Founded | May 19, 1919 |
---|---|
Founder | Stephen Mather et al. |
Focus | Protecting the US National Park System |
Location | |
Area served
|
United States |
Members
|
Over 1,000,000 |
Revenue
|
$37,444,618 USD |
Employees
|
Approximately 170 |
Slogan | "Protecting our national parks for future generations" |
Website | http://www.npca.org/ |
The National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) is the only independent, membership organization devoted exclusively to advocacy on behalf of the National Parks System. Its mission is "to protect and enhance America's National Park System for present and future generations."
Founded in 1919 as the National Parks Association, the organization was designed to be a citizen's watchdog for the National Park Service (NPS) created in 1916. Among the founders of NPA was Stephen Mather, the first director of the National Park Service. Robert Sterling Yard was NPA's first employee. Although Yard received personal financial support from Mather, the two often differed on development issues in the parks. Taking a strong preservationist position, Yard objected to such commercialization of the parks as the jazz bands and bear shows at Yosemite National Park.
The association continued to resist commercial efforts to build dams and promote mining, logging and hunting in the national parks. In 1970, the organization changed its name to the National Parks and Conservation Association, in response to the national attention to a new range of emerging environmental issues, including air and water pollution. This was shortened to National Parks Conservation Association in 2000.
Led by President and Chief Executive Officer Theresa Pierno, the nonpartisan NPCA works on the ground, in and around national parks, conducting research, and working with National Park Service staff, community leaders, park advocates, and state and federal legislators to ensure that National Parks are "welcoming and well funded, well managed, and well protected for present and future generations".
Today, NPCA has grown to 25 regional and field offices around the country. It publishes a quarterly magazine, National Parks, which is distributed primarily to its members.
The North Fork Watershed Protection Act of 2013 is a bill that would withdraw 430,000 acres of federal lands in Montana from programs to develop geothermal and mineral resources. The law would forbid mountaintop removal mining and other natural resource development. The affected lands lie adjacent to Glacier National Park and already have some protections. The bill follows up on an agreement between Canada and the United States on how to protect the trans-border area from the effects of mining. In the 2010 agreement, Canada agreed not to do any additional mining on the British Columbian Flathead with the expectation that Montana would do the same thing to its land. The NPCA supported the bill, saying the bill "protects both our outdoor heritage and our economic future for generations to come."