González, Savage: President Obama’s Yosemite visit reminds of public land opportunities

By José G. González and Jennifer Savage, Special to The Mercury News | 6/17/2016 

This article was originally posted in Mercury News.


With President Obama’s planned Father’s Day visit to Yosemite to celebrate 100 years of the National Park Service, we welcome his enthusiasm for protecting public lands for all people.

Our country’s population is as diverse as our natural landscapes. That’s why we applaud his efforts to protect places that represent our rich history and conserve our natural treasures.

As president, Obama has protected places that tell the story of Native American, Latino, African American, Asian-American and women’s history. Here in California, the president has designated the San Gabriel Mountains, César E. Chávez, and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments as well as three new national monuments in the desert.

Regardless of background, Californians prize open space. Millions of visitors explore our stunning national parks, monuments and forests every year. We hike, surf, camp, canoe, bike, rock climb, walk the beach, picnic together and ooh and ahh at wildlife and stunning vistas.

California represents equality of opportunity, and our public lands and spaces — open to everyone — are a symbol of this. We value equitable access so that all people may enjoy and benefit from exploring the outdoors. We have a state park system that millions visit each year. The public’s right to access our beaches matters so much that we codified it into state law.

 However, not all of our communities have access to open space and public lands. The Census Bureau predicts that by 2043, a majority of our country’s residents will be people of color. Yet recent research showed that 73 percent of Americans who participated in outdoor activities were white.
There is much still to be done to protect our state’s natural treasures for generations to come and to engage diverse communities in the outdoors. We see an opportunity to address these issues in two ways.

First, we support the California Coastal National Monument Expansion Act. This legislation, brought forth by Sen. Barbara Boxer and Reps. Jared Huffman, Lois Capps and Anna Eshoo, would protect 6,200 acres of public lands in Humboldt, Santa Cruz and San Luis Obispo Counties as part of the California Coastal National Monument.

The Cotoni-Coast Dairies on Santa Cruz’s northern coast are a part of these lands. These 5,800 acres of former farmlands boast rare species, coast redwoods, and rolling terrace grasslands. Riparian corridors flow directly into Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, home to gray whales, sea otters and harbor seals.

Designating the Cotoni-Coast Dairies as a national monument would also link together a vast landscape of coastal open spaces and upland forests. These include state and local parks, private nature preserves, working forests, agricultural lands, beaches and protected ocean waters. If Congress fails to act, we support action by the President to protect these valuable areas.

Second, we urge the President to embrace a vision for conservation for the next 100 years for all people. We have an opportunity with the centennial of the National Park Service to both celebrate what we’ve accomplished and plan for the next century. There is much we can do to ensure that our public lands reflect the demographic and ethnic diversity of our nation.

To move this vision forward, we ask the President to issue a Presidential Memorandum that focuses on the importance of national parks and public lands for all people. This memorandum should direct federal land management agencies to adopt guiding principles for a more inclusive approach to public lands.

We can take these actions now for our communities and for generations to come. Our national parks and other public lands must reflect, honor and engage all Americans — for our families and our future.

José G. González of Fresno is the founder of Latino Outdoors. Jennifer Savage of San Francisco is the California Policy Manager with Surfrider Foundation. They wrote this for the Mercury News.

 


Latino Outdoors has a simple solution to increase diversity in natural recreation

This article was originally published in Seattle Globalist.

Yvonne Rogell | July 13, 2016


David García, Kimberly Gonzalez and Michelle Piñon are ambassadors for the Washington chapter of Latino Outdoors. They all grew up in different parts of southern California and share a passion for the outdoors and the environment. (Photo by Yvonne Rogell)

It’s early February. A group of forty people gathered at Snoqualmie Pass are strapping on snowshoes, a light snow falling around them.

For some, this is the first time they’ve seen snow.

“There was a mom… and after a little while, one of her little ones got tired and she was carrying him on her back and I thought: she’s going to be tired or cranky. But she was smiling and said ‘they’re never going to forget this, they’re never going to forget this,” recalls Kimberly Gonzalez. “That’s why we do it.”

Gonzalez is talking about her work as an ambassador for the Washington chapter ofLatino Outdoors, a budding national nonprofit that works to connect Latino communities with nature and outdoor experiences.

As the National Park Service approaches its 100th birthday next month, many are rightly asking why outdoor recreation is a predominantly white activity, and what can be done to increase diversity and inclusion.

Latino Outdoors was born out of this narrative. Hispanics are the second fastest-growing demographic in the U.S. and are among the most underrepresented groups in conservation, outdoor recreation and environmental education organizations, according to the group. The problem, they find, is that many nonprofits do outreach to communities of color or low income communities one time, without coming back to cultivate that relationship.

That’s something that rings true for Gonzalez based on her own experiences in Seattle.

She’s sitting on a big rock on the West Point Lighthouse Beach in Seattle’s Discovery Park, looking out over the Puget Sound. Fellow ambassadors David García, 25, and Michelle Piñon, 24, are beside her. This Sunday afternoon, they’ve met up to discuss their hopes for the future of Latino Outdoor’s local chapter.

Since their first event— a bird walk in the Union Bay Natural Area last December — they’ve organized a half dozen outings of all kinds, from kayaking to hiking and climbing. They’re planning on continuing to host one event every month going forward.

“I see us as really providing a different platform for engagement, one that isn’t a one-off, one that is about building a community of people,” says Piñon. “We’re trying to avoid that pitfall of being that one-off time that you send your kids to this one camp, and they might never see that particular place again.”

