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You need a reservation system/limits for major national parks. There are too many people now.
Either you limit the people, or the parks will be destroyed.
It’s chaos in Yosemite National Park
This is the first summer since Yosemite stopped using their reservation system
There have been almost 100,000 more visitors than this time last year
It’s so crowded the lines of cards are hours long and people are parking illegally in the meadows that are supposed to be protected
“The line of cars goes on and on and on, all waiting to get into Yosemite National Park. People were waiting for like at least hour and a half and once you're inside, the waiting isn't over”
By 7.30 am parking can already be at capacity
“The entire park, it was impossible to park. There's nowhere to park for anybody. Waiting to find parking, waiting to get on the shuttle — With many getting impatient and just illegally parking wherever they could. There are people pulling onto meadows, pulling off pavement, going off-road”
“Environmental Resource Center says it was at least better than this. Without any limits the amount of vehicles, amount of people, it becomes overwhelmed. He believes the decision was good for business, not for the environment”
You can’t even take the shuttles they’re so packed, I found:
Shuttles are overwhelmed, trails including Half Dome cables are jammed, and congestion is constant. Park staff and environmental groups say it’s harming sensitive meadows and wildlife habitat
There is no daily cap on vehicles during peak summer hours
Many park employees, over 300 signed a petition, environmental groups, and former staff criticize the decision as prioritizing crowds over visitor experience
Go back to a strict reservation system. There are way too many people
If I go to your farm and I see you repurposed tires into a garden bed, or a livestock water tank I am leaving.
A tire leaches mass chemicals into whatever is in it (e.g. soil or water).
Pretty much the entire US is sprayed with Roundup for short term value extraction. From the agriculture system, to forest service. It's inescapable.
All done so private companies can extract monetary gain from your health.
Locals didn’t think Roundup was being sprayed near Lake Tahoe. So @natethecurious went to find out.
Nate dug up maps from the Forest Service's website, and headed to a spot where one of them indicated spraying might already be happening.
Public uproar has echoed across the Tahoe area since April, when our yearlong Mother Jones investigation revealed that, in California, the fastest-growing use of glyphosate—the main ingredient in Roundup—is to spray forested areas, including this massive new project around Lake Tahoe.
As the public outcry grew over the past few weeks, news begin circulating on social media that the Forest Service was backing off. “They cancelled the plan!" one person wrote. "People showed up to meetings, called our representatives and it’s finally cancelled. OUR VOICES MATTERED ON THIS ONE.”
But that wasn't true. At Sierra-at-Tahoe, Nate stood on a mountainside that clearly had been doused in glyphosate. The plants around him were nearly all dead—killed with the controversial herbicide, which the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer has deemed a probable human carcinogen—and that a 2020 report from the US Environmental Protection Agency said likely harms 93 percent of endangered species.
You can read Nate's full report at https://t.co/MQyaBkIMgb.