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Showing posts with label EVERGLADES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EVERGLADES. Show all posts

Thursday, February 10, 2022

9 Unexpected Places to Learn About Black History

 



FEATURED STORY
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9 Unexpected Places to Learn About Black History
These fascinating sites share important and often overlooked stories about people who shaped U.S. history and culture.
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TOP STORIES
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H. B. Lindsley/Library of Congress
 
5 Facts You Might Not Know About Harriet Tubman
Next month, the National Park Service will commemorate the 200th anniversary of Harriet Tubman’s birth. She’s a revered American hero — and there’s so much more to her history than what we learn in school.
Learn more →
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© Yale University Art Gallery/Purchased with a gift from Katherine D. and Stephen C. Sherrill, B.A./1975
 
A Diamond in the Rough
The only ballpark in the National Park System also has deep ties to African American history. One of the last few remaining Negro League ballparks, Hinchliffe Stadium was nearly lost — but the storied playing field at Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park in New Jersey is getting a new lease on life. Learn more on NPCA's podcast.
Listen →
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© lovemushroom/Adobe Stock
 
Adventure Awaits
Winter blues got you down? There’s no better cure than daydreaming about your next park adventure, and our free expert guides share insider tips and tricks to help you plan an extraordinary trip.
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© Rebecca Drobis
 
Park Ink
Members of one niche community are obsessed with national parks, and they have the stamps to prove it. Read this and more in the Winter issue of National Parks magazine.
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© Simon Skafar/iStockphoto
 
A Triumph for One of Our Oldest, Wildest Parks
Last month, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced that it will invest $1.1 billion for Everglades restoration, the largest such federal investment in history.
Learn more →
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Courtesy of Richard/MyParkStory
 
Share the Love
Forget about chocolate hearts and flowers ― find yourself someone who looks at you the way these two look at Grand Teton. Read these heartwarming tales of romantic park connections and share your own memories on My Park Story.
Read more and share your story →
TRIVIA CHALLENGE
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© 46travels/iStockphoto
 
Parks in the Arctic
Alaska is home to nearly two-thirds of the land in the entire National Park System — some 54 million acres in all. But only four U.S. national park sites lie entirely north of the Arctic Circle. Do you know which four?
Learn more →
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Join us for Salute to the Parks on April 6
Whether you choose to celebrate with us in person in Washington, D.C., or virtually from the comfort of your home, we invite you to be part of this special annual event alongside park advocates across the country. Together we will honor those who speak up on behalf of our national parks and celebrate all that makes our parks so special.
RSVP →
Quote of the Month
"Asians in America, including some of the most vulnerable, are still discriminated against, treated as invisible and suffer from hate crimes to this day. Designating Amache a national park site would shine a light on our forgotten history and help tell a more complete story of America."

— Bob Fuchigami, a survivor of Amache, a World War II incarceration camp in Colorado. Later this month, he and others will commemorate the Day of Remembrance, the 80th anniversary of the presidential order creating these unjust imprisonment sites.
Park Notes is a publication of the National Parks Conservation Association

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Monday, July 19, 2021

Drilling for Oil in the Everglades Is Exactly as Stupid as It Sounds

 

Drilling for Oil in the Everglades Is Exactly as Stupid as It Sounds

This lush freshwater oasis is the Big Cypress National Preserve in the Florida Everglades. It was the first national preserve to be created in the United States.

Verdant tropical swamp and wetlands below a blue sky with white clouds in Big Cypress National Preserve in southern Florida.
FRANK MIRBACH / GETTY IMAGES

This is an oil drilling operation.

Oil pumpjacks in front of a flue that are billowing out emissions near Fellows, California, in Kern County.
GARY KAVANAGH / GETTY IMAGES

In Florida, an oil drilling company wants to superimpose photo 2 onto photo 1. And the wildest part is, state officials might actually let it happen.

At the tail end of 2020, Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) handed Florida the power to grant permits to projects that could damage the state’s wetlands. Now, we’re seeing why this was a terrible idea: an oil drilling proposal in the Everglades is on track to move forward.

Here are some obvious reasons this shouldn’t happen:

  • The Big Cypress National Preserve, located north of Everglades National Park, is an important freshwater swamp ecosystem. It nurtures a diversity of wildlife, including alligators, orchids, and the critically endangered Florida panther, and its waters replenish the Everglades. Drilling here would devastate this ecosystem and wreak havoc on endangered species.
  • Oil drilling would also harm the nearby lands of the Miccosukee Tribe, who have lived on these lands for generations. This development is a continuation of the destructive practices of the past which have harmed the Miccosukee Tribe’s homeland, cultural resources, and way of life.
  • We can’t afford more fossil fuels when urgent action is needed to avoid the worst effects of the climate crisis. The Biden administration’s climate plan recognizes that conserving lands and waters is a critical part of the solution. Wetlands in particular store carbon, mitigate floods, and recharge aquifers used for drinking water. So, sacrificing one of the largest wetland ecosystems in the Western Hemisphere would be a step in the wrong direction.

Florida developers are rushing into the Everglades because the government opened the door.

  • On its way out in December, the Trump administration gave Florida unprecedented power to greenlight projects in the state’s sensitive wetlands — a power that the federal government controlled until now. It did this despite the state’s consistent track record of rubberstamping wetland destruction.
  • The state has shown its inability to run the environmental programs already under its control, and its takeover of the wetlands program will be no different. The administration has given the state — and any developers it grants permits to — carte blanche to harm as many endangered species as they want, forever, without any guidelines or limitations. This is a blatant violation of the Endangered Species Act.

Florida politicians are too chummy with developers to be trusted to protect this priceless ecosystem. Earthjustice is suing the EPA and other federal agencies for abdicating their responsibility to safeguard Florida’s wetlands.

  • We’re representing conservation groups who are challenging the Trump administration’s rushed transfer of the federal wetlands permit program to Florida.
  • This isn’t our first time defending Florida’s precious wetlands. For decades, Earthjustice has taken on Big Ag and the federal government to protect this essential ecosystem. These fights are part of our work to strengthen biodiversity and stave off an extinction crisis.
  • We have persevered when political winds changed over time and will continue to make sure that federal and state governments keep their commitments to protect Florida’s wetlands.
Great Egret (Ardea alba) along Sweetwater Strand in Big Cypress Preserve, Florida.

Great Egret (Ardea alba) along Sweetwater Strand in Big Cypress Preserve, Florida.





"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...