To date, the environmental movement has gone through three phases. The
challenges of continuing population growth are now demanding that the movement
enter a fourth. We call it "connection ecology." Without a move
toward connection ecology proliferating access restrictions will increasingly
separate people from their natural environment, undermining human quality of
life and the environmental constituency. These four phases are briefly summarized below.
Phase I: Legacy Parks (The Establishment of Yellowstone through Mission 66)
Guiding Principle: "...conserve the scenery and
the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for
the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them
unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations." -- The Organic Act which guides the National Park Service
Accomplishments: Yellowstone; Rocky Mountain; Arches; National Forest lands, campgrounds, and trails; Boulder Mountain Parks, etc. Today the vast majority of natural area visits are to these legacy sites. It's hard to imagine where the environmental movement would be without them.
Shortcomings: Weak understanding of complex eco-dynamics, failure to
protect non-park lands, overly commercial focus.
Phase II: Outrage and Revolution (Silent Spring through the Energy Crisis)
Guiding Principle: Opposition to the Widespread Pillage and Looting of the Environment.
Accomplishments: Clean Air and Water Acts, the Environmental Protection Agency, National Environmental Policy Act, Wilderness Act, Endangered Species Act, other key
environmental statutes and agencies. Defeat or
pro-environmental modification of countless major projects (Glenwood Canyon,
Vail Pass, oil shale, Rocky Flats, nuclear power, Marble and Bridge Canyons...)
Shortcomings: Difficulty in dealing with the
"close call" environmental issues where the benefits may not outweigh the costs.
Phase III: Hold the Line/Separation Ecology (1980/90's 2000's?)
Guiding Principle: "Earth First. No compromise in defense of
mother earth." Opposition to "industrial tourism."
Accomplishments: Expanded open space programs, wetland and
endangered species protection.
Shortcomings: Undervalues human visitation. Inadequate consideration given
to the costs of environmental protection. Doesn't search for
visitation/protection win-win. Contributes to
excessive pressure on legacy parks. Diminishes visitor experiences. Increases
separation between humans and the natural environment.
Phase IV: Connection (Coexistence) Ecology (The next step, I hope)
Guiding Principles: Earth and people first.
Accomplishments:
Encourages and accommodates human visitation. Innovative,
win-win visitation/protection solutions. Builds quality of life for
all citizens. Builds environmental constituency.
Likely Shortcomings: Accepts some environmental risk and damage.
Will require repair and restoration.