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Op-Ed | The Qualities Needed In The Next National Park Service Director

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The next director of the National Park Service should bring many of the same traits exhibited by Newton Drury, Horace Albright, George Hartzog, and Connie Wirth (L to R)/NPS

Editor's note: Jonathan Jarvis, the 18th director of the National Park Service, retired today. Who will be his successor? Harry Butowsky, a retired National Park Service historian, outlines some qualities needed in the agency's 19th director.

In 2017, the National Park Service begins not only a new year but also a new era with new leadership. The National Park Service finished its first 100 years with many examples of excellent leadership and, unfortunately, some examples of poor or no leadership. 

The past seven years have been hard on the National Park Service. Our agency has been beset by low morale, a continued lack of adequate funding that goes back to the last century, a growing maintenance backlog, sexual harassment scandals, overcrowding in our national parks, fraud by at least one regional director, and an inability to turn the centennial of the National Park Service into a solid foundation upon which to base the next 100 years.

What is needed now is leadership of the type the National Park Service has not experienced for the last generation.

Many of our previous directors, beginning with Stephen Mather and Horace Albright, are now legendary. Mather and Albright established the National Park Service on a firm foundation and gave it life. Their policies and examples have served the agency well over the last century. They understood the importance of history and used history to give life to the National Park System.

These men were followed by Newton Drury, Connie Wirth, George Hartzog, Russell Dickenson, and James Ridenour. Each took on the problems of the day to enrich the service. They each passed to the next generation of Americans a National Park System in better condition then when they received it.

All had important leadership qualities. They were able to influence, motivate, and enable others to contribute toward the effectiveness and success of the National Park Service. Each had the ability to bring positive change to the agency. They were all men of substance and accomplishment with long careers before they became the director of the National Park Service.

During the Wilson administration in 1915, Interior Secretary Franklin K. Lane was perfectly willing to pick a Republican outsider renowned for his business acumen to launch the service. Lane picked Mather, a successful businessman then at the pinnacle of his private career — a man of vision and achievement. Lane knew that Mather could tackle difficult problems and achieve results.

Mather had ideas gleaned from years in the business world. He knew how to mobilize people and resources to accomplish larger aims. Lane understood this. In 1916, working with the railroads and other private groups, Mather helped lay the foundation of the National Park Service, defining and establishing the policies under which its areas were to be developed and conserved unimpaired.

Using the railroads, Mather engaged Congress with the facts. Even in 1917, tourism led by the national parks was a $500 million business. Why should the country just throw that away?

Mather knew how to spot and hire good employees. Albright was one of his first hires and worked with Mather throughout his tenure as director and went on to succeed him. Albright also was a man of vision and common sense and was able to engineer the transfer of 64 parks from the War Department to the National Park Service after meeting with President Franklin Roosevelt in 1933. He knew how to sell his idea to create a larger and more comprehensive National Park System.

Stephen Mather, a businessman, not a bureaucrat, was chosen to be the first director of the National Park Service/NPS

Today, the next director of the National Park Service needs to be as bold. Unfortunately, there is little that is bold from inside the government, since the bureaucracy will never allow it.

Today, there are multiple threats to the National Park System. There is a real threat to their future that only an outsider dare take on. Mather and Drury were not afraid to take on interests that posed a threat to the National Park System.

Drury was an outsider, first serving 20 years as executive secretary of the Save-the-Redwoods League prior to becoming National Park Service director. Born in Berkeley, he was the third Californian, after Mather and Albright, to lead NPS. His term was perhaps the most critical NPS has seen. Drury turned back incessant demands to use the parks for mining, grazing, logging, and farming under the guise of wartime or post-war necessity. In spite of intense political pressure, Drury protected the parks and kept them inviolate.

Wirth also grew up in a park environment — his father was park superintendent for the city of Hartford, Connecticut, and later the city of Minneapolis. Wirth took a degree in landscape architecture from what is now the University of Massachusetts. He first came to the Washington, D.C., area to work for the National Capital Park and Planning Commission. Albright had him transferred into NPS, where he was put in charge of the Branch of Lands. He went on to supervise the Interior Department's Civilian Conservation Corps program, nationwide. As director, he won President Eisenhower's approval of a 10-year, billion-dollar Mission 66 park rehabilitation program. Mission 66 remains today the largest and most important fiscal achievement to improve the infrastructure of the National Park Service.

Hartzog, in the years leading up to his tenure as director, was a ranger at Great Smoky Mountains National Park and superintendent of Jefferson National Expansion Memorial National Historic Site in St. Louis, where he spearheaded the project for Eero Saarinen's Gateway Arch.

As director, he served as Stewart Udall's right arm in achieving a remarkably productive legislative program that included 62 new parks, the Historic Preservation Act of 1966, and the Bible amendment to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act that led to the establishment of the Alaska parks. Much of the nature and scope of the National Park Service today owes its creation to the vision of Hartzog.

