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Bioprospecting: Mining Our National Parks One Gene at a Time

By Geov Parrish, AlterNet. Posted November 28, 2006.


The National Parks Service is considering a proposal to allow private companies to own the genetic resources of plants and animals in our parks.

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In a season when crowds are rioting over $600 video game consoles, and O.J. Simpson could sign a deal for millions with the Murdoch empire to reenact the "hypothetical" murder of his wife and her friend, it may seem like absolutely everything is now for sale in our mercenary culture.

The latest evidence of this comes from, of all places, one of the most trusted and admired of federal agencies. The National Park Service (NPS) is quietly taking public comment through Dec. 15 on a proposal to allow private companies to "bioprospect" in our national parks -- to commercially mine, not the mineral riches of a park, but the genetic resources of plants, animals, and microorganisms in territories specifically set aside for stewardship in the public trust.

The proposal is contained in a Sept. 15, 2006, court-ordered Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), an outgrowth of a lawsuit over a similar 1997 proposal at Yellowstone National Park during the Clinton administration. Steady privatization has been under way at the Park Service for more than 20 years, but the requirement that the NPS actually study the effects of bioprospecting seemed to shelve this particular bad idea.

And then, magically, seven years later, the EIS appears, laying out three options that would cover not just Yellowstone but all parks. The document, subtly entitled "Benefits-Sharing," reads less like an environmental study and more like a sales pitch for its preferred choice, "option B," to allow commercial bioprospecting but require "benefits-sharing" agreements and potentially some degree of public disclosure of those agreements. (Or, potentially, not.)

The other two choices the public is to comment on are option A, to do nothing -- thus allowing bioprospecting without so-called benefit-sharing; and option C, which is to only allow this genetic mining for "noncommercial or public interest research." Not exploiting our parks' genetic treasures at all is not even listed as an option in the document.

In the global south, home to much of the world's genetic diversity, this battle has already been underway for decades. In a process reminiscent of Columbus, transnational corporations have been using Western courts and laws to patent genetic codes and plant and animal life that existed long before any humans were around to "discover" them or own their "rights." The struggle against such legal chicanery has often been led by indigenous peoples who've relied upon the riches of their environments for millennia without the assistance of lawyers or scientists (or shareholders). Suddenly, they've been told they no longer have the right to use those riches -- or, worse, they can use them, for a price, paid to distant companies with no truly legitimate claim to their use.

This, in the south, is referred to as "biopiracy," and it seems like an appropriate term to start using in America as well. National Parks, beginning with Yellowstone (whose geothermal features were instrumental in both the park's original founding and the commercial appeal of "bioprospecting"), were set aside as lands to be owned and used by the public. Their early stewardship, beginning with Yellowstone, was specifically intended by Congress to exclude high-value heritage lands from the rapacious development of much of the surrounding West. We are the owners of these lands -- but their resources are now apparently for sale, in ways large and small, without the permission or even knowledge of the rightful owners. That's piracy.

An even scarier aspect of the NPS proposal is the precedent it sets, and the question of where that precedent stops. Can any life form or portion thereof existing in the parks be given away (or "benefit-shared," if the public agency gets a cut)? In any public lands? Using eminent domain, anywhere at all? What's to stop the government, using existing law and schemes such as this, from deciding by regulatory fiat that some piece of your genome should be "benefit-shared" by some state agency? It's an awfully slippery slope, one in which, thanks to two decades' worth of privatization of public resources, we're already well downhill of the crest.

The Park Service will, and has, argued that in a time of scarce public funding, commercial opportunities such as this can bring in valuable revenue to help preserve the park system. But what point is preserving a public park system whose parts can all be privately claimed? More to the point, these resources are not the federal government's to sell: They belong to all of us. And most especially to the point, there are some things that simply shouldn't be for sale. Life is an obvious one. It's one thing to sell chickens; it's another to sell the exclusive rights to Gallus gallus. The only difference here is size. Only a few weeks remain for public comment on the NPS proposal. Take some time to weigh in. Otherwise, some big corporation -- let's call it Helixco -- will be using tweezers, small but lucrative ones, for its Christmas stocking this year.

Public comment deadline is Dec. 15, 2006.

