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Nov 14, 2009
 

Public Scoping open now through
February 4, 2010

Click here to view the Federal Register Notice

Yosemite National Park is extending the public scoping period for the Merced Wild and Scenic River Comprehensive Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement (MRP/EI. The Notice of Intent to prepare the EIS was originally published in the Federal Register on June 30, 2009 (with a 60 day public scoping period originally set to conclude on August 29, 2009). The Notice of Intent to extend the scoping period was published in the Federal Register on August 25, 2009. In response to public comments, the scoping period has been extended to February 4, 2010. A notice to extend the public scoping period will be forthcoming in the Federal Register.

Any individual, organization, agency, or other interested parties are encouraged to provide written comments – any further responses must now be postmarked or transmitted no later than February 4, 2010. Comments submitted to date in response to the June 30, 2009 Notice of Intent need not be resubmitted.

All written responses and comment forms [772 kb PDF] should be addressed to the Superintendent, Attn: Merced River Plan, P.O. Box 577, Yosemite National Park, CA 95389, or may be sent via the Internet or submitted via FAX to 209/379-1294.

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Posted: Nov 14, 2009 1:14pm
Nov 7, 2009
Just wanted to let friends who love Yosemite know that your thoughtful involvement in the future of Yosemite National Park is needed.  

Most of you are aware that after nearly a decade of very hard effort, two grass roots organizations and their tireless attorneys (Friends of Yosemite Valley and Mariposans for the Environment and Responsible Government) prevailed in federal court over a very obstinate and well-funded National Park Service.  I am proud to say that a handful of us citizens were able to stop what had been the imminent construction of a new road and additional buildings on the banks of the Merced River in Yosemite Valley. The bogus busing and development--oriented Yosemite Valley Plan has also been rescinded (no longer exists). So, for now, the Wild and Scenic Merced River corridor is protected from greed, corruption, and excessive development . . . 

 As per the settlement agreement for this case, the NPS is required to begin a truly fresh start for Yosemite's future. Though local residents and other knowledgeable citizens involved in past park planning efforts have plenty of reason to be skeptical and suspicious of the National Park Service's sincerity regarding park planning and public processes, I want you to know that some park management has recently retired and/or have moved on to other jobs; there has been a lot of employee turnover recently in YNP and this may actually bode well for this new planning effort. And, this fresh opportunity is the best that can be done in current environmental law to shape a more ethical and transparent public planning process for Yosemite's future.  In other words, this is the real deal. And this process is just beginning. Make your comments now, BEFORE park planners begin work on the draft CMP document·

The deadline for written scoping comments for the Merced Wild and Scenic Comprehensive Management Plan is December 4, 2009.  

PLEASE send written comments and/or attend a public meeting (days/times/locations listed below). Yosemite is a national park and it belongs to all of us, no matter which state we live in. I have already started drafting my scoping comments here in Vermont . . . 

PLEASE speak up, tell the NPS what you want (or what you don't want) in Yosemite Valley. All citizens need to get involved this time because this IS a truly fresh start, unlike in recent planning efforts. Unlike in previous planning efforts, this process is being very closely monitored by the court. If citizens fully participate in this process it will be much easier than before to hold NPS accountable to their actions. It is my hope that wider citizen involvement combined with court monitoring will go a long way towards prodding the NPS, finally, into producing a legal and protective plan for the Merced River. 

Written comments can be mailed to: 
Superintendent, Attn: Merced River Plan
Yosemite National Park
P.O. Box 577 
Yosemite National Park, CA 95389 

or faxed to (209) 379-1294

Comments can also be sent by email

For more information on this new planning effort, you can visit the park's website at www.nps.gov/yose/parkmgmt/newmrp.htm

The park service says,    
"Everyone is invited to share ideas to address:
   Specific actions needed to protect the river
   On-the-ground site planning for El Portal, Yosemite Valley, and Wawona
   (including restoration, location of campgrounds, recreation
   opportunities, and employee housing)
   Strategies for addressing parkwide transportation and other methods for
   dealing with user capacities.
"


Upcoming Merced Wild & Scenic River Plan Public Meetings:

El Portal
Saturday, November 7
10 a.m. to Noon 

AND

Monday, November 30 
6-8 p.m.
Clark Community Hall

Sacramento: Sacramento Southside Clubhouse
Monday, November 9
2051 6th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814