Participants on the Latino Outdoors hike to Annette Lake in June. Karitza Medina (far right) says she thinks it’s critical that we are connected to our environment and that we protect it. “Sometimes we forget how our choices impact the environment.” (Photo by Michelle Piñon)

One of the group’s participants and advocates is Paulina López, who lives in the South Park neighborhood of Seattle. For her, Latino Outdoors is a great way to encourage families to get active by giving them a first introduction to the outdoors.

“How do we get Latinos into making more healthy habits into their daily lives, and also incentivize those who have children to do the same?” López asks.

She points out that one of the main reasons families don’t exercise outside is that many simply don’t have time to research where they can go. The fact that Latino Outdoors provides all their events free of charge — from transportation to gear and parking passes — makes it easy for families to participate and gives them the confidence to later go out and explore on their own.

For Karitza Medina, who moved to Seattle from Indiana after college about a year ago, Latino Outdoors has been a way to meet people who also enjoy outdoor activities in her new city. Her first event was a kayaking outing in Lake Union; since then, she tries to put all events on her calendar and looks forward to meeting other Latinos that are new to the area.

“Our culture as Latinos is similar… If I meet someone from, let’s say, El Salvador or Guatemala, we’ll have similarities and I’ll feel very happy to have met that person,” she says, adding that the group welcomes anyone, regardless of ethnicity or cultural background.

“How can I want to protect this if I don’t even know that it exists?”

Medina thinks that one of the keys to Latino Outdoors’ success is that the person organizing the hike has something in common with the people they’re trying to get to participate.

“I try to encourage the Latinos that I know to go,” she says. “They will feel more at ease and comfortable [with time] because they will have someone to relate it to.”

Back at the beach in Discovery Park, the three ambassadors — who all volunteer their time to coordinate the events and reach out to sponsors — say that the response from the community has been huge, and that it seems like a lot of people, not just Latinos, have just been waiting for something like this to appear in Washington.

“I think we sometimes see people through a certain lens of struggle and say, ‘Oh those poor communities of color, they can never get outside, we gotta save them,’” Gonzalez says. “But in reality there are a lot of people like us that…have this passion, that maybe even majored in it, but felt lonely for another reason, like we didn’t quite belong.”

As our interview at Discovery Park is wrapping up, an osprey that’s been cruising up and down the beach suddenly arches its wings upward, retracts its legs and dives into the water. It goes completely under for a brief moment and then re-appears, a fish dangling from its claws.

(Photo by Yvonne Rogell)

The ambassadors hop up from where they’re sitting on the rocks and follow the bird’s flight.

“I always think: how many kids are out there that…don’t have the resources to get out to places to look at birds and look at nature,” Garcia reflects. “Maybe one of them is the next big birder, or the next big marine scientist? How can I be passionate about this… how can I want to protect this if I don’t even know that it exists?

You can learn more about Latino Outdoors and get in touch with the Washington chapter atwww.latinooutdoors.com. Upcoming events are posted on their Facebook page. There’s onethis Saturday, July 16th at Crystal Mountain. 


It’s your land, too.

This article was originally published in High Country News.

Paul Larmer | June 27, 2016 | From the print edition


A couple of weeks after a dozen or so well-armed white men and women occupied Oregon’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, announcing that they were there to help the locals “claim back their lands and resources” from the federal government, I began to wonder: Where were all the folks on the other side — the public-lands patriots — the people who say they cherish our country’s rare birthright of a vast landscape, accessible to all Americans, no matter where they live?

So I emailed several conservation leaders, asking them whether they were going to the refuge to protest the protesters. “It might be best if everybody just lets the locals keep the pressure on these guys, or if the press pays a little less attention to them,” one replied, adding, “I think they are doing much harm to their already discredited anti-public lands cause.”

Perhaps the eclectic gathering at the refuge did harm that cause; the drumbeat to transfer federally managed lands to states seems to sound a little less forceful these days. But their actions, and the lack of a coordinated response from the outdoor and conservation community, raised an unsettling question: Who will nurture and lead a new generation, one that’s more diverse and more urban, to defend the West’s environment and lands?

Executive Director and Publisher Paul Larmer

The good news, as we demonstrate in this special issue, is that new people are taking up the challenge. And though they share much in common with the activists of the past, many look quite different, and have taken very different paths to the cause. I met Glenn Nelson, the Japanese American writer of our cover essay, at a conference in Jackson, Wyoming, last fall, well before the Oregon occupation, but shortly after he launched trailposse.com, a website dedicated to “diversifying by demystifying the outdoors.” In the months since, High Country News has formed a partnership with him, co-publishing stories and essays by Nelson and other writers of color.

Nelson’s own complex story of connecting to both his racial identity and the outdoors demonstrates that it’s high time for a movement dominated for the past century by Anglos to reach out to and share power with a rapidly changing demographic. So, too, does his profile of Latino Outdoors, a group that, with lightning speed, has tapped into the Latino community’s deep well of passion for the outdoors. I recently met one of the group’s educators, Raquel Rangel, whom we profiled on hcn.org last year. She takes people from California’s Central Valley to nearby state parks and relishes their growing connection to the public lands. “The greatest fulfillment comes when someone says, ‘Thank you for bringing me to your park,’ Rangel says. “I say, ‘It’s not my park — it’s your park, too.’ ”

That’s a message the whole country needs to hear, whether it’s trumpeted from an urban park in California or a remote wildlife refuge in Oregon.