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See more stories tagged with: national parks, national park service, genes, bioprospecting, environmental impact stat

Geov Parrish is a Seattle-based columnist and reporter for "Seattle Weekly," "In These Times" and "Eat the State!" He writes the Straight Shot column for WorkingForChange.

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This situation has to end
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Nov 28, 2006 12:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The notion that one can go out, find something in natute, and patent and own it is a complete perversion of patent law and rational behavior - but it's an outgrowth of the so-called "information economy" that's also widely promoted in national universities.

What you have is a situation in which patents are the basis of gargantuan profits in the pharmaceutical and technology sector. Often the information being patented is either already present in nature or has been generated using public funds at national universities. It's nothing but theft.

This is destroying the quality of science and education in this country. The people who control the University of California are among the worst offenders - they've sold out their basic scientific integrity and have become another set of corporate slaves. These same universities are the ones patenting information that is the product of billions of years of evolution - it's a complete perversion of what patents are supposed to be for, and it's also corrupting the academic environment.

The whole story can be found in University Inc. The Corporate Corruption of Higher Education, by Jennifer Washburn"

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Reclaim the Commons!
Posted by: Lizmv on Nov 28, 2006 12:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Corporate control of our life support system is what this should be called. As a permaculture designer, I often use various fungi - mushrooms - to remove toxins from soil, to reclaim land that has been poisoned by industrial agricultural use. It's easy, free and in the end also provides food and medicine for everyone to use.

We MUST protect our biodiversity from corporate control! No one has a right to own and to profit from what Gaia provides. This is our heritage is SHOULD NOT BE FOR SALE! And I use the word 'our' to include all living beings, not just humans.

Reclaim the Commons!
http://www.rtc.revolt.org/

PS Could someone please tell me how to include links?

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» RE: eclaim the Commons! Posted by: AdamG
perverts
Posted by: rsaxto on Nov 28, 2006 2:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is one more indication that the Feds are run by perverts, criminals, antienvironmentalists, warmongers and planet wreckers. We need to impeach the idiots now running the Federal Parks and all others who serve greedy corporations instead of decent people and the decent biosphere.

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The 2006 Anti-Corporate Film Festival
Posted by: CounterCorp on Nov 28, 2006 4:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is simply the latest example of an ongoing effort by small groups of people hiding behind a corporate "cloak" to take that which belongs to all of us collectively, declare it their own, and then charge the rest of us to use it.

Theft of the commons is one of the issues that will be addressed at the 2006 CounterCorp Anti-Corporate Film Festival, which runs this weekend, Dec. 1-3, in San Francisco. For more information about the festival and the films that will be shown, visit the CounterCorp website at www.countercorp.org.

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Trust the guardians, not
Posted by: anothername on Nov 28, 2006 4:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An argument made for allowing corporations to exploit natural defenses in the South American forests was that such profit motive would help protect the forests. Does anyone have an update on how well this has worked?

I encourage the exploration of nature and its diversity in the interest of humanity, especially if it helps to protect the diversity of nature. However, I recognize that many corporations are eager to preserve only that from which they can drain profit (cf. the lack of diversity in genetically-modified seeds thrust upon the world's farmers).

I also have no trust in the government to protect the public's interests in the economic riches and new discoveries resulting from the use of biological resources. All we need to do is to look at how little interest the government retains in pharmaceuticals that were developed using government-funded research or at how cheaply rights to minerals in federal parks and to oil in offshore reserves have been sold to other congolomerates.

Regardless of how the balance of public interest and use of biodiversity is resolved, I do not support the patent protection of nature. Businesses, or individuals, developing new products and isolating the elements of nature that lead to those new products should have economic benefits for their efforts and serendipity. Yet, that benefit should not be in the form of patents, whether it is a human being's DNA or a protein produced by a strain of bacteria.

Another question with which to close: Does anyone have an update on patent protection of mice groups bred to have certain traits, with the mice sold to researchers? Does this approach to economic interests have solutions to the dilemma presently being discussed?

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» RE: Trust the guardians, not Posted by: benzene
Science
Posted by: cmd on Nov 28, 2006 5:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Genetic mapping is a long and expensive process with many benefits. I don't think you can patent a natural organism's DNA, only the map of that DNA. Another question, does allowing scientists to research the genetics of these organisms harm the park or the species in it?