Berkeley: Doubletree Hotel & Executive Meeting Center
Tuesday, November 10
200 Marina Blvd
Berkeley, CA 94710


Los Angeles: LA River Center
Monday, November 16
570 West Ave 26 # 100
Los Angeles, CA 90065
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Posted: Nov 7, 2009 10:12am
Aug 14, 2009
Muir’s March will take place September 12-19, 2009, when 24 of the fittest and most dedicated hikers will journey from Tuolumne Meadows to O’Shaughnessy Dam to raise awareness, as well as funds, for the fight to restore Hetch Hetchy Valley. There are stringent requirements that must be met by hikers, but the rest of us can still be supportive by sponsoring a hiker. To find out more about the hike or how you can pledge your support, click here

 

The name “Hetch Hetchy” is derived from the name of a type of grass with edible seeds that is prevalent in that valley. As late as the 1850s, Mono Lake Paiutes were still freely gathering acorns, seeds, and roots in the valley, undisturbed by outsiders. Hetch Hetchy Valley was a great food source for the Mono Lake Paiutes. Other foods were hard to come by in the upper Tuolumne area. 

Photo taken by Andrew Thompson and assigned to public domain.
 
 
 
By 1867, the first valley survey was made by the California Geological Survey. This helped to establish the Tuolumne River as a fresh water source for San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake. John Muir, leader of the Sierra Club of that period, led the fight against creating a dam and flooding the Hetch Hetch Valley. Pro-dam arguments included a statement that the valley would be even more beautiful with a lake to complement the waterfalls and rugged valley walls. In 1913, the Raker Act put an end to the bickering, and the dam was completed in 1923.
 
Over the past several decades, there has been much constructive dialog about the merits of restoring the Hetch Hetchy Valley. All along, there have been Americans angry about constructing hydroelectric plants and dams on public lands. Since it has been determined that there are other sources than the Tuolumne River for San Francisco’s fresh water needs, restoration of Hetch Hetchy has been thrust forward.
 
While you consider whether you support the restoration and how deeply you may want to contribute to restoration efforts, enjoy the many beautiful photos of the Hetch Hetchy Valley before and after the dam. Every link below contains photos and/or maps of the area. Click here to learn more about the Mono Paiutes.
 
 
Hetch Hetchy before the dam         
Yosemite photos         
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Posted: Aug 14, 2009 10:47am
Aug 9, 2009

We Native people are always very respectful of our elders. Our elders pass down the knowledge, culture, and traditions to younger members and keep our tribal histories in tact.

I was surprised to hear that once again our tribal leader was disrespected and talked down by a Yosemite National Park employee, not only just a regular Yosemite National Park governmental employee but the Yosemite National Park Indian Liaison.

The United States federal government designated a special employee to be an envoy between the Park service and the Indian groups that once held the land that was theirs.

When the Yosemite Paiute people started to question why the Park was changing our historical tribal people from Paiutes to Miwoks, our Paiute baskets were being labeled “Miwok-Paiute”, and the Paiutes, including the most important historical tale of Chief Tenaya were being erased from the Park, the Park Service became abrasive.

We Paiutes noticed that the Park Service was bending over backwards to appease their current and former Indian employees who are going for federal recognition under the name “Southern Sierra Miwuk”. We have no qualms with the Miwoks, but what the Park was doing was lying and re-creating history. The person who has been responding to our requests and concerns is the Yosemite National Park Liaison who has been extremely rude to our people and want us to just go away. The reason they like working with this non-profit is because they OK excavation projects like digging up Indian grave sites like at El Portal where we Paiutes disagree with this practice. They use this group to go around NAGPRA policies and prevent any Indian groups from complaining.

