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For Immediate Release: Wednesday, November 30, 2005
Contact: Chas Offutt (202) 265-7337
National Parks to Seek Corporate Sponsorships
Corporate Funds Will Alter Park Landscapes and Sway Policies
Washington, DC — In a quiet but far-reaching change, the National
Park Service is poised to adopt a new policy of aggressively seeking
corporate sponsorship of park projects and facilities. In return for
financial sponsorships, the plan will give corporate donors naming
rights, use of National Park symbols and personnel in advertising and
much greater influence over park managers, according to public comments
filed today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).
“This starts a slow motion commercialization of the national park
system,” stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. “What will be
allowed stops just short of licensing ads for ‘The Official Beer of
Yosemite’ or ‘ Old Faithful, Brought to You by Viagara.’”
The Park Service has put forward a draft directive encouraging
active pursuit of potential financial donors and repealing the agency’s
current passive posture of merely accepting donations. Public comment
on the plan closes this week. Interior Secretary Gale Norton has hailed
the plan as an “exciting” new approach for broadening the funding base
for national parks.
Park managers would be encouraged to offer packages that attract big corporate donors, including –
- Liberalized naming rights for trails, benches, rooms and
other facilities (but not parks themselves), as well as display of
logos and slogans on park literature, computer screens, and plaques;
- Exclusive
media advertising rights to the official NPS Arrowhead symbol, the term
“Proud Partner” of the National Park Service and the use of uniformed
park employees in ads; and
- Flexibility to negotiate customized recognition deals that “meet the needs of individual donors.”
The plan jettisons bans against accepting or soliciting donations
from vendors, concessionaires, permittees and others doing business
with a park. Alcohol, tobacco and even gambling companies would also be
eligible park sponsors. The only up-front review of major gifts would
be a subjective “totality of circumstances” test applied by top
officials to determine whether the donation is “appropriate.”
The plan is designed so that private donations develop into a much
more significant factor in overall park budgets, as well as
high-profile capital projects and improvements. Currently, the Park
Service raises an estimated $17 million from outside sources each year.
“Large corporate donations exert a not-so-subtle gravitational pull
on park managers who are increasingly dependent on these donors for
their budgets,” Ruch added, noting that PEER is already hearing from
park employees who have been transferred or reassigned to placate
donors. “Influence peddling will soon become a major recreational
activity in our national parks.”
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Read the PEER comments on the proposed donation solicitation policy
Compare the proposal with current restrictions |