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» RE: Science Posted by: benzene
The Truth of the Matter
Posted by: benzene on Nov 28, 2006 6:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's to stop the government, using existing law and schemes such as this, from deciding by regulatory fiat that some piece of your genome should be "benefit-shared" by some state agency?

Well, that's already being done. Pieces of your genome have already been patented by various biotechnology companies. It is true that they don't have a patent to the actual DNA (they can't because they cannot control distribution or use). But they do have a patent to the map of that DNA. Furthermore, some companies actually own the patent on certain animals, such as specially engineered transgenic mice.
This situation comes about as the result of companies wanting some assurance that the money they invest in basic research will pay off for them in the end. By knowing that they'll be able to patent a map of a particular genome fragment, they can justify the cost of sequencing that fragment because after they do, they'll be getting liscencing fees from other scientists who want to use that sequence. It's a fucked up situation, but the sad part is that it makes sense from a capitalist viewpoint.

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» RE: The Truth of the Matter Posted by: Plexius
Where to comment?
Posted by: Urstrly on Nov 28, 2006 6:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm more than eager to comment on this nefarious plan, but after reviewing more than 900 titles on the NPS Planning and Public Comment site can find no mention of it. We need a title and citation.

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» RE: Where to comment? Posted by: hayduke1
» RE: Where to comment? Posted by: mom'z the word
Hostile takeover of property for the commercial interests is nothing new
Posted by: SDres11 on Nov 28, 2006 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From South Dakota to national, the avalanche keeps on piling. If only the south and the midwest weren't written off by the otherwise wonderful progressives would this corporate and hostile takeover been averted. Oh well, time to fight back !

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NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO, NO,
Posted by: mdruss42 on Nov 28, 2006 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NO!

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real ecoterrorism
Posted by: hayduke1 on Nov 28, 2006 6:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we the people must defend the common good--the land--our future, against the corporate eco-terrorism that is wholly embraced by this criminal administration (though note that the proposal first saw light under Clinton).

"wilderness needs no defense, just more defenders"

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Take It To Heart
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 28, 2006 6:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How can you buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us.

If we do not own the freshness of the air and the sparkle of the water, how can you buy them?

Every part of this earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine needle, every sandy shore, every mist in the dark woods, every clearing and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people. The sap which courses through the trees carries the memories of the red man...

We know that the white man does not understand our ways. One portion of land is the same to him as the next, for he is a stranger who comes in the night and takes from the land whatever he needs. The earth is not his brother, but his enemy, and when he has conquered it, he moves on. He leaves his father's grave behind, and he does not care. He kidnaps the earth from his children, and he does not care. His father's grave, and his children's birthright are forgotten. He treats his mother, the earth, and his brother, the sky, as things to be bought, plundered, sold like sheep or bright beads. His appetite will devour the earth and leave behind only a desert."


Attributed to Chief Sealth (Seattle)

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henderson
Posted by: henderson on Nov 28, 2006 8:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article says public comment must be before Dec. 15 - where do I go to comment?

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Scarce public funding?
Posted by: badkitty on Nov 28, 2006 8:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gee, are we short on money to preserve our national parks? Well, we could raise taxes on corporations and the wealthy. And, an even better idea--let's abolish the military, whose function during the past three and a half years has been to reduce the safety and security of the United States by destabilizing the Middle East. With friends like the US military, no one needs enemies. The amount of money spent on the military could protect our national parks from any kind of privatization, if not global warming.

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psyche
Posted by: psyche on Nov 28, 2006 8:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is horrible! Please HOW DO WE COMMENT?

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Make Your Comments Via This Site
Posted by: MikeMc on Nov 28, 2006 9:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.parksnotforsale.org/

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» RE: Make Your Comments Via This Site Posted by: Conservasaurus
When did looking to nature to solve man's problems become taboo?
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Nov 28, 2006 11:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the life of me, I can't imagine why looking to nature to creatively solve some of our most pressing problems is a bad thing. The next iteration of penicillin may be waiting in a geyser in Yellowstone. Trying to find out the genetic basis that allows other organisms to escape the viruses that plague us is a good idea. How can anyone argue for closing our eyes, plugging our ears, and suffering and dying quietly?