Dickenson was a Marine Corps veteran who worked his way up through the NPS ranks. Dickenson held a variety of positions within the National Park Service — before ascending to the directorship in May 1980. Having risen through the ranks and enjoying the respect of his colleagues, Dickenson restored organizational stability to the Park Service after a succession of short-term directors. He obtained its support and that of Congress for the Park Restoration and Improvement Program, which devoted more than a billion dollars over five years to park resources and facilities.

Ridenour came from outside the National Park Service. He was formerly head of Indiana's Department of Natural Resources and served as director during the Bush administration (1989-1993).

Doubting the national significance of Steamtown and other proposed parks driven by economic development interests, he spoke out against the "thinning of the blood" of the National Park System and sought to regain the initiative from Congress in charting its expansion. He also worked to achieve a greater financial return to the Park Service from park concessions. In 1990, the Richard King Mellon Foundation made the largest single park donation yet: $10.5 million for additional lands at the Antietam, Gettysburg, Fredericksburg, and Petersburg Civil War battlefields, Pecos National Historical Park, and Shenandoah National Park. Ridenour also warned us of the dangers of too large and rapid expansion of the system.

All of these men exhibited leadership and were not only able to identify challenges faced by the National Park Service but were able to solve these challenges. They were men of knowledge and substance. They had the courage of their convictions and were not afraid to do what was right and good for the National Park Service.

A word about their opposites, then, the politically-inclined directors who have directed the National Park Service for the last generation. We just suffered through our last. Sure, they know what we want to hear. The point is that they tell everyone what they want to hear. They take no stands; they take no risks. Like the worst of our political appointees, they believe in going along to get along. They have devastated the morale of our employees.

The National Park Service now faces new challenges. For example, in 2009, the National Parks Second Century Commission report stated the following:

“National parks are among our most admired public institutions. We envision the second century National Park Service supporting vital public purposes, the national parks used by the American people as venues for learning and civic dialogue, as well as for recreation and refreshment. We see the national park system managed with explicit goals to preserve and interpret our nation’s sweep of history and culture, sustain biological diversity, and protect ecological integrity. Based on sound science and current scholarship, the park system will encompass a more complete representation of the nation’s terrestrial and ocean heritage, our rich and diverse cultural history, and our evolving national narrative. Parks will be key elements in a network of connected ecological systems and historical sites, and public and private lands and waters that are linked together across the nation and the continent. Lived-in landscapes will be an integral part of these great corridors of conservation.”

Fine, but each of these goals is a minefield, just as similar goals were to Mather and Albright.

In order to accomplish these goals, new leadership is needed to inspire the employees of the National Park Service and to reconnect with the American people. This leadership will need strong managerial traits. They are the same traits used by the Mather, Albright, Drury, Wirth, Hartzog, Dickenson, and Ridenour.

These traits are the ability to focus on outstanding problems, exhibit confidence in solving issues, use transparency in all respects, have integrity, offer inspiration, and, above all, show a passion for your work.  

With the exception of some great and innovative National Park Service directors such as Hartzog and Dickenson, you don’t give that agenda to a bureaucrat to solve. True innovation usually comes from outside of the government. It comes from a Mather, an Albright, or a Drury.  As John F. Kennedy discovered when speaking of the State Department, it was like a bowl of Jell-O. When you kicked it, it jiggled a lot, and then settled right back into place.

The question is where to look for a new director who knows that. Anyone can talk about vision, but few can get it done. I believe the new director must come from the private sector outside of the ranks of the National Park Service and federal government. Given the poor quality of leadership the National Park Service has suffered for the last generation, an infusion of new blood is critical.  Only an outsider will be able to secure the agency’s confidence after decades of lackluster appointments. We need a new beginning. We need a person with a fresh outlook and new ideas.

The next director will have to focus a laser beam on the huge maintenance backlog and lack of adequate staffing in our parks. He/she will have to inspire confidence among our employees that their solutions will solve our problems. Every decision he/she makes must be transparent and be explained to the employees of the National Park Service. He/she must inspire everyone to do his/her best in the performance of duties and exhibit a passion for the parks and the core natural and cultural values they contain.

He/she must inspire an atmosphere of innovation where employees can contribute ideas to improve the management of their parks and, finally, he/she must have the patience to work out difficult issues that are complex and not subject to immediate solution.

I believe our next director must have the qualities and talents of Mather. Our next director should have a record of accomplishment in business or some other aspect of the private sector. Our next director should have no ties with the agency but be free to look at the agency with a fresh perspective to decide what must be done.

Our next director must be a problem solver. Our next director must give the National Park Service and System a new beginning. He/she must have the patience to work out difficult issues that are complex and not subject to immediate solution.

And yet, the incoming director should also realize and appreciate the wondrous resources – natural, cultural, historical – held within the National Park System and be committed to seeing they remain unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.

In 2017, we have a chance to begin again and start the next hundred years of the history of the National Park Service with as strong of a leader as Mather and Albright demonstrated in the founding years of the National Park Service. We need to build a firm foundation to do this.

The National Park Service needs the best leadership available. The American people and the thousands of hard working and loyal NPS employees deserve no less.

