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Updated: Big Bend National Park Proposing To Cut Mountain Bike Trail, PEER, NPS Retirees Raise Objections

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Big Bend's Lone Mountain would be circled with a hiking and biking
trail under a proposed Centennial Initiative project. Photo by Jeff
Blaylock, used with permission.

The very purpose and role of national parks is being drawn into question over a proposal by Big Bend National Park officials to cut a dual-use mountain bike trail into a hillside near Panther Junction.

In some aspects, the proposal underscores the gist of a Traveler column from last month, one in which we broached the subject of the popularity of having a national park nearby but the often-resulting opposition to many of the rules and regulations -- and even restrictions -- that come with such an entity on the landscape.

At the heart of the issue, as opponents to the mountain bike trail note, is the role national parks were created and the mandate given the National Park Service to manage them. While public enjoyment and recreation are certainly key to the parks, resource management is foremost the role of the Park Service.

Against that mandate, questions are being raised over whether Big Bend officials are holding to that mandate, or bending over to placate a special interest group that already has more than 300 miles of mountain biking opportunities in the park.

Big Bend officials are preparing an environmental assessment into a roughly 10-mile-long network of trails that would be cut into an undeveloped part of the park. Part of the project would include parking for a trailhead and a picnic area near the Panther Junction Visitor Center, and a second trailhead near Grapevine Hills Road.

While the park describes this trail as an added recreational outlet for park visitors, members of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees see it as little more than a "promotion of the mountain bike industry" and a move that facilitates "the regrettable trend toward parks becoming venues for extreme sports."

This project did not arise overnight. Indeed, back in 2007 it was seen as a "centennial project" by Interior officials under the George W. Bush administration. Back then, the International Mountain Bicycling Association was a strong proponent, and had promised to come up with half of the $12,000 cost then estimated for the project.

The proposed loop trail would start near the visitor center at Panther Junction, cross the Chihuahuan desert and wrap Lone Mountain while providing sweeping views of the Chisos Mountains, the southern-most mountain range in the country.

While Big Bend officials say the trail is simply another recreational outlet for park visitors, they do note that it's part of a deal IMBA struck with the National Park Service years ago to explore more mountain biking in the park system.

The purpose of the proposed project is to provide park visitors a trail-based recreational opportunity in an area of the park where none currently exists. The proposed action is in keeping with a 2002 Memorandum of Agreement between NPS and the International Mountain Biking Association that encouraged identifying mountain biking opportunities in the national parks, including new trail construction in appropriate areas. The primary objectives of the proposal are to: 1) create new recreational opportunities for park visitors, and 2) provide a trail-based recreational opportunity in the vicinity of Panther Junction.

   
That arrangement with IMBA is part of the issue cited by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility in their objections.

"The project is a collaboration between the south Texas national park and a private mountain biking group, raising disturbing “pay-to-play” questions about user groups carving out park lands for special purposes," the group said in comments it filed with the Park Service.
 
Most of the backcountry trail would be single-track – approximately the width of a bike, with one-way traffic moving counter clockwise.  Horses would be barred from the trail.
 
“Big Bend calls this a ‘multi-use’ trail but it is clearly designed for high-speed, high-thrill biking.  Any hikers foolish enough to venture on this path risk tread marks across their backs,” said PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that the EA dryly concedes “some visitors might not enjoy their experience sharing the proposed trail with mountain bikers.” 

“We are not anti-mountain biking," said Mr. Ruch, "but are concerned that scarce public dollars may be diverted to promote exclusionary recreation scratched out of national park backcountry.” 

In their comments on the proposal, members of the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees said Big Bend officials seem to be "pursuing an agenda not supported by law, policy and common sense."

"The mountain bike trail construction proposal for Big Bend NP raises serious questions regarding the purpose of National Parks. Through law, Congress and the courts have clearly established that resource protection must always come before visitor enjoyment," Rick Smith, who chairs the coalition's executive committee, wrote to the park. "While there may often be a tug of war between those who place enjoyment first and those who place preservation first, the law clearly states which of the interests has priority. 