The belief structure that leads to the article above is almost indistinguishable from the belief structure that says ESC research is a no-no...

...except that folks that object to federal dollars going to ESC research actually have a pony in that race (partly THEIR tax dollars), whereas the "anti-science" so-called environmental groups (and certainly not all of them are so religiously anti-science) at large seem to just want to deny any potential to extend human life or avert suffering, irrespective of who foots the bills for the research.

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» Biomimicry Posted by: Lizmv
Don't be ridiculous alarmists
Posted by: loneoak on Nov 28, 2006 11:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Come on people, this article is terrible. It, and the comments offered above, are poorly researched and extremely discomforting to see on AlterNet (Parrish, I thought better of your reporting).

Let's consider briefly the possibility that there is a difference between bioprospecting and biopiracy. Piracy is, of course, theft. It is perfectly reasonable to be highly critical of researchers and corporations that make billions off of 'discoveries' of genetic 'resources' and then do nothing to distribute the benefits. These benefits ought to be distributed to the people who live in that area and the ecosystems that brought about the wonders of evolution that the research exploits. Yet, to automatically rule out the possibility of using naturally occurring stretches of genomes (which we want for the enzymes they code for) also automatically rule out the possibility that such benefits will ever be distributed.

Notice that this article and the comments never once actually articulate a good reason why we ought to be opposed to the use of naturally occurring enzymes. It relies on some absolute division between humans and nature. And it assumes that it is obvious to all that humans commit a crime anytime they cross that line. People, that line does not exist. Get over it and start focusing on how we humans can work together amongst ourselves and with our ecosystems to benefit all of us (and us includes all living beings). This article is a perfect example of the costs of such absolutism: in the name of some line that must not be crossed, it completely ignores the specific conditions in which we could all do well.

If anyone should support bioprospecting (an unfortunately name), it is environmentalists. Carefully regulated public and private research that shares benefits from patents with the people who live on or own the land is something that should be considered, and I'm glad the National Parks are finally considering it. It offers the possibility of much more environmentally sound enzymatic processes that replace industrial processes. It offers that possibility of tremendous medical discoveries. Indeed, perhaps the single most important contribution to genetic technology came from a thermophilic baterium in Yellowstone's hot springs. The 'taq polymerase' allows the amplification of DNA, a technology central to tests for genetic diseases and the mapping of the human (and other species') genome (Parrish, how come you never mention this?). Such huge leaps in our self-knowledge would have been impossible without the contribution of a humble bacteria. For the life of me, I cannot come up with a good reason why this is inherently unethical or frightening.

That is different than being skeptical of the conditions in which the 'discovery' occurred and was exploited. Unfortunately, the taq polymerase is a case of biopiracy -- not a cent was ever shared with the American people, who 'own' Yellowstone. If the National Parks adopt 'Option B,' this won't happen anymore. If they adopt the corporatist 'Option A' then it will. If they adopt the option advocated for above -- 'No prospecting at all' -- then no more taq polymerases! Oppose the conditions that lead to biopiracy (like no regulations, neo-colonialism, and a terrible patent system), not the very act of learning from nature how to do things better.

Don't cede the middle ground between complete corporate dominance over our shared world and alarmist environmental myopia. Doing so takes our eyes off of the real goal: flourishing for all living beings.

By the way, the NYTimes science section covers this controversy in a much better article today. I'm html illiterate and the link is too long for AlterNet, so I can't post the link. The title is "The Search for Private Profit in the Nation’s Public Parks."

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We just won't be happy until we've f*cked it all up!!
Posted by: MAD on Nov 28, 2006 12:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's just get on with it already! The sooner we start signing over the rights to every strand of genetic material in existence, from aardvarks to zebras to zebra grass, the sooner we can start looking back scornfully on this primitive era when pinion nuts don't taste like grape soda and dairy cows don't yet produce chocolate milk. Hummphh - Primitive indeed!

Does anyone happen to have Monsanto's email? How about ADM?

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relevant author.....
Posted by: leodog on Nov 28, 2006 7:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Vandana Shiva, read Biopiracy et al.....

