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Speak up for Wilderness in Olympic National Park

The National Park Service (NPS) is accepting public comments on its Cape Alava and Sand Point Trail Rehabilitation project in Olympic National Park in Washington. Ninety-five percent of the Park is designated Wilderness, including this northwestern corner on the Pacific Coast. We need you to speak up for Wilderness by Tuesday, April 26.

The Cape Alava and Sand Point trails start from the Lake Ozette trailhead, which is Olympic National Park’s busiest trailhead for overnight wilderness use. Together with a stretch of beach, the two trails create a nine-mile triangular hike. About 70 percent of the 13,533 feet of trail boardwalk is damaged. 

The NPS is looking at three preliminary alternatives to address the condition of the boardwalks. Two alternatives include massive amounts of helicopter use, which is inappropriate and generally prohibited in Wilderness. One alternative includes 178 to 250 round-trip helicopter trips over five years, and the other alternative, which involves replacing some of the boardwalk with turnpike (ground-level wood boxes filled with gravel and soil), includes 690 to 835 round-trip helicopter trips. A third no action alternative continues the Park’s current management where small sections of boardwalk are replaced by carrying in materials when possible (which could include frequent trail closures). The no action alternative is the best of the three options, but still fails to properly protect Wilderness in Olympic NP. 

The NPS must do better for Wilderness in Olympic. This extensive boardwalk is inappropriate in Wilderness. Before replacing it, the NPS should determine if the trail is necessary, and consider rerouting it to a different location. The NPS could close the trail and divert people to points south of the area. The agency could also reduce the number of visitors to the area, or it could remove the boardwalk and let people have a wilderness experience where visitors accept conditions as they are. If the NPS decides to rebuild the boardwalk, it needs to do so without motorized equipment. Volunteers could assist by hauling in boardwalk pieces.

Please urge the National Park Service to adopt a wilderness-compatible alternative for addressing the boardwalk in the Daniel J. Evans Wilderness in Olympic National Park. Comments are due Tuesday, April 26. 

Please go to the NPS website listed below, and submit your comments on the Cape Alava and Sand Point Trail Rehabilitation project. Feel free to copy and paste our talking points from below, but use your own words where possible.

https://parkplanning.nps.gov/commentForm.cfm?documentID=118507

Dear National Park Service Staff,

Please accept my comments on the Cape Alava and Sand Point Trail Rehabilitation project. I urge the Park Service to adopt a wilderness-compatible alternative for addressing the boardwalk in the Daniel J. Evans Wilderness in Olympic National Park.

Before replacing the boardwalk, the Park Service should first determine if the trail is necessary, and seriously consider rerouting the trail to a different location. The Park Service could close the trail and divert people to points south of the area.

The Park Service could also reduce the number of visitors to the area, or it could remove the boardwalk and let people have a wilderness experience where visitors accept conditions as they are.

If the Park Service decides to rebuild the boardwalk, it needs to do so without motorized equipment. Helicopter use is both inappropriate and generally prohibited in Wilderness. Volunteers could be recruited to haul in boardwalk pieces rather than using helicopters.

Please address the boardwalk at the Cape Alava and Sand Point trails with a wilderness-compatible solution.

Help us protect Wilderness in Olympic NP and around the country. All first-time donations matched by a generous member in Alaska.

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