"Further, NPS Policies articulate this legal precedence into coherent direction for the agency to place resource protection as the primary role of the agency in managing our parks," he added. "In the case of this EA we believe that single-track mountain biking may be enjoyable for the participants but we do not believe it is necessary or appropriate for experiencing the value and purposes for which national parks are set aside by Congress and construction of a single use trail certainly does not conform to the resource protection deference over public enjoyment the park must honor."

Carving this stretch of bike trail, wrote Mr. Smith, "provides no additional means of appreciating park wilderness beyond that available on existing backcountry roads, particularly on roads with very low speeds and levels of vehicular traffic."

"There is nothing about single-track mountain biking that adds a unique opportunity to appreciate the natural and cultural resources of this national park. On the contrary, the rough, rocky terrain combined with hazardous vegetation detracts from that opportunity. In addition there are hundreds of miles of single track opportunities on nearby private and state lands where mountain biking is being actively welcomed and promoted."

PEER's other concerns include:

*  This would be the first trail constructed from scratch on undeveloped park land to accommodate mountain bicycles.   A pending rule change, also supported by IMBA would open millions of acres of national park backcountry, including recommended wilderness, to mountain bike trails;

*  Big Bend already has 200 miles of trails and roads open to mountain biking and there are another 900 miles of bike-accessible trails and roads on state and private lands surrounding Big Bend;

*  This trail would be expensive to maintain and vulnerable to high erosion.  Yet Big Bend, like other national parks, has a sizeable backlog of maintenance needs on existing facilities, and;

*  While the proposed trail is not in designated wilderness, the project would likely preclude the land from ever being designating as wilderness.
 
“The plan at Big Bend is without precedent in the national park system,” added Mr. Ruch, who is urging members of the public to send comments to Big Bend National Park before the comment period on the park's Environmental Assessment runs out April 2.  “This is part of the steady degradation of our parks into settings for thrill sports rather than preserves for enjoyment of natural and cultural features.”
 
Currently, bicycles are allowed on park roads, dirt or paved, as well as on trails in developed areas, such as the South Rim Village at the Grand Canyon.  Backcountry trails are generally reserved for hikers and horseback riders. IMBA began its campaign to gain access to national parks trails in 2002.

A copy of the park's environmental assessment is attached below. To voice your opinion on this project, head to this site.

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Kurt, you're right: "The very purpose and role of national parks is being drawn into question" by this initiative. The question is whether the national parks are going to continue to slide into national irrelevance, with a few iconic places visited by hordes in Winnebagos and the backcountry seen mainly on televisions and computer screens. That's the vision the PEER graybeards have for the national parks, and it would mean the slow death of them aside from a few Disneylandesque venues. I read part of the exhaustive 93-page Environmental Assessment, a document so elaborate that it amounts to a full Environmental Impact Statement, and it's plain that the NPS is beginning to reject the crabbed vision shared by PEER and other devotees of stasis and inevitable decline. Good for the NPS. I'll be sending the park superintendent a letter in support of Big Bend's planned alternative.


imtbke,

I think you're overstating the "irrelevance" of the backcountry.  Plenty of the backcountry requires reservations to be made months in advance in order to secure a campsite.  Besides, would it really still be backcountry wilderness with mountain bikes zipping through it?  Especially once a precident is established for building trails in backcountry areas proposed for wilderness designation?


Like most groups the mountain bike fraternity is it's own worst enemy. In too many places single track biking is about adrenaline rushes and racing. If you question that just look at the various websites. This is not to dispute that many mountain bikers love the natural world as much as any hiker. The ATV crowd always says it is just a few bad apples that create a bad impression and the same can be said of mountain bikers. But when there is pressure to create a multitude of trails including illegal ones in parks around the country, and hikers and horsebackers are often frightened on narrow trails,there is an understandable backlash. Big Bend NP is far from the crowds near big cities, and by itself the proposed trail in undisturbed country is relatively innocuous. So much so that one of the local promoters told me it will not attract many mountain bikers. Even the draft EA says something similar. But the main question is why do it when there is so much single track available in the larger Big Bend area. And what is wrong with rough dirt roads with very little vehicular traffic? Perhaps it is because it doesn't provide the adrenaline rushes so many seek.