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just one reason to disallow ANY patents on life
Posted by: maymahri on Nov 29, 2006 1:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you allow patents on life, on genetic sequences, you encourage companies like Monsanto and ADM to do things to living things which have never EVER been done in natural history. Substances created in the process are potentially lethal: take Starlink Corn... they said they would control it and that it couldn't "get out". But it did "get out" and generated a vast recall of tortilla shells because several people went into anaphylaxis after eating them and nearly died. (If you don't at least label these foods, severe allergic reactions cannot be traced and the material at least taken off the market -- to say nothing of punishing guilty parties). They have also been in the business of replacing the saved seed of farmers the world over with chemicals and seed generated to go together which cannot be saved, but which have to be purchased each year at greater and greater cost. India, where they said the seed would solve hunger problems, has seen farmers commit suicide by drinking the pesticides they couldn't pay for rather than see their families go another year with failing crops, because the soil is now so poor. And there are lawsuits forcing farmers to sell their holdings to pay lawyer fees after loosing to Monsanto because the genetic markers of their patented genes were found in their fields... even though they blew there on the wind from another farmer's field. This is insanity. It might work if there were no greed, if people had enough knowledge and wisdom to see the future consequences, but we just don't. The best we can do for ourselves is to make sure the Dr Frankensteins of the world are in plain view, tightly controlled, and prevented from capitalizing on their "inventions". Only then can we be reasonably sure they are done out of a joy of pure scientific discovery and not out of greed. This is just one group of consequences of gene patenting for profit.

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Predation...
Posted by: bob t on Nov 29, 2006 1:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The predation of our natural resources and our Parks must be prevented. Those who support this corporate predation are predators themselves and most likely Rethugs themselves who would sell their grandmothers graves for corporate profits. Not everything in our live and our country must be about corporate greed. Turning all of America over to ADM and Cargill to the destruction of our family farms and family ranchs is an abomination to ALL Americans. If the predation of our treasury and the lives of our vets, their families and family farms and ranchs for the Bush family and the oil company wars is just WAY, WAY, WAY to high a price for us taxpayers to pay for their endless greed. Let's just dump them all. Send the Bush family to Paraguay. America belongs to 'we the people' not the corrupt Bush family or the State of Texass or the oil companies or the drug companies or the pharmas. I'd rather die for America then to give it to these bastards.

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Investment opportunity
Posted by: MT512 on Nov 29, 2006 4:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I own Mars, and am selling select parcels at very reasonable prices.

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Comment here
Posted by: mom'z the word on Nov 29, 2006 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TRY THIS.

http://parkplanning.nps.gov/document.cfm?
parkId=442&projectId=12515&documentID=16763

Comments may be submitted through the PEPC website, by mail, or hand-delivered to Yellowstone National Park headquarters in Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming. Comments will not be accepted by fax, over the phone or e-mail.
Comment Period: 09/22/2006 - 12/15/2006

The PEPC Website (http://parkplanning.nps.gov/)brings you back to the above site.

I am having a hard time finding an address to send the letter. Therefore, I am sending my letter to my Senator, Boxer, and asking her to get it into the right hands. Also I can e-mail the letter to Senator Boxer who will deliver it to the NPS for comment. I do not trust Snail mail this time of year. I am getting the impression NPS does not want comments or any interference to this process. NPS does not give an address, the Alternet article did not give an address. NPS is making this very hard to comment. I wonder why?

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kelleycat
Posted by: kelleysh on Nov 30, 2006 7:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey Geov Parrish,

A call to action article with NO contact information? Even printed newspapers include contact information. Just how many potential comments were lost because of this oversite?

If Mom'z could find it, so could you. Thanks Mom'z! -

"Try:
http://parkplanning.nps.gov/document.cfm?
parkId=442&projectId=12515&documentID=16763

Comments may be submitted through the PEPC website, by mail, or hand-delivered to Yellowstone National Park headquarters in Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming. Comments will not be accepted by fax, over the phone or e-mail.
Comment Period: 09/22/2006 - 12/15/2006

The PEPC Website (http://parkplanning.nps.gov/)brings you back to the above site."

Alternet Editor - please add the contact info. and a link to the body of this article ASAP. If it gets emailed or reprinted readers won't get so frustrated AND they can take action. The only way to stop this disgusting, insane property grab is to FLOOD them with protests.

And thanks Alternet for running this important story.

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