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国家公园【11】US Park Service Director: A Dream Job

littleflute 漂泊者乐园 2021-10-05

More than 300 million people from around the world visit America’s national parks each year.

They visit beautiful places like the Grand Canyon and Yosemite. They walk among the ancient giant sequoia trees and watch wolves, bison and bears in their natural habitats.


Around five million people each year visit the 1.6 km deep Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona



They are all managed by the U.S. National Park Service. This year it is celebrating its centennial, or 100th anniversary.

Jonathan Jarvis is the National Park Service Director. Recently, he spoke to VOA about his time with the service.

“For the last 100 years, the National Park Service has been charged by the U.S. government to manage the very best of America; the very best places that represent both our natural and cultural heritage. So, to be part of this organization and to be in the directorship is really a lifelong dream for me.”

He has worked at the park service for 40 years, and been the director since 2009.

“I like to say the National Park Service is the only federal agency with the responsibility to ensure the public actually has fun! So we have a lot of places that are there for the enjoyment of the American people, and visitors from around the world.”

Called the country’s national treasures, these parks are found in every state. They cover over 32 million hectares from Guam to the Virgin Islands to Alaska. There are 412 sites in all.


A view seen on the way to Glacier Point trail in the Yosemite National Park, California.



Not Just Beauty: Lessons Learned Too

But they are not just places of wild nature. The national parks include thousands of historic buildings, presidential homes, monuments and Civil War battlefields. They tell the story of the United States of America.

The director says the parks are not just about seeing their beauty.

“We want you to learn something, to take something away. Whether it’s to learn about nature or plate tectonics or climate change, but also about history.”

Sometimes those history lessons are difficult ones about the darker side of America.

Jarvis talks about the Manzanar National Historic Site in California. This is the place that tells the story of the internment of Japanese-Americans in military-like camps during World War Two. He explains that Japanese-Americans were held in the camps by order from President Franklin Roosevelt when the U.S. was at war with Japan.


An annual pilgrimage to the Manzanar National Historic site - one of ten concentration camps in which Americans of Japanese ancestry were held during World War II - has been held for more than 40 years



“Over 100,000 Japanese-Americans were rounded up at bayonet point and put into prison camps for multiple years during the war just because of their ethnicity. The Park Service has been charged with telling that kind of story."

Jarvis says it is “an honor” to serve as the director. It is a big job. The agency has 22,000 employees and gets help from another 400,000 volunteers. He says being in charge of “incredible places” is the “best job in the government.”


NPS Director Jonathan Jarvis during a wilderness walk with students at Prince William Forest Park, Virginia




Those incredible places are full of action—fires, volcanoes and floods. He says there are also activities around the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution—freedom of speech. The parks also participate in activities around the Confederate flag used by the south in the Civil War, and LGBT rights.

Dealing with Climate Change

The national parks hold some of the country’s most beautiful natural spaces. One thing the park service must deal with, however, is climate change. The parks are federally protected, but that does not shelter them from the effects of warming temperatures.

Jarvis gives some examples. Like the glaciers -- the large bodies of ice on slopes -- in Glacier National Park. He says they will be “gone within 20-25 years.” He adds that the wildfires in the national parks and other public lands are burning “at least a month longer,” than in years past.

Because of climate change, he says, “the forests are not even coming back the same way.”

“We’re seeing species being forced to migrate and not necessarily having the corridors to connect between parks and protected areas across the landscape.”

Park Service’s Second Century

Heading into its second century, Jarvis says the new national parks will be “more representative” of women and minorities in the U.S.

He says there are several key goals for the parks future. One of those goals, he says, is “battling to protect these key natural resources.”

“I hope that the Park Service thrives in its second century -- that it is established on a sound foundation of financial support. But really the key is the public support. That the public still views the National Park Service as essential.”


I’m Anne Ball.


Julie Taboh wrote this story for VOA News. Anne Ball adapted it for Learning English. Hai Do was the editor. We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments Section and visit us on our Facebook page.

_____________________________________________________________

Words in This Story


centennial – n. the one hundredth anniversary of something

plate tectonics – n. the theory that Earth’s outer shell is divided into several plates that move over the surface of the Earth

bayonet – n. the knife-like point at the end of a rifle

ethnicity – n. group of people who belong to a particular race or share a culture

LGBT – short cut phrase. stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender

migrate – v. to move from one place to another to live

corridor – n. a long narrow passage in a building or piece of land

thrive – v. to do well

essential – adj. extremely important or necessary



This year, the U.S. National Park Service turns 100. America’s 28th President, Woodrow Wilson, formed the National Park Service in 1916 to “protect the wild and wonderful landscapes” in the United States.

Today, the National Park Service protects over 400 parks and historical sites from coast to coast. Every week, VOA Learning English will profile one of the sites within the National Park Service.





往期回顾:

国家公园【10】Big Bend National Park: A Texas Treasure

国家公园【9】Rocky Mountain National Park: Wild and Wonderful

国家公园【8】Crater Lake National Park: A Blue Jewel

国家公园【7】 The Grand Canyon: A Sight Beyond Words

国家公园【6】Yellowstone: America's First National Park

国家公园【5】: Obama Names New National Monument in Maine

国家公园【4】Denali: The Alaskan Wild

国家公园【3】:  Sequoia and Kings Canyon: