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Glacier's budget not nearly as rosy as first predicted

Chris Peterson/Hungry Horse News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 17 years, 7 months AGO
by Chris Peterson/Hungry Horse News
| March 20, 2008 11:00 PM

Glacier National Park's 2008 budget looks like a decidedly mixed bag, with some divisions seeing hiring increases, while others will see far less funding. While the base budget did see a sizable boost, trails and other projects, which fall under different funding categories, will see significantly less funding.For example, the Park's trails budget will not get $248,000, building maintenance will not get $300,000 and visitor use area maintenance will not see $161,000."Lack of funding for these projects will result in an overall net loss of temporary employees in these areas unless funding is secured through other means. Loss of special project positions will impact trail repair work as well as historic preservation, buildings and campground maintenance activities. Further, there will be no road chip sealing," Park officials said in a prepared release.That's not good news for a Park with 700-plus miles of trails, several historic structures and roads that get pounded by the weather. Some trails funding, for example, comes from the base budget, but not all of it.Speaking privately, some Park employees likened it to a shell game, where one section of the Park budget benefited, while others fared poorly.For example, several Park divisions actually see increases in employment.Under the Park Service's new Centennial Initiative, funding corresponds to specific park requests and covers a variety of activities. The interpretation division will restore two seasonal positions ?one in Two Medicine and one in Many Glacier, and will also add a new seasonal position. The Facility management division will hire nine new seasonal positions and will extend several current seasonal positions. Visitor and resource protection divisions will hire several new positions including: two biological technicians, one fire forestry technician, one permanent non full-time ranger, and three seasonal rangers. Additionally, 16 rangers will work longer seasons. Funding was also provided for a new volunteer coordinator.There were also additional operational increases for interpretation, including hiring an education specialist as a permanent non full-time position and a permanent non full-time visual information specialist. This specialist is also partially funded by the Park Service's Intermountain Region and will work with other parks to develop media for them. Further, five seasonal rangers were restored and an additional position will work a longer season.Acting Superintendent Stephanie Dubois tried to put a positive spin on the mixed bag of numbers."In practical terms, this base operating funding increase means that we will be able to hire more seasonal employees and visitors will see more rangers out in the park," Dubois noted. "We will begin a special watchable wildlife program in Many Glacier. We will be able to better protect the public and park resources through the extension and/or hiring of protection rangers. Our education program will be permanent, which will foster stewardship among youth. We will be able to continue connecting people to Glacier with the use of cutting-edge technology."Glacier's total pot of budget funds is about $25 million. About half of that is its base budget.The park's base operating budget increased from $12.030 million to $13.19 million, which is an almost 10 percent increase and fully covers pay increases for employees paid from base funding. The increase will also help with escalating utility and fuel costs for daily operations. Included within this operating budget is $624,975 from the National Park Service's Centennial Initiative. This is a permanent increase to the park's operating budget that will provide for enhanced seasonal operations, Park officials said.The Park also is awaiting Congressional approval on other Centennial projects, including funds for programs to celebrate Glacier's centennial which is coming up in 2010, a volunteer stewardship program for native plants and a dorm project at Lake McDonald Lodge.The Centennial Initiative is a Bush Administration program designed to match private donations with federal dollars to get programs funded in national parks.

ARTICLES BY CHRIS PETERSON/HUNGRY HORSE NEWS

April 10, 2008 11 p.m.

Montanans for Multiple Use loses suit against Forest Service

A federal court in Washington, D.C. has struck down all the claims brought by Montanans for Multiple Use and other multiple use groups that claimed the Flathead National Forest was closing roads and revising its forest plan in an illegal manner.MFMU filed the complaint in June of 2003, claiming the Flathead wasn't following several federal laws when it amended its forest plan some 23 times in more than 15 years.The multiple use group claimed that the amendments amounted to a "de facto" rewrite of the forest plan.The court disagreed on several different fronts, the most damning being that MFMU and other groups simply didn't follow administrative procedures when they brought their claim. For example, if an amendment to a forest plan is brought forth, a group that opposes it must go through an administrative appeal process ?by writing letters of protest, etc. ?before it can file suit.The court found the groups simply didn't do that ?they just decided to sue the federal government. In their defense, they claimed they didn't know what the amendments meant until they were already in place ?but the court didn't buy that argument. In fact, the court likened it to the parable of the frog in a pot of boiling water. The frog, as the story goes, is placed in a pot of cold water. Raise the heat a degree at a time and the frog doesn't realize it's being boiled.But if you throw the frog in the boiling water it jumps out ?or at least tries to.In this case, however, MFMU never proved its case that it was futile to go through the administrative appeal process.MFMU also claimed the Forest wasn't following the law because it hadn't revised its forest plan in the past 15 years as required by law. But the court noted that forest plan revision was well under way and that Congress had extended the deadlines to rewrite forest plans.MFMU was supported by several other groups, including Flathead County, Northwest Montana Gold Prospectors, Owens and Hurst Lumber Co., the Flathead Snowmobile Association and several other multiple use and motorized land use advocates, including Leland's Honda."We are pleased with the court's ruling and will continue working to achieve the balance that multiple use management requires on National Forest System lands," Flathead National Forest Planning Staff Officer Rob Carlin said in a prepared release.The case was heard in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.MFMU chairman Fred Hodgeboom could not be reached for comment. The case was decided by chief judge Thomas F. Hogan.

May 29, 2008 11 p.m.

Dupont beats Hall in primary; Democrats support Obama locally

Former Flathead County Sheriff Jim Dupont beat incumbent Gary Hall in the Republican primary for Flathead County Commissioner by a wide margin Tuesday, 7,837 to 3,475.

April 24, 2008 11 p.m.

Plowing the Sun Road, Many Glacier 'slow going'

It's been a slow go plowing the Sun Road and Many Glacier over the past week as the weather went from bad, to great, to lousy again in the past few days in Glacier National Park.