Recently our tribal leader contacted Yosemite National Park Service to ask what their policy was regarding bears that are killed by automobiles or found dead. When Grizzly Bears were roaming in Yosemite we Paiutes considered them our “Aunties” and that is what we call them in our language. Today in Yosemite there are only black bears, but we Paiutes hold them in high regards. A Yosemite Park newsletter stated that many bears are killed every year by speeding automobiles in the Park and asked people to please be careful, so we Paiutes wanted to know what happens to the dead bear carcasses, which is really a simple request. (see Photo 1)

Our tribal leader called what he thought was the department that handled that matter and a few days later the Yosemite National Park’s Indian Liaison, who is white, called him back. In previous conversations the Yosemite Indian Liaison has hung up on one of our members who asked why his ancestor had been changed from a Mono Paiute to Southern Sierra Miwok on Park signs and books. In mid conversation she said “I don’t need to listen to this anymore” and rudely hung up the phone on him. In other conversations she has indicated that we were lying and told our Chairman “We don’t believe you” after we provided government documents, Indian census, Indian probates, plus excerpts from the book that they sell in their own bookstore showing that Paiutes, not Miwoks, were the original Indians of Yosemite (see Photo 2)

This time our tribal leader made a record of her conversation with the Yosemite National Park Indian Liaison and this is how it went:

Conversation with Yosemite National Park Indian Liaison on March 4th 2009 regarding our call about bear disposal in Yosemite National Park

I had placed a call to the YNP about the bear skinning incident last week

I wanted to ask about the NPS procedure of disposal of dead bears in YNP.

I placed a call to Tom Medema.

Naturally no one returned my call so I forgot the incident.

Then on March 4, 2009 at 1145 am, I got a call from the NPS.

Jeanette Simons called me at 11:45.

I was surprised it was the Indian liaison Jeanette Simons.

I asked why she was calling and she said I called her.

I said no, but I did call the staff of interpretation of YNP.

I explained the call was regarding the bear skinning incident which I read in the minutes and I was curious on the YNP Protocol dealing with dead bears.

I said to Jeanette Simons, “You saw it since you over see the minutes of the non profit Southern Sierra Miwoks.”

Jeanette Simons said “that bear skinning incident only happened once.”

I said “not according to the minutes where it stated in the following sentences it was on going since 1960/70s.”

Jeanette Simons stated rudely "Were you there”?

I asked her if she was there?

Jeanette Simons stated no!

Jeanette Simons asked me if I called Kimberly Summerfield?

I said no based on the court testimony she is not an Indian and for a non Indian to cut up a bear in the Parks Indian Village is outrageous.

I said in the minutes even the members of the Southern Sierra Miwoks Tribal council they thought it was outrageous and as I further read in the minutes the council didn’t even think Kimberley was an Indian.

Jeanette Simons stated you can be an Indian and not be federally recognized.

I said I read Kimberly Summerfield’s Federal court testimony in the Lorenzo Baca case and she stated under oath she was adopted Miwok but couldn’t prove it and then she further stated she was Cherokee.

I said “I doubt she is an enrolled Indian and under the eyes of the Government and Kimberley is not a federally recognized Indian.”

Jeanette Simons stated “Oh I forgot you’re a Walker Indian.”

I said “yes I am a Walker River Paiute and I am a federally recognized Indian.”

I said “you know I can remember on December 5, 2007 here in Sacramento, when you asked rather catty, Where is Walker River on the map.”

I said “I showed you but I remember your tone, I said ever since I have known you it appears you always come off with a snotty tone with cutting remarks.”

I told her “I remember every cutting remark she has ever said to me.”

I told her after the Paiutes were kicked out of Yosemite National Park they went home to Mono Lake and when the Department of Water and Power bought everyone out, the Paiutes relocated to Walker River Paiute Indian Reservation to become farmers.

I asked her if she read the minutes and took the testimony seriously such as Raymond Andrews riding a horse in the Meadows and reaching down and eating a marmot.

I asked her if she took Raymond Andrews testimony seriously when he stated the UCLA Fowler was going to give him artifacts from the El Portal Site and he said he was going to give it to Tony.

I told her I called Wendy Teeter who disputed that process since non profits could not acquire any artifacts.

Jeanette Simons asked me if I enjoyed ridiculing Indian people.

I said I’m not ridiculing Indian people, I’m just reading the minutes of YNP and the tribes.

Jeanette Simons stated “You must not read very well”.

I said I read English as written in these minutes. Jeanette Simons stated “obviously you don’t understand what you read”.

I said “Oh I read and understand very well.”

Jeanette Simons stated “I don’t think so”.

I said “you know Jeanette you go on and on and no one has ever corrected you.”

I said “I can remember all the statements you made such as ‘Where do you people get this stuff’?”

I told her another cutting remark she uses is "Some people disagree with you?

