You are here

Group Pushing Proposal To "Complete" North Cascades National Park

Share
North Cascades National Park is a magnificent, and imposing, landscape that could be made more user-friendly under a proposal to expand the park by some 238,000 acres. Photo of receding mountains in North Cascades National Park by QT Luong, www.terragalleria.com/parks, used with permission.

Its name evokes visions of lofty, snow-covered crags and wild America. A place where few venture far off-road and where wild things roam, an untamed landscape rich with rewards if you have the mettle to explore its mountains.

 

And yet, while North Cascades National Park was designated in 1968, the park embraces an incomplete landscape, one that could be made more robust and attractive to visitors with the addition of nearly 238,000 acres, according to a group pushing for park expansion.

You wouldn't quickly come to think that a park of more than a half-million acres could be incomplete. But when you look at the lay of the land, and at the natural wonders that lie just beyond its boundaries, that conclusion isn't so difficult to reach.

“What essentially happened back in the '58 to '68 period, there was a lot of horse trading about what should be in and what shouldn't be in," explains John Miles, a professor at Western Washington University who is a member of the North Cascades Conservation Council that developed the American Alps Legacy expansion proposal for the park. "Some areas that folks at the time, leaders of the time like Polly Dyer and others, thought should be in were ultimately excluded.

“So what has essentially happened is those people are still around and in their 90s, and so they said, ‘We want to finish the job,’" the professor went on. "'We want to finish the job' was essentially the position they took and add some areas that we thought should have been in the park in the first place."

Covering 504,780 acres and encompassing the Ross Lake and Lake Chelan national recreation areas, North Cascades holds within its existing borders towering mountains popular with climbers, glaciers and snowfields, alpine meadows, and forests that provide habitat for a rich, if not populous, array of wildlife. Black-tailed deer, small numbers of gray wolves, fishers, wolverine, black bear, and at least one grizzly bear, roam the park's landscape.

Alternate Text
Ross Lake is outside the national park's boundaries. NPS photo.

That the national park sandwiches Ross Lake NRA was the result of visions of hydroelectric power to feed Seattle and surrounding communities.

"The reason that it was designated as a recreation area instead of a park was that there was a proposal to raise Ross Dam by 100 feet higher than it presently is, which would have flooded a significant section around Ross Lake," says Professor Miles. "And so the area was placed in an NRA instead of put in park status."

Today, however, interest no longer exists to raise the height of the dam, according to the Conservation Council.

But it's not an easy park to experience. Outside of the Ross Lake NRA, no road dives very far into the landscape. Hiking, backpacking, and paddling are the best ways to see this landscape. As alluring as that landscape and wildlife might be, the park is not exactly user-friendly, notes not only the proponents of the expansion proposal, but also North Cascades Superintendent Chip Jenkins.

“I think one of the things we recognize is that the North Cascades National Park Complex, in many respects, it’s actually more like an Alaskan park than a Lower 48 park in that it is largely a wilderness park," the superintendent points out.

"When North Cascades was created, it was never intended that you would have that experience where you would drive through an entrance gate and you would drive up to that defining visual experience," he explains during a phone conversation. "And I think that is a contributing element to kind of the different relationship that the public has with North Cascades, compared with other parks.

“It’s not the only reason, but I think it’s one of the reasons. You don’t get into a car and drive to a place in the park and have that big, stunning view of a peak or of a glacier or what not."

Instead, as you drive north from Seattle on Interstate 5 you blow past a sign saying "North Cascades National Park," drive along state route 20 through Sedro-Wooley, which proclaims itself the "Gatewaty to the North Cascades," and some 50 miles on down the road you finally find yourself in ... Ross Lake NRA, not the national park.

“And you kind of spit out the other side (of the NRA), and I think for many people it was like, ‘Where were the North Cascades? We went through this thing called the Ross Lake Recreation Area, where are the North Cascades, what is that geographic area?'" says Superintendent Jenkins.

Alternate Text
Parking can be a problem along Highway 20 in Ross Lake NRA, though a management plan due late this week from the Park Service could contain solutions. NPS photo.

The expansion proposal would solve that dilemma by turning Ross Lake NRA into part of the national park proper.

According to Jim Davis, executive director of NCCC, most of the 238,000 acres his group wants added to North Cascades National Park are low-elevation lands in the NRA that frame Highway 20. Such an addition would ban hunting now allowed in areas of the NRA, but it also would make the park more user-friendly, particularly for families, he says.

"It’s primarily front country that we’re looking at adding to the park. There is some recreation in those areas now, but we envision quite a bit more recreation in the future," Mr. Davis explains. "We’re expecting that, ultimately, folks will be very glad that we don’t have hunting layered right on top of family recreation opportunities."

