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News
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 23, 2003
Personal Watercraft Use Recommended for Amistad National Recreation Area in Texas
Contact:
Elinore Boeke, 202-721-1621
Brian Berry, 202-777-3524
Washington, DC—Personal watercraft
will again be included in the recreational mix at Amistad
National Recreation Area in southern Texas under a proposed
rule published yesterday in the Federal Register. The National
Park Service proposed rule states that “PWC use would
be allowed under a special regulation… and would be
managed consistent with the management strategies in effect
before November 7, 2002. PWC users could travel wherever other
motorized vessels are allowed.”
The rule, expected to be finalized and take effect in time
for the 2004 boating season, is consistent with the Amistad
strategic plan, which recognizes the significance of “offering
diverse water-based recreational opportunities.”
"We’re pleased to see that the National Park Service
is acknowledging what the industry has known all along,”
said Jeff Ludwig, Regulatory Affairs Manager for the Personal
Watercraft Industry Association (PWIA), which represents Bombardier
(Sea-Doo), Honda (AquaTrax), Kawasaki (JET SKI), Polaris (Polaris
Watercraft), and Yamaha (WaveRunner). “That is, that
personal watercraft have no unique effect on the environment
which would require singling them out for bans or overly restrictive
regulation."
The publication of the Amistad proposed rule marks the fourth
unit of the of the National Park Service to complete scientific
studies on the impact of personal watercraft (PWC) and recommend
that PWC use be allowed. The settlement terms of a lawsuit
brought by an anti-boating group forced many National Recreation
Areas and National Seashores to close temporarily to PWC until
environmental assessments (EAs) could be performed and a rulemaking
process concluded, but every completed study has recommended
that PWC be permitted. To date, two National Recreation Areas—Lake
Mead (AZ/NV) and Glen Canyon (AZ/UT)—and one National
Seashore—Assateague Island (MD/VA) allow PWC, and nine
other units in addition to Amistad have also completed EAs
that show no unique impact from PWC.
"Although we’re happy that the rulemaking process
at Amistad is nearing an end,” said Ludwig, “it’s
unfortunate that a tremendous amount of time and money had
to be expended in order to continue the status quo, and to
once again show that the outrageous claims of anti-access
groups are not true. Surely the NPS has more important projects
on which to spend its money, such as reducing the staggering
maintenance backlog."
In addition to the four noted above, the other units of the
National Park Service considering PWC use are Big Thicket
(TX), Bighorn Canyon (MT/WY), Curecanti (CO), Chickasaw (OK),
Cape Lookout (NC), Fire Island (NY), Gateway (NJ/NY), Gulf
Islands (FL/MS), Lake Meredith (TX), Lake Roosevelt (WA),
Padre Island (TX), and Pictured Rocks (MI).
Model legislation and other information on personal watercraft
can be viewed at www.pwia.org. The Amistad National Recreational
Area website is www.nps.gov/amis. Comments on the proposed
rule are due by December 22, 2003 and may be mailed to the
Superintendent, Amistad National Recreation Area, HRC 3 Box
5J, Del Rio TX 78840. Emailed comments with the subject line
“PWC rule” may be sent to amis@den.nps.gov,
and must include the sender’s name and return address
in the body of the message.
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