I said “You remind me of Mrs. Drysdale acting like some puffed up white woman who doesn’t know how to speak with Indian People.”

Jeanette Simons said "You got the minutes and you’re like a kid in a candy store and you don’t know what to do with them?

I said I read them to see the bigger picture and to become enlightened.

She laughed and said “Your Not enlighten, far from it.”

I said “there you go again with your cutting remarks.”

Jeanette Simons stated “What can I do for you today.”

I said I wanted the protocol of YNP and the dead bear policy.

Jeanette Simons stated I just gave you the protocol. (She still did not give us the procedure but continued to argue. We just wanted the policy and procedure of dead bear disposal).

I said can you send me a statement from your office documenting this bear skinning incident and she said she just gave me a statement.

I said I would like one in writing and Jeanette Simons asked for what reason.

I said I don’t know maybe one of my members might want to create a blog or I might give it to the media.

Jeanette Simons stated haven’t you already done this?

I said I will write the Superintendent or Washington DC and then I will get a written response from them.

Jeanette Simons said I just gave you a response,

I said I need one in writing.

Jeanette Simons said write the Superintendent and he will give you your written response.

Jeanette Simons also added “Oh David, You know that stuff you gave us in the binder December 5, 2007, well we just don’t believe you anymore.

I said “you never believed us when we first met in YNP so really nothings changed. You have always been negative to us so why should this surprise me.”

I realized this is the same old conversation with Jeanette Simons and politely told her
“Your no Indian liaison and hung up.”

After this conversation we Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute people were finally fed up with the treatment at the hands of the non-Indian Yosemite Park Indian Liaison towards our elders and leaders of our tribal group. We filed a formal complaint and hopefully it doesn’t fall on deaf ears.

Our tribal elders and leaders should be offered the highest respect and honor and not treated with such disrespect from the United States government official who is paid to be the go-between the Park and the Indian people of the area. (see Photo 3)

Our tribal Chairman, who she disrespected, is the direct descendent of Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute chiefs and captains. He is descended from Captain John, leader, warrior and medicine man of the Mono Lake Paiute people. He is also from Captain Jim, leader of the Bridgeport Paiute people and the people who used to roam northern Yosemite. Here is the real kicker, according to the false genealogy that Yosemite National Park is passing off to help its friends and fellow co-workers at the Park, our Paiute Chairman is the hereditary chief of the Southern Sierra Miwuks, while those in charge are not. That is correct according to the faulty genealogy that the Park is now using our Paiute chairman is the hereditary chief of the Southern Sierra Miwoks.

Years back Yosemite National Park’s white Indian ethnologist Craig D. Bates wrote that Young Charlie was from the line of Yosemite Miwok chiefs. What Bates did not realize when he wrote that incorrect information was that Young Charlie, who was not a Miwok but a Paiute, had an older brother. This older brother was Pretty Charlie and our chairman is also a direct descendent of Pretty Charlie. If we are too believe the Park’s wrong and faulty genealogy than as the oldest male of the Charlie family the line of the Miwoks goes down through the older male generations, and would mean that according to the Park that would fall directly on our Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute Chairman. The same Chairman and elder the Yosemite National Park Service’s Indian Liaison disrespected. Of course that is using their faulty information, when in fact Young Charlie and his older brother Pretty Charlie and the rest of the Charlies were Paiutes.

We believe that Yosemite National Park Service should hire someone who can speak to the concerns of the Indian people without being extremely rude to us. We Indian people are tired of this treatment at the hands of the United States government, but then once again haven’t they always treated Indian people this way.

 

 

Source:YosemitePaiutes

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Posted: Aug 9, 2009 12:13pm
Aug 6, 2009

Small victory, but still a victory.

Mariposa County takes off wrong photos of "Yosemite Miwoks" that were Washoes and Mono Paiutes.

http://yosemiteindi ans.blogspot. com/2009/ 06/washoe- paiutes-misident ified-as. html

http://www.yosemite mariposa. com/wp-gallery2. php?g2_itemId= 324

http://www.yosemite mariposa. com/wp-gallery2. php?g2_itemId= 321

Hit the links and no more photo.