The park staff is expected to release later this week its general management plan for Ross Lake NRA. That document is expected to address accessibility to the national park through the NRA. Under the Park Service's draft environmental impact statement on the management plan, the preferred alternative called for "the North Cascades Highway corridor would function as a 'window on wilderness' where visitors would be provided with meaningful opportunities to see, experience, and learn about the North Cascades. The NPS would create a distinct sense of arrival to help visitors understand they have entered a unit of the National Park System.

The NPS would work with (Washington State Department of Transportation) and (Seattle City Light) to improve signage with the goal of informing people about services and recreational opportunities in the North Cascades NPS Complex. Redesigned and constructed entrances would serve as portals into the North Cascades. Dramatic viewsheds of the Skagit River, jagged mountain peaks, waterfalls and reservoirs would introduce visitors to the North Cascades along the highway corridor. The NPS would work to provide activities to entice people out of their vehicles via enhanced overlooks, the existing visitor center, and visitor facilities in partnership with Seattle City Light and the North Cascades Institute.

Once out of their vehicles, the NPS and partners would provide opportunities for enjoyment and learning, such as ranger-led tours, Diablo Lake tours, and numerous hiking trails. Visitors would be encouraged to venture further into the North Cascades on dayhikes, ranging from short accessible trails to more strenuous hikes that leave the highway corridor and venture into the wilderness.

Alternate Text
The prominent Liberty Bell peak is outside North Cascades National Park. NPS photo.

Along with swallowing Ross Lake NRA, the expansion proposal calls for moving 143,058 acres of U.S. Forest Service lands into the park. Those acres include low-elevation rain forest along the Baker River, portions of the Cascade River, the headwaters of the Skagit River, and the landmark Liberty Bell outcrop found today in the Okanongan-Wenatchee National Forest on the eastern side of the national park.

In doing so, not only would the enlarged park be more attractive and accessible to visitors, says Mr. Davis, but it also would provide safer habitat for wildlife in that hunting would be banned.

"A big part of our motivation of doing this is to provide a real core wildlife habitat protection area," he says. "If you look at issues like wolves and grizzly bears and wolverines in the North Cascades, with grizzly bears they tend to get shot accidentally by bear hunters, and wolves are shot unfortunately by poachers. And so we really are looking at trying to identify some large protected areas where they could roam freely. And it also would increase watchable wildlife, which translates pretty quickly into increased visitation."

Of course, not everyone supports the proposal. Opposition by mountain bikers, hunters, folks who liked to walk their dogs or ride horses in some of the areas initially proposed for inclusion, such as the Golden Horn area in the Okonagan-Wenachee National Forest, led the Conservation Council to trim about 160,000 acres from its proposal. Some in the Methow Valley feared enlarging the park in their direction would bring too many tourists their way, and so the proposal was scaled back there, too. Others in the region, pointing to the great multiple-use opportunities currently available between the mix of Forest Service lands, NRA, and park proper, wonder whether there's a need to fix something that's not broken.

Still, the idea of a larger national park isn't a new one to the Park Service.

"In the recommendations that were put together back in the '50s and the '60s, even the Park Service said that the park boundaries should be larger, encompass many different features," says Superintendent Jenkins. "But ultimately the political compromises that led to the creation of the park created the boundaries where they were.

“What I also think is kind of interesting about the history here is this Highway 20 that bisects the park, when the boundaries were being discussed and when the park was actually created, the road did not actually cross the entire Cascades. It deadended up here at a place called Ross Dam," he adds. "Part of the deal, part of the political compromise, was federal funding to build the highway across the Cascades, and now we have this Highway 20 and it goes up and it goes over two passes, with really world-class scenery.

"It goes over Rainy Pass and Washington Pass and it goes by the prominent features of Liberty Bell. It’s somewhat evocative of going over Tioga Pass in Yosemite (National Park). Really, really stunning alpine national park quality scenery, and of course you’re in the (national) forest."

Not only would the proposed expansion raise the visibility of the national park, but it would be economically beneficial to surrounding communities, according to an economic analysis prepared for the Conservation Council by Thomas Power, a Montana-based economist who long has studied the value of environmental initiatives on local economies.

Alternate Text
Diablo Lake also lies within Ross Lake NRA, not in the national park proper. NPS photo.

According to his analysis, an expanded North Cascades National Park by 2030 would more than quadruple annual spending by visitors and the Park Service in the region, from $15.1 million annually to $66.2 million; the number of jobs in the communities surrounding the park would nearly quadruple from 356 to 1,376; and personal income would triple, from $11.1 million to $33.2 million.

