
Centennial Initiative #InclusiveVision4Next100United States
Apr 26, 2016
Our Public Lands:
An Inclusive Vision for the Next 100 Years
Throughout history, our public lands - including national parks, forests, monuments and other areas - have played an important role as part of America’s identity. Unfortunately, these lands have not always been reflective of our country’s demographic and ethnic diversity. This disconnect is becoming more apparent as the face of our country continues to change at a rapid pace and more urgent because the future of our public lands will depend upon public support from all Americans.
Our public lands are facing pressure in Washington, D.C., where some members of Congress would like to sell them off -- and strip the President of his authority to protect our existing national parks and monuments or to create new ones. These attacks are happening alongside increasing commercial and energy development which is putting pressure on our public lands and threatening valuable historical and cultural treasures. Across the country, many of our communities have too little open space; and climate change, air and water pollution are risking our families’ health and our future.
Without a broad base of support, we are at risk of losing the historic, cultural, natural, spiritual, economic and recreational resources that our public lands currently provide and of missing opportunities to identify and conserve other valuable resources for future generations.
As America’s National Park Service celebrates its centennial this summer, we have a responsibility to create a vision for the next century that focuses on the importance of public lands for all Americans. We must find ways to engage all segments of our population so that they become active users, owners and supporters of public lands.
A more inclusive approach to our country’s public lands over the next 100 years must be driven by three guiding principles:
• REFLECT THE FACES OF OUR COUNTRY: Our public lands must reflect the demographic and ethnic diversity of our nation’s citizens among visitors, the agencies’ workforce and in the designation of new units. This will require a cultural shift within the agencies responsible for managing and overseeing these spaces and a commitment from people outside the agencies to join together to support this approach.
• RESPECT FOR ALL CULTURES: Our public lands play a unique role in capturing the many different historical, cultural and spiritual stories that have shaped this country; celebrating acts of bravery and sacrifice, recognizing the unique contributions of all Americans, and providing opportunities for atonement and healing. We need to make sure that the full range of these stories are being told at existing and new park sites and public lands. Protecting cultural and natural landscapes that tell America’s complex history will help us learn from our past, honor our ancestors and educate future generations.
• RESPONSIBILITY TO ACTIVELY ENGAGE ALL PEOPLE: The future of our
public lands depends upon public support from all Americans. Moving forward, we must actively and authentically engage a diverse range of communities in new and meaningful ways to build support for our public lands and shape the direction of our future public lands and natural resources policies.
We must use this opportunity to challenge America in its second century of conservation to create a system of public lands that engage, reflect and honor our nation’s entire people. By doing so, the 21st century will be about protecting our current public lands and designating new landscapes that more broadly reflect America’s rich and varied culture.
Maite Arce
President/CEO
Hispanic Access Foundation
Frank & Audrey Peterman
Founders
Diverse Environmental Leaders Speakers Bureau
José G. González
Founder
Latino Outdoors
Priscilla Ouchida
Executive Director
Japanese American Citizens League
Vanessa Braided Hair
Co-Founder
ecoCheyenne
Peter Conroy
Co-Chair
Freedom Riders Park
Charles Person
Original Freedom Rider
Shantha Ready Alonso
Executive Director
Creation Justice Ministries
Jocelyn Torres
Nevada Program Director
Conservation Lands Foundation
Steve Dunwoody
California Director
Vet Voice Foundation
Jes Ward
Executive Director
cityWILD
Luke Miguel Argleben
Student Advocate
Dr. Carolyn Finney
Author
Black Faces White Spaces
Rue Mapp
Founder and CEO
Outdoor Afro
Camilla Simon
Director
HECHO
Mark Magaña
President
GreenLatinos
Silvia N. Perez-Rathell
National Director for Corporate & Federal Relations
League of United Latin American Citizens
Teresa Ana Martinez
Executive Director
Continental Divide Trail Coalition
Loretta E. Pineda
Executive Director
Environmental Learning for Kids
Xavier Morales
Executive Director
Latino Coalition for a Healthy California
Donald Cravins, Jr.
Senior Vice President for Policy
National Urban League
Hillerie C. Patton
President
The Dignitas Agency
Sarah Milligan-Toffler
Executive Director
Children & Nature Network
Mark Masaoka
Policy Director
Asian Pacific Policy & Planning Council
Jose Davila
Vice President for Policy & Government Relations
Hispanic Federation
Chad Brown M.Sc.
Founder & Executive Director
Soul River Inc. - Runs Wild
Pastor Frank Ruiz
Co-Founder
Por La Creación
Faith Based Alliance
Christine Alonzo
Executive Director
The Colorado Latino Leadership, Advocacy and Research Organization
Lorette Picciano
Executive Director
Rural Coalition
Glenn Nelson
Founder
The Trail Posse
Angela Florez
Director of Leadership Programs
Valle del Sol
Jessica Reeves
Chief Operating Officer
VotoLatino
Pamela Rivera
Partnership & Constituency Advocate
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