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Posted: Aug 6, 2009 10:12am
Jul 18, 2009
Yosemite National Park Extends Merced River Plan Public Scoping 90 Days

Date: July 17, 2009

Yosemite National Park will extend its public scoping period an additional 90 days to November 27th, 2009. This is in an effort to ensure the public, interested parties, and the surrounding communities will have adequate time to contribute to the public scoping process for the new Merced River Plan.

Please note that the following scoping meetings have been postponed at this time:

Wednesday, July 22 Mariposa Government Center 5100 Bullion St., Mariposa, CA 95338 (2nd Floor)

Tuesday, July 28 Mono Basin Visitor Center Highway 395, Lee Vining, CA 93541

Wednesday, July 29 Yosemite Valley Auditorium Open House Yosemite National Park, CA 95389

Thursday, July 30 Groveland Community Hall Groveland, CA 95321

Monday, August 3 Pasadena Senior Center 85 East Holy Street, Pasadena, CA 91103

Thursday, August 13 Foster City Recreation Wind Room – 2 nd flr above the library Foster City Community Center 100 E. Hillsdale Blvd, Foster City, CA 94404

Tuesday, August 18 Sacramento Southside Clubhouse 2051 6 th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814

Wednesday, August 26 Yosemite Valley Auditorium Open House Yosemite National Park, CA 95389

A revised schedule of public meetings will be made available in the near future.
For additional information please e-mail us.


http://www.nps.gov/yose/parknews/mrpscopingextended.htm
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Posted: Jul 18, 2009 11:33am
Jul 18, 2009

A comment from Erick Rhoan

 

The link to my comment is here: http://erickregalad o.wordpress. com/2009/ 07/18/my- comment-concerni ng-the-draft- environmental- impact-statement -for-the- environmental- educational- campus-in- yosemite/

It's twenty pages long but very thorough.  I hope you find it persuasive.

Here's a basic outline of my argument:

  1. I reluctantly support Alternative 2 because it will update the Crane Flat facility already in existence and leave Henness Ridge untouched thereby protecting any human remains at that site from being dug up.
  2. I oppose Alternative 3 because it will demolish Crane Flat campus and dig up Henness Ridge.  Further, human remains at the site will be mitigated according to consultation agreements with park-affiliated tribes including the American Indian Council of Mariposa County which, as we all know, is not an Indian tribe.
  • The AICMC is not a federally recognized tribe under any pertinent statute, has not completed the mandatory procedures for federal recognition, are not listed in the federal register as a federally recognized tribe, and are not an Indian tribe at (archaic and rarely used) federal common law.  Therefore, they lack any standing to enter into consultation with the National Park Service and I also hint that the NPS has violated federal law in conceding in the 1997 Programmatic Agreement that they aren't federally recognized and then started consulting with them as an "Indian tribe" in a manner used only for federally recognized tribes.
  • Majority of lineal descendants were not consulted for this project or any project the NPS has taken concerning invasive ground impacts.  This lack of good faith communication is one of the reasons the injunction against the El Portal Wastewater Treatment Facility was upheld in Friends of Yosemite Valley v. Kempthorne.
  • Allowing a deficient consultation process would allow human remains to be claimed by the wrong people and the potential for desecration is pronounced.
Also, the NPS says they won't find anything of interest under NAGPRA if they dig up Henness Ridge which is just bass-ackwards given the numerous archeological reports they have stating Yosemite is one big cemetary.  Yet they will say that Henness Ridge was an area of trade and gathering by numerous tribes in the area and while this measure of human activity is recognized, the NPS states that the other spectrum of human activity - death, dying and being buried - doesn't exist here.  Basically, the NPS thinks it knows where Indian remains will be found or will not be found.  Even if they guess right on Henness Ridge, the consultation process is still deficient and possibly illegal.

So anyway that's what I submitted to the NPS concerning this campus. 

Now, on to bigger things such as the new Draft Environmental Impact Statement concerning the revised Merced Wild & Scenic River Plan.  In granting the injunction, Hon. Anthony Ishii wanted to see good faith communication between the NPS and lineal descendants concerning the El Portal Waste Water Treatment Facility.  Have you, lineal descendants, seen any of that good faith communication thus far?

