies.
Why then is it now proposed to introduce uses into our parks that are inimical to the very reason for establishing them? National parks have not been set aside for grazing by cattle, logging, prospecting, hunting or commercial development. These activities, to be permitted in national parks in several states, are incompatible with the fundamental reasons for creating them - protecting our natural and cultural heritage. Such uses compromise and diminish the reasons for visiting national parks - to enjoy the beauty of natural landscapes and to relax in natural settings removed from the complexities and stresses of modern living.
The most insidious of these intrusive uses are the proposals of the Victorian government to lease areas within our national parks for up to 99 years to encourage commercial development by private corporations.
In reality, a 99-year lease transfers ownership of a public asset, something we all own and can share, to a private benefit enjoyed by a privileged few. Once the private sector develops resorts and associated infrastructure, the return of this land to the public will never occur. Thus, with long-term leasing provisions embedded in legislation as is now occurring through the National Parks Amendment (Leasing Powers and Other Matters) Bill, most land in our national parks is vulnerable, because leased areas can be readily expanded.
Indeed, the bill now before State Parliament makes clear that up to two-thirds of the land in our national parks could be placed under long-term leases. Of further concern is the provision that allows the decision to lease land in our national parks for 99 years to be made by the responsible minister. A 99-year lease would essentially remove land from the park and transfer tenure and management to the private sector. Currently, such an action can only occur by a decision of the Parliament to pass an amendment to the National Parks Act.
New resort development within national parks is now recognised internationally as undesirable and in conflict with the very things that national parks are established to protect.
Resort developments established in the 19th and early 20th centuries in Canada and the US by the railroad barons are today substantially constrained with only modernising and replacement now occurring.
Closer to home, the new visitor development and camping ground at Cradle Mountain National Park in Tasmania has been built outside the park, as is the Cradle Mountain Lodge. Recently, the calamitous Seal Rocks development at Phillip Island cost taxpayers $55 million in compensation when the private development foundered. There was also the proposal, to the dismay of many, to develop a resort on the sand dunes of our much-loved national park at Wilsons Promontory. Such a possibility becomes increasingly probable with statutory provisions in the National Parks Act permitting leases of 99 years.
We cannot understand why the government would wish to pursue high-risk policies that threaten the security of our national parks when low-risk, attractive development could be encouraged in outstanding locations just outside our national parks.
Bill Borthwick, the Liberal MP who was Victoria's first minister for conservation, held grave fears about commercialising our national parks. In 1992 he said: ''The Americans all know that they made that dreadful mistake years and years ago of allowing concessionaires in and taking over. I implore, whether it be Liberal or Labor government in the future, don't fall for the fast-buck concessionaires within national parks.'' His deeply felt concerns then are just as real today.
Government policy that starts the journey of incremental privatisation and commercialisation of national parks would be a betrayal of public trust.

Professor Graham Brown, AM
Professor Michael Buxton
Professor Peter Doherty, AC
Mrs Alicia Fogarty
Justice John Fogarty, AM
The Hon. David Harper, AM, QC
Professor Barry Jones, AO
John Landy, AC, CVO, MBE
Dr Margaret Leggatt, AM
Dr Mick Lumb, OAM
Duncan Malcolm, AM, JP
Professor Rob Moodie
Sir Gus Nossal, AC, CBE
Lady Lyn Nossal
Professor Margot Prior, AO
Dimity Reed, AM
Don Saunders, PSM
Dr Helen Sykes, AM
Associate Professor Geoff Wescott
Professor David Yencken, AO
Professor Spencer Zifcak

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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby Hallu » Mon 19 Aug, 2013 10:34 pm

The problem is, although they acknowledge a very real issue, they're talking absolute rubbish about the past and present of Australian National Parks. The legislation in those park is already really really poor, amongst the worst in the world. You can prospect for ore in them, and then the government will modify the boundaries of the park in order to accommodate the mine (Kakadu, Karijini). You can do motorsports in a lot of them, you can hunt in Alpine parks, you can put phone towers on them, high power lines (Churchill NP in Victoria)... Their management is mostly appalling : rubbish roads in the parks of Northern WA, hard to find information on the parks in NSW (their website is a mess), poor feral/pest management (lack of funds mostly), etc etc... No one is denying the beauty of the places, or the hard work done by the ranges with limited funds, but Australia has 2 enormous problems, pretty much unique in the world : 1) their parks are NOT national, they're managed by the states, which can do whatever they want with them (which is why the US created NPs in the first place : the states will think about themselves first, not about the importance of the environment) 2) there are more than 500 national parks in Australia, the selection is extremely poor, many places don't deserve at all the status of NP. This is a problem that is more or less State dependent : South Australia has a very careful selection process, but Queensland has parks as small as a square mile... This Edito of Reader's Digest Wild Australia illustrates this, and is a very interesting and revealing read :
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby Lindsay » Mon 19 Aug, 2013 11:05 pm

