Over the past several years, I’ve tried to speak out on the lack of 
stewardship and law enforcement in my state’s most heavily visited state park.  
Despite my best efforts, this has been an experience of ever-increasing 
frustration, as I’ve come up against the institutional dishonesty of a natural 
resources agency with no commitment to accountability.

    Recently a friend who shares my concerns has opened my eyes to a new 
dimension of abuse in this park—a variety of issues which are more often seen 
in urban parks, including handguns, drug dealing, bonfires, and an atmosphere 
of intimidation.  Residents whose homes are adjacent to the park don’t feel 
safe walking there alone, and some longtime residents have stopped visiting the 
park altogether because of safety concerns.

    For years I’ve tried to raise attention to the park’s issues from an 
ecological standpoint—habitat degradation, invasive plants, the loss of 
threatened species and the steady encroachment of sea-level rise.  But my 
friend has convinced me that in many ways, this state park has become an urban 
park, surrounded by dense residential development and increasingly subject to 
urban issues.

    I would appreciate hearing from anyone, in the US or around the world, who 
has dealt with similar concerns—and I would especially appreciate hearing how 
local communities have responded to this kind of multilayered abuse of public 
lands, which all too often seem “protected” in name only.  I am trying my 
utmost to find some sort of workable solution, and I’m open to constructive 
suggestions.  

                                                                                
                                       Thank you,

                                                                                
                                       J. A.

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