MRP Planning Documents & Meeting Schedule: http://www.nps. gov/yose/ parkmgmt/ 2009_mrp_ planning_ docs.htm

Did you know the first public meeting was already held in Fresno on July 13th?  That was only a few days ago.  The remainder of the meetings are going to be in Oakhurst, Yosemite, Pasadena, Sacramento, Mariposa, Groveland and Lee Vining.

I'll try to go to one, but I hope you all find the time to attend one and report back to us what you heard.  If you go, then remember: ASK QUESTIONS.

Talk to you all soon,

Erick Rhoan
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Posted: Jul 18, 2009 11:09am
Jul 8, 2009
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Read
Location: California, United States
Sent  to me by another, it reads:
I found the following on some obscure website announcing scoping meetings, etc. for the new MRP.   
Action Alert - Help Draft Yosemite Plan 3.0

The Merced River thunders down from Yosemite's high country, down Nevada Falls and Vernal Falls, and then undergoes a drastic personality transplant.  Flat, tranquil Yosemite Valley mellows water.  The river meanders lazily through the flat Valley floor in big oxbow curves before picking up speed again as it exits the Valley.  You can rent an inflatable boat in Curry Village to spend four hours drifting four slow miles, and they will be the among the best four hours of your life, as dragonflies dart across the river's surface, tadpoles are just out of arm's reach, sandbanks call for picnics, currents send you here and eddies send you there, and the spectacle of Yosemite Falls changes around every riverbend.  

The Merced River was declared a Wild & Scenic River in 1987, which meant that governmental agencies with jurisdiction over it had to declare plans for preserving its unique values.  The National Park Service moved slowly on its plan 1.0 until January 1997, when Mother Nature trumped the best laid (or not) plans of mice and men.  Heavy high country snowmelt fattened the lazy river into a torrent.  The river crested up to ten feet higher than its usual banks, uprooting trees, washing away picnic tables and destroying bear lockers, and washing out roads.  
 title=
Half of the Valley's 900 campsites were destroyed.  The National Park Service elected to close Upper and Lower River campgrounds and a portion of Lower Pines campground while it rethought the Wild & Scenic River plan.

Once the plan 2.0 was drafted in 2000, Friends of Yosemite Valley and others filed lawsuits, claiming that the plan permitted too much development too close to the river.  If you follow Yosemite news, you've probably seen snippets of various plans and rulings: all construction work is halted! number of visitors to be capped! ice skating rink to be removed!  Cheap campgrounds removed, expensive lodging rebuilt!  The NPS appealed, but was turned down in 2008 by the Ninth Circuit federal appellate court in a case known as Yosemite III (the title hints at how Yosemite breeds litigation).  The courts ordered the NPS to throw out old plans and produce a brand new plan, version 3.0.  And that's where you and I come in.

The NPS goes back to the drawing board for the Merced River plan now, and wants to hear from the public. Action Details! You can mail a comment to Superintendent, Attn: Merced River Plan, Yosemite National Park, P.O. Box 577, Yosemite National Park, CA 95389, or fax it to (209) 379-1294.  Apparently an email option isn't available.  If you've already submitted a comment, no need to do so again.  

Public hearings will be held on the following dates & locations (all meetings from 4 PM to 8 PM):

Monday July 13, Fresno, REI 7810 N. Blackstone Ave. Fresno, CA 93720

Thursday July 16, Oakhurst, Community Center 39800 Road 425 B, Oakhurst, CA 93644

Wednesday July 22, Mariposa, Government Center 5100 Bullion St., Mariposa, CA 95338 (2nd Floor)

Tuesday July 28, Mono Basin Visitor Center, Highway 395, Lee Vining, CA 93541

Wednesday July 29, Yosemite Valley East Auditorium – Open House Yosemite National Park, CA 95389

Thursday July 30, Groveland Community Hall Groveland, CA 95321

Monday August 3, Pasadena Senior Center, 85 East Holy Street, Pasadena, CA 91103

Thursday August 13, Foster City Recreation Wind Room – 2nd flr above the library Foster City Community Center 100 E. Hillsdale Blvd, Foster City, CA 94404

Tuesday August 18, Sacramento, Southside Clubhouse 2051 6th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814

Bold typeface indicates hearings in/near Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sacramento.

Officially, these hearings are to draft a new EIS, but unofficially, it's a question of crowd control.  How many people can fit alongside the banks of the Merced River in Yosemite Valley at the same time?  It's the existential question -- balancing public access and environmental protection -- that's plagued every national park.