The "privatisation" of National Parks must be resisted at all costs. An asset that belongs to the people is not the governments to give away to private interests. I live for the day the lackey of some private operator tells me I can't access some area of a NP because his company has a lease on it. :twisted:
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby perfectlydark » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 5:57 am

+1 lyndsay. In fact I couldnt wait to give a return outburst
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby GD4Up » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 8:37 am

Out of the Stock Journal is an attempt to put forward the British system as a model for Australia!

http://www.stockjournal.com.au/blogs/ag ... torypage=0

Some parts of the article have some merit. Here the author talks about a trip to England and meeting a farming family managing a national park (as a farm)

Importantly, he took enormous pride in the fact that he was a custodian of both a productive farm and an environmental legacy for the benefit of future generations, including his own children. He was adamant that both productivity and environmental values had been enhanced under his care.


Of course, I'm yet to meet any land manager who doesn't believe that they know best and are great stewards of their land, so I get extremely nervous when I see...

Imagine if the UK approach was adopted in Australia, so that significant parts of national parks were privately owned, the parks were managed by locally run boards in accordance with agreed management plans, farming was permitted where it was viable and tourism was encouraged, with some of the money currently utilised for park management offered as incentives for owners to preserve environmental values. Would the environment be any worse off than it is under a policy of locking it up and looking at it through binoculars, with just a privileged group of park staff having free access?


...and I didn't realise goats were more destructive than sheep and cattle :roll:
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby perfectlydark » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 9:21 am

Farming and preservation are not 2 things that go hand in hand
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby Clusterpod » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 9:22 am

Goats are causing terrible damage here in the west, and, I must assume, over the borders.
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby Hallu » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 10:27 am

It's ridiculous to apply the European model to Australia (or for that matter to any recently colonized world such as America (South and North) ). In Europe, hunting and farming has been there for so long that it's actually part of the ecosystem now. This is why in France you have sheep herders and hunters in National Parks. Sheep provide food for predators (and right now helps the return of the wolf, and hopefully some day the lynx and the bear), and hunters regulate game numbers. Remove them out of the equation, and you get a sudden burst in deers, foxes, pheasants etc... and a dive in predator numbers with an obvious negative impact on the ecosystem. In Australia, feral species have been here for only about 100-150 years in significant numbers, and they won't be fully part of the ecosystem before a long time, meanwhile native species will go extinct, mainly small marsupials and reptiles/amphibians. So having farmers or private owners would accomplish nothing. What would accomplish something is for example NOT removing the tax for mines and using it to finally eradicate the feral species we can. It's not hard to shoot goats, donkeys, camels or horses, we see them everywhere during our bushwalks, it only takes money and will.
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby perfectlydark » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 12:07 pm

I alwaysget the feeling states just see big patches of land that costs them money and think wouldnt it be great if we "leased" it out to someone to build some "infrastructure" (resort) so we can save money and make a quick buck?
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby GPSGuided » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 12:15 pm

perfectlydark wrote:I alwaysget the feeling states just see big patches of land that costs them money and think wouldnt it be great if we "leased" it out to someone to build some "infrastructure" (resort) so we can save money and make a quick buck?

No surprise if that's what can get a majority of the voters to support their "better" economic management. Some out there only cares about the bottom line, little on the environment.
Just move it!
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Re: "Privatising our National Parks: A betrayal of public tr

Postby perfectlydark » Tue 20 Aug, 2013 1:01 pm

Sad but true. Too often "extreme" measures are apparently ok as long as you can say the previous government gave you no choice..
I think nat parks should be natoinalised personally .too much room for poor decisions or greed if not centrally controlled and managed
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