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Posted March 2, 2010
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alpine lakes, Washington
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This iReport is part of an assignment:
Boy Scouts turn 100 |
A president, a governor, two Eagle Scouts and preserving the wilderness
In 1975 a bill creating the 390,000 acre Alpine Lakes Wilderness area in Washington state passed Congress but White House and Forest Service staff recommended a veto. Congressman Joel Pritchard from Seattle, Washington called Governor Dan Evans of Washington and implored him to fly to Washington, DC to urge President Gerald Ford to sign the measure. The president's staff told Evans he had 15 minutes.
The Governor arrived in Washington, DC but realized he did not bring a remarkable photo essay book promoting the Alpine Lakes wilderness. He called a long time friend who lived in the Washington DC area who years before was a scout in Dan Evans 'troop and asked him if he had a copy. He agreed to lend it the next day if the Governor would get President Ford to autograph it. Unbeknownst to Ford’s staff, the President and Governor Evans were both Eagle Scouts and shared a love of the outdoors greatly enhanced by their many years in Scouting. The two ended up looking through the book and talking for an hour.
Despite the request by the Forest Service to veto the bill, President Ford signed the Alpine Lakes Area Management Act into law on the afternoon of July 12, 1976, reportedly saying “anywhere so beautiful should be preserved.”
Governor Evans said, “I think the public has a strong desire to experience something that is not paved, polluted or crowded, for the sake of their own sanity and civilization. I have followed one rule with respect to whether or not areas should be designated as wilderness. If you preserve too much wilderness you can always change designations. If you preserve too little wilderness, you can never recreate it.”
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