Justinh,

You're right, of course, that such areas exist. I don't know that plenty of such areas do. But indeed I may be, as you argue, overstating the point. Most national park units are small enough that the backcountry is accessible by the 19th century means (on foot and the backs of large mammals) that the graybeards insist on imposing on everyone else. To the extent people are still willing to use those means, they will remain at least modestly popular.

My comment, now that I reflect on it, applies better to the National Wilderness Preservation System. Through agency misinterpretations of the Wilderness Act, which have gotten to the point that staff can't use a wheelbarrow or a chainsaw to maintain a trail, the vast wilderness landholdings have become inaccessible enough that their hold on people's imagination (outside of the fervent wilderness lobby and perhaps a small cohort of over-60 Caucasians who backpacked in it circa 1970) has got to be waning. I don't think anyone can dispute that much wilderness is essentially unvisited, its trails disappearing and its appeal to all but the foregoing tiny bands rather minimal. That's not good for wilderness or today's sedentary youth. (Not that Wilderness has to be cleaned up and groomed for mass visitation, of course.)

So I think your point is well-taken, but I also think that I've fairly characterized the essential issue, which is whether the national parks are going to have a future or not. The PEER approach will lead to a dead end.


imtnbke,

Even the largest parks are accessible by foot and horseback, which is the point of backpacking through preserved wilderness.  I'm not sure I follow your charaterization that hiking or horseback riding can be "imposed" on people.

The real point of disagreement seems to be over what to do with wilderness.  What I hear you saying is 1) that because not enough of it is being visited, we  might as well open it to mountain biking 2) and if it were open to mountain biking, its characteristics as wilderness wouldn't be especially marred by this.

I disagree with 1 and 2.  But of course there may not be a right answer here (apart from legal issues)--just different values.  (Incidentally, I happen to be a pretty avid mountain biker as well as a backpacker.)


Zeb,

Mark from IMBA made quite clear that mountain bikers prefer thrills. I was simply reiterating his words to get that point across. And I don't believe I wrote that mountain bikers have no respect for nature. That was your inference.

But really, if challenging single track is the "prize" mountain bikers are seeking, as Mark stated, does it matter what the landscape is? And as you make clear, this isn't about a 10-mile stretch of trail, this is about a much, much longer network threaded through the park(s).

Imtnbk, the parks will slide into irrelevance if they are overrun by any and all recreational pursuits simply for the sake of those pursuits and not for the sake of what they were intended to preserve.

P.S. -- As for the 93-page EA amounting to a full-blown EIS, ask the folks at Cape Hatteras or Grand Canyon. Their EISes on ORVs on Hatteras and overflights at Grand Canyon were well more than seven times that long.


I have one question though it may not be in the format it should...

In the original formation of the national parks what was the intended mode of transportation to allow the people to visit and see the parks?

Seeing how some of the first issues with the NPS was that it catered only to the rich who could... "A" get time off work, "B" afford to travel the great distances to get to the parks, and "C" afford the accomodations that were built there.


Kurt, let me assure you that this trail won't constitute a thrillride — that's not the intent of the design. You paint mountain biking with an awfully broad brush, as if riding singletrack is all about speed and thrills, and cycling on dirt roads is necessarily slow and cautious. Not so. The Big Bend trail will be designed so beginner and intermediate mountain bikers can enjoy it at modest speeds, with plenty of opportunity to enjoy the scenery and react to other trail users. It's true that more advanced riders may not be drawn to this trail — they'll likely take a lap on it and decide that it's too beginner-friendly for them. That's okay — they'll find plenty of opportunity to charge Big Bend's rugged dirt roads at higher speeds (though under the posted speed limits, of course).

Believe it or not, riding a bicycle on a trail can provide the same opportunities to observe and interact with the natural world that hiking does. A narrow trail brings the cyclist that much closer to the natural environment — more so that riding on a dirt road. (Do you like to hike on roads? I didn't think so.) Foot travel doesn't automatically create a contemplative experience either — we've all met hikers who seem more focused on the mileage they're covering than their surroundings. When I trail run (which I enjoy frequently) it's sometimes more of an athletic challenge than a nature-based experience. That's okay, I can take a leisurely lap of the same trail on my mountain bike afterwards and soak in the natural beauty of the trail.

The point is that adding a small amount of well-desiged, shared-use trail at Big Bend might be a good thing. I hope we get the chance to try it!


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