"The expansion of NCNP is intended to provide a much broader range of activities for visitors. This can be expected to keep those visitors longer in the park and increase the likelihood that they will spend one night or more within or outside the park in one of the gateway communities," reads one section of the report. "They then can return to the park to take advantage of more of the park’s recreational opportunities or spend time engaging in recreational activities associated with other public lands in the area or the recreational opportunities provided by private resorts in surrounding communities."

Driving that economic boost is the belief that rolling Ross Lake NRA into the national park will create both greater recognition of, and greater access to, North Cascades National Park. Currently, the park's annual visitation of roughly 20,000 is dwarfed by cross-state neighbor Olympic National Park, which in recent years has seen annual visitation bobbing around 3 million visitors.

Branding, you see, can make a difference.

"I think the American people, as connoisseurs of travel, they recognize the words ‘national park’ as indicating a caliber of experience or a level of quality that they go out of their way to try to experience, that they go out of their way to try to visit," says Superintendent Jenkins. "There’s a certain brand identity of the word 'national park.'

“You look at AAA maps, you look at Google maps, you look on your GPS in your vehicle, places that are identified as national parks, they’re pulled out and they’re highlighted," he adds. "That indicates something about the market demand, I guess.”

How far the expansion proposal advances remains to be seen. Mr. Davis has been working with the staff of U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, with hopes she'll introduce legislation to make the expansion happen.

“Sen. Cantwell's staff is basically in a due dilligence mode at this point. Tie down all those loose ends and look to see if there are any major problems," he said. "We’re hopeful that she’ll come out with a bill very soon, although there’s nothing that promises that at this point.”

Featured Article

Comments

" led the Conservation Council to trim about 160,000 acres from its proposal."
This is a classic example of an orginization compromising away it's ideal even before the fight has begun. What are they afraid of? That the timber industry will call them radicals? That the dam builders will put up a fuss? That the mountain bikers will quit their group. The North Cascades is incomplete habitat. For the sake of the wildlife that depend on the wilderness there for their survival, compromise among the friends of the park is ridiculous!


"You wouldn't quickly come to think that a park of more than a half-million acres could be incomplete. But when you look at the lay of the land, and at the natural wonders that lie just beyond its boundaries, that conclusion isn't so difficult to reach."
Curious why the author didn't mention the hundreds of thousands of acres of USFS wilderness that were created adjacent to the park after its inception? That seems like an important point to mention when folks are stating they didn't get quite what they wanted back in '68.
Also, visitation to the NCNP Complex is well above 300,000 people a year, but I guess it works better in a one-sided article to throw out the 20,000 number.
Whoops! The author forgot to mention (perhaps he didn't know) the North Cascades Highway is closed four to six months a year.
Memo to Chip Jenkins: Folks know they are in the North Cascades, be it park, rec area or forest land, because they are driving on the NORTH CASCADES HIGHWAY.



What I also think is kind of interesting about the history here is this
Highway 20 that bisects the park, when the boundaries were being
discussed and when the park was actually created, the road did not
actually cross the entire Cascades. It deadended up here at a place
called Ross Dam


He adds:

Part of the deal, part of the political compromise, was federal funding to build the highway across the Cascades, and now we have this Highway 20 and it goes up and it goes
over two passes, with really world-class scenery.



This isn't actually correct. There was a much publicized crossing of the highway (much of it dirt) in 1968, the year the park was officially created, by boosters of the highway on each side of the crest. The road did actually cross the entire Cascades.


The original American Alps proposal was downsized by about a third because of strong local opposition, mostly from recreationists, that would probably have doomed the whole idea. I doubt you'd agree that this proposal increases accessibility, as the NPS claims, if you were a climber, backcountry skier, hunter, outfitter, dog-lover, mountain biker, hang glider, or snowmobiler with experience having your activities restricted by the NPS.

Here's some tongue-in-cheek local reaction: http://www.methowvalleynews.com/story.php?id=4372

The proponents perceived threats to wildlife and water quality are greatly exaggerated, in my opinion. Ditto those from hydro, wind farms, mining or logging. Locals already shot down a destination ski resort near the current boundary. Many of the proposed additions outside the North Cascades Highway corridor are already USFS wilderness. I've heard reasonable people, sympathetic to environmental causes, object that the greatest threat to this area is the loss of a working system of multiple-use recreation, if this proposal comes to pass.