Comments

Harry, this is superb. I hope Ryan Zinke is reading The Traveler, and further passes this along to the President-Elect. Certainly nothing I have seen in the media comes close to your reasoned analysis. Why do great leaders look outside bureaucracy? Even Horace Albright underscored that point. Because a bureaucracy, in his words, "is just another bureaucracy." Now that the Park Service has become what Albright feared, it will take another Mather or Albright to undo it.


A good read.

 

My concern is that the 'fresh perspective' from an outsider does indeed ensure that 'the wondrous resources - natural, cultural, historical - held within the National Park System and be committed to seeing they remain unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.' My concern, of course, is that an outsider named by this uber-profit motivated administration would act overtly or covertly to liquidate or consume those wondrous resources.


Conrad Wirth placed obstacles in the way of the Ice Age National Park being designated and Jon Jarvis prevented the Ice Age National Scenic Trail from becoming a unit of NPS. How about the next NPS Director is someone interested in filling gaps in the System or who does not suffer from Mountain Majesty Bias?


Interesting article, but I am concerned that the solutions offered for the problems within the NPS are derived from the past.  If we want to join the 21st Century we need to look forward to true innovators; people not afraid to move into the future.  The reverance of the past and past leaders is not a progressive outlook....it does not address the deeply embedded "great white male" culture that has existed in the NPS since its formation.  It has led to the perpetuation of a single-mindedness that has embraced sexist and even racist behavior.  It has always seemed to me that the NPS states they want to move ahead, but the over-dedication and over-honoring of tradition keeps the agency locked into the past.  It has become cult-like in its extreme need to look back to a finer time.  The NPS has never shed its military roots and while the agency encourages employees to speak up and out, but they really don't want to hear it or do anything about it--the "chain of command" is priotized and protected. Employees are expected to hold the line and maintain the image; "you can't say that" and "you can't do that" are the most common catch-phrases in the service. Staff and professional employees need to be as honored as the "ranger"....I would like to see the uniform go away....that might be a good first step in breaking the mold that has immersed the NPS.

 


Rick, J. Horace McFarland was giving this speech exactly 100 years ago today at the Fourth National Parks Conference, convened by Stephen T. Mather in Washington, D.C.

https://archive.org/stream/economicdestinyo00mcfa/economicdestinyo00mcfa...,

As Americans, we have ALWAYS tied the national park idea to the profit motive. Certainly, Trump's administration will not be the first "uber-profit motivated administration" in American history. What inspired McFarland to give this speech--and many like it over the previous decade? In part, and in fact in large part, the loss of the Hetch Hetchy Valley under Woodrow Wilson's "uber-profit motivated administration." Presevationists needed to turn the argument, or lose all of the national parks. P.S. Not that it really matters, but Wilson was a Democrat.

What Harry is driving at is to forget the labels and start looking at the people--and the culture. Newspapers don't want you doing that, because yes, they live on labels. The television media is even worse. They have you convinced that Trump is different, when he is not different in the least. He is rather an American, using American arguments, as did J. Horace McFarland 100 years ago. P.S. McFarland spearheaded the movement for the National Park Service, again, reminding Americans of the bottom line.

If we don't like the bottom line, we're a little late. Nor is anyone going to "liquidate" the parks, now that they are cash cows for many states. The system works just fine. While Uncle Sam maintains the parks, the corporations get to take the profits. Again, what Harry is driving at is the need for balance, not throwing the system out.

That will only come from someone who understands what "the system" really is, and why a bureaucracy, as it rushes to perpetuate itself, prefers the strategy you are using here. "They're coming after your wondrous resources!" If you don't pick "us" again, the parks will be ground to dust.

Yes, they will, if we now pick another bureaucrat instead of a leader. We'll know the moment he or she opens their mouth. If out comes "race, class, gender, and diversity," we'll know that Donald Trump is another Woodrow Wilson, the first "uber-profit motivated" president willing to give a national park away. P.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, both D-California, say we will never get Hetch Hetchy back. Again, isn't history fun?


Al, I was with you until you started demonizing the media and minimizing the actual words and deeds of Trump. At that point, I'm sorry, but you are simply another apologist.

 

I have serious hopes and expectations for the future of the NPS. I thought Harry Butowsky's article was very interesting and thought-provoking, however none of you apologists for Trump will lull me into complacency.


I think the choice of the next NPS Director, indeed the National Parks themselves, will likely become irrelevant once our fascist Manchurian candidate is inaugurated.  Prolonged economic depression is probably the most benign of the Trumpian futures awaiting us if he somehow avoids blundering into nuclear war.


Well, Rick, at least you got halfway through. Now, did you read McFarland's speech? I was waiting to see if you would catch the part about running the national parks without corporate influence, i.e., the government should provide all of the services.

Trump is not the issue here. Staying informed is the issue. If you think the media does that, fine. If you think those criticizing the media are demonizing it, fine. What I think is that people don't read enough, other than what they want to read. Worse, they then believe everything they read. "The actual words and deeds of Trump," as you put them, come from the sources you prefer. A historian is obligated to read every source, and no, that does not make me an apologist. I know where Mr. Trump has let us down, but then, I know where Secretary Clinton let us down, as well. Now, read Mr. McFarland's speech. You might learn something you don't already believe. 

 

 

 


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