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Gun law complaints trail Obama during park tours
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 15 - 08 - 2009


Family in tow for a tour of
national treasures far from Washington, President Barack
Obama is trailed by criticism from gun opponents and parks
advocates for allowing firearms into such majestic places
as Yellowstone, AP reported.
«There is still time for Congress and the president to
take steps to keep loaded firearms away from the valleys of
Yellowstone, the cliffs of Yosemite, and the Statue of
Liberty _ but they need to act quickly,» said Paul Helmke,
president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.
The group is named after former White House press
secretary Jim Brady, who became an ardent gun control
advocate after being badly wounded in a 1981 assassination
attempt on President Ronald Reagan by a gunman with a
psychiatric history.
A bill that Obama signed in May permits licensed gun
owners to bring firearms into national parks and wildlife
refuges as long as state law allows it. The new law, which
takes effect in February, will replace rules from the
Reagan administration that generally require that guns in
national parks be locked or stored in a vehicle's glove
compartment or trunk.
«If they wanted to fight that, they could have,» said
Jonathan Dorn, editorial director of NationalParkTrips.com
and editor-in-chief of Backpacker magazine. «That one just
felt like a very political decision that was maybe more
about politics than about maybe paying attention to the
preferences of the vast majority of people who are frequent
park users.»
Still, Dorn called the law «one hiccup» in an otherwise
supportive parks agenda so far by the Obama administration.
The Democratic-controlled Congress passed the less
restrictive measure with bipartisan support after Sen. Tom
Coburn, an Oklahoma Republican, inserted it into
Obama-backed legislation imposing new restrictions on
credit card companies. Democratic leaders decided not to
challenge Coburn, and Obama signed the gun measure without
comment.
Politically, the move thrilled gun-rights advocates such
as the politically influential National Rifle Association
and outdoorsmen. They generally lean conservative, which
may help Obama's soft standing with centrists and
independents. But it certainly didn't set well with some of
Obama's core Democratic constituencies, environmentalists
and gun-control backers.
The Obama family _ the president, the first lady and
daughters Malia and Sasha _ had a busy sightseeing weekend
planned: trekking in Yellowstone National Park on Saturday,
including a visit to the geyser Old Faithful, and touring
Grand Canyon National Park on Sunday.
Their stops come during one of three summer weekends when
the administration waived entrance fees at 147 national
parks and monuments to spur tourism and boost local
economies.
Less than a year in office, Obama doesn't have much of a
record when it comes to the national park system.
Nonetheless, parks advocates say the administration has
indicated it wants to spend more on parks and expand the
parks system.
At this point, «it's more rhetoric than it is decisions»
but «we believe there's a pretty bold and ambitious agenda
brewing for national parks in this administration,» said
Ron Tipton, the National Parks Conservation Association's
senior vice president of policy. «We're seeing the
interest right out of the box, and we're seeing it
exemplified by a president who takes his family to a
national park in his first year in office. That's very
unusual.»
Dorn, likewise, applauded Obama for «making a pretty
significant statement this early in his administration at a
time when he's got some pretty heavy things on his
shoulders.»
From the outset of his presidency, Obama signaled his
would be an administration sympathetic to the parks. He
signed legislation that set aside more than 2 million acres
(800,000 hectares) in nine states as protected wilderness.
That was one of the largest expansions of wilderness
protection in a quarter-century. Supporters said the law
would strengthen the national parks system; opponents
called it a «land grab.»
Since then, the administration has taken several other
steps that have encouraged parks advocates:
_Proposed cutting the number of snowmobiles allowed daily
into Yellowstone in the winter to 318 and requiring guided
tours. It proposed a similar policy at other national
parks. Wyoming has asked a federal judge to force
Yellowstone to allow up to 740 snowmobiles a day.
_Halted the filing of new mining claims on nearly 1
million acres (400,000 hectares) of U.S. Forest Service
land near the Grand Canyon for two years while the
administration studies whether uranium mining there should
be permanently prohibited. It also has pledged to overhaul
a 137-year-old hardrock mining law that favors the mining
industry.
_Devoted $750 million in economic stimulus money to
address a maintenance backlog in parks and increased the
operations budget request to Congress for parks by $100
million.
_Picked Jon Jarvis, a biologist and 30-year-veteran who
oversees the national parks across the West, to head the
National Parks Service.


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