Kurt's article goes on at some length about the supposed economic benefits that would accrue from this expansion, but there is nary a mention of costs at a time of budgetary crisis. The USFS is already cut to the bone; transferring these areas to the top-heavy NPS would likely be seriously expensive in paperwork alone. It seemed during my career that way over half the cost of NPS projects was overhead such as planning and environmental compliance. For most NPS managers, new programs and infrastructure were always a much higher priority than taking care of what they already had.

According to Superintendent Jenkins, " ...it was never intended that you would have that experience where you would drive through an entrance gate and you would drive up to that defining visual experience...and I think that is a contributing element to kind of the different relationship that the public has with North Cascades, compared with other parks."

Yet that is precisely what this expansion proposes to alter. What exactly has changed since NOCA was created? Is there anything really broke here that needs fixing?


When I visited the area in 2009 I definately had some confusion of what the area was. I was in the North Cascades visitors centre, but I was actually in a NRA, and when looking at driving into the park proper to get out and hike there were only minor access points over poor quality roads


The Methow Valley News publishers are intimately involved in the heli-skiing business (which would be big losers since a park designation would end their noisy overflights) so their opposition to "development" is laughable but not in the way that the authors intended.


Hey Anon of 11/29 @ 11:30: A quick bit of fact checking shows the Methow Valley News publisher to be a guy named Donald Nelson.  Near as I can tell, Donald Nelson has nothing at all to do with the North Cascades helicopter skiing enterprise.  He is a former editor or publisher of a west-side business journal, so one might expect him to naturally be more aligned with the King County Council and the Responsible Republican groups whose support N3C worked so hard to cultivate in the early days of their proposal -- before the Mounties and the UW Climbing club.
 
All that said, he'd probably be a fool to jump too quickly to support the type of economic expansion and increased visitation numbers proposed in the N3C Economic Forecast as folks over in the Methow have been fighting since the late 60's to keep the Methow from turning into a destination resort or "gateway" community.  Ironically, this is exactly what N3C has proposed as the foundation of their proposal.  New visitor centers, hotels, commercial establishments, 7-11's in Mazama and Marblemount.  It all is weird, and one has to suspect big money is lurking somewhere...especially if Maria Cantwell and Co. are being courted as the sponsors for legislation at the federal level.
 
The author should also be reminded that this 20,000 visitor a year # is a bogus bit of spin-doctoring.  WSDOT figures show between 400,000 & 500,000 annual trips over Washington Pass and into the Methow Valley (in about 5 months.  Every single one of those travelers feels as though they are visiting the "North Cascades" and COULD be counted as a VISITOR if one wanted to be intellectually honest in terms of quantifying how many people come to see and enjoy the "North Cascades".  Most of them only want an ice cream cone and a photo in Winthrop anyway.  A National Park, with few visitors (God forbid like Alaska!) doesn't seem like such a bad thing to any of us who have been unable to secure backcountry campsites at Rainier or the Olympics over the past 30 years.
The plan referenced above for the Ross Lake area will be interesting to review once it comes out -- hopefully as soon as the author suggests. 
 
It will at least provide us with a semi-objective look at the overall needs of this management unit -- free from the rampant spin that dominates the pieces provided by N3C and crafted into "articles" like this one.
 
 
 
 
 


I grew up in Skagit Valley. The vast majority of "visitors" to this park are people who are just driving from Western Washingto to Eastern Washington. The Actual Park Boundaries more than likely see less than 10,000 people a year. Most of them are made up of people who venture just outside the recreational area around Ross Lake and the short stretch of the Pacific Crest Trail that leads from Highway 20 into the Park on it's way to Lake Chelan. 99.9% of that Park sees no human activity. Expanding the Park would decrease outdoor recreational oppertunities not increase them. As you are aware permits and permission must be obtained to camp within the Park boundaries and camping is restricted to designated areas. The Park would be of better use as National Wilderness. The National Wilderness designation has more protections against developement but allows far more freedom for recreation.


Add comment

CAPTCHA

This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

The Essential RVing Guide

The Essential RVing Guide to the National Parks

The National Parks RVing Guide, aka the Essential RVing Guide To The National Parks, is the definitive guide for RVers seeking information on campgrounds in the National Park System where they can park their rigs. It's available for free for both iPhones and Android models.

This app is packed with RVing specific details on more than 250 campgrounds in more than 70 parks.

You'll also find stories about RVing in the parks, some tips if you've just recently turned into an RVer, and some planning suggestions. A bonus that wasn't in the previous eBook or PDF versions of this guide are feeds of Traveler content: you'll find our latest stories as well as our most recent podcasts just a click away.

So whether you have an iPhone or an Android, download this app and start exploring the campgrounds in the National Park System where you can park your rig.