Almost everyone agrees that Yosemite Valley is far too crowded in the summer months, but no one agrees on a solution.  The group that I'll loosely call "pro-development" argues that the people can't be kept away, so Yosemite needs to accommodate them, but with environmentally sensitive buildings away from the river.  Some people accuse them of selling out to the concessionaires -- for example, replacing picnic tables near the river with expanded restaurant seating further away puts profits over people -- but others applaud environmental sensitivity -- the picnic tables shouldn't be that close to the river in the first place.  The group that I'll label "pro-limited-access" advocates requiring everyone to leave cars at El Portal and ride shuttle buses into the park; however, this group doesn't neatly align with the usual pro-environmental groups, because of smog and related concerns.  The NPS wants the right to turn cars away at the Valley entrance, which many see as just plain un-American.  There's a "pro-marketing" group advocating soft power: the NPS should just market other parts of the park, such as Wawona, that maybe aren't as environmentally fragile.

For what it's worth, my answer is: I don't know how best to control crowds in the Valley in summer, but I won't be part of them, which I suppose puts me in the marketing group.  I will visit Yosemite Valley in winter to ice skate under the shadow of Half Dome, take mystical dawn walks through dazzling snow, and admire the rainbow snowcone that builds up at the base of Upper Yosemite Falls.   title= (photo credit: me!)
Yosemite Valley is 2% of the park's land area but attracts 98% of the visitors.  Hundreds of miles of trails take you away from the Valley and into the wild.  The prettiest waterfall in Yosemite isn't even in Yosemite Valley.  My favorite alpine lake is six trail miles away from Glacier Point.  In the long run, undamming Hetch Hetchy Valley, once a place rivaling Yosemite Valley in scenic awesomeness, could give visitors another reason to get outside the Valley.  That's my point of view -- but what's yours?

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Posted: Jul 8, 2009 2:15pm
Jul 5, 2009
Yosemite indian village being built
Friday, July 3, 2009 3:20 PM
From:

thought you would like to know that construction has started on the proposed indian cultural center in yosemite valley west of camp 4. it is in the valley plan but as you know the valley plan has been stopped and no new building is allowed.

they have already started to dig a VERY large hole for the roundhouse but i do not think historically they had ones this large
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Posted: Jul 5, 2009 11:59am
Jun 7, 2009

Dear Mariposa County Visitor’s Center                                                                  6-2-09

RE: Mariposa County Native American Indian history on your website.

  We are members of the Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute Indian Community who have ties to early eastern Mariposa County and Yosemite .

We encountered your website on the internet while doing some research and came across these photos on your website;

http://www.yosemitemariposa.com/wp-gallery2.php?g2_itemId=324

The photo is on the Mariposa County website titled “Historic – Yosemite Miwok Indians”. The photo is of a Washoe Chief and his family in Alpine County around Lake Tahoe .

http://content.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt5290180b/

http://www.imageenvision.com/stock_photo/details/0003-0702-2020-4060/washoe_indians

http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/dgkeysearchresult.cfm?word=Washo%20Indians&s=3&notword=&f=2

Located on this page on the same Mariposa County website;

  http://www.yosemitemariposa.com/wp-gallery2.php?g2_itemId=321

  The photo is also on the same Mariposa County website titled “Historic – Yosemite Miwok Indian woman”.

The woman in question is Maggie “Taboose” Howard. Her maiden name was Maggie “Taboose” Sam. “Taboose” is a Paiute word for nut grass bulbs

which we Paiutes used to eat. The word Taboose is not in the Miwok language.

Maggie was the daughter of Joaquin “Kosano” Sam a Paiute leader of the Yosemite-Mono Lake area. Maggie was the aunt of Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute basket makers Lucy Telles and Alice Wilson. When Maggie died she was buried in Bishop California . Maggie was one of the most photographed Native Americans in the country. She demonstrated for Yosemite tourists for years. Many of her descendents live in Bridgeport California . Maggie also has descendents in the Washoe tribe.

Could you please correct these errors because these photos are misidentified and are historically incorrect.

Yours truly,

 

David Andrews
Yosemite-Mono Lake Paiute Indian Community
Visibility: Everyone
Tags:
Posted: Jun 7, 2009 10:49am

 

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