by Hallu » Mon 24 Mar, 2014 2:20 am
The US both have State Parks and National Parks. The point of the National Park creation by the US was specifically to prevent the greedy states from exploiting their State Parks. At first, states such as California, would create a State Park (so lock it basically) and exploit it for wood, coal, or simply sell it to the highest bidder. Federal control prevented that, and the idea was that a careful selection would have to be applied : outstanding natural features, fauna, a large area etc...
In Australia it was never like that. Royal National Park was created while it was basically a European garden with introduced plants, and introduced fauna (rabbit, fox, deer). It was completely the opposite of the situation in the US : here parks were created to prevent the federal government from exploiting it. The NP culture never really caught up in Australia, because there are too many of them, and because the country was so unknown, wild and sparsely populated. Mostly symbolic reserves were created, with no strong criteria on size, outstanding features, boundaries and numbers. That's why you have several hundred NPs in Australia, from ridiculously small to huge and why there is no strong legislation forbidding grazing, logging or mining in them. What's sad is that there's never been a prime minister willing (or able) to change this. The only way it could be done is through ecological disasters : imagine if the GBR were to die completely, then maybe this would shake the general opinion into forcing our politicians to do something. But until then, Australia is still retarded in terms of conservation compared to other Western countries. So creating federal ruling would change nothing if new laws aren't voted. And nowadays with Abbot ruling the country, it would actually makes things worse. No state is gonna agree to this with such a stupid industrialist PM.
Last edited by
Hallu on Mon 24 Mar, 2014 9:35 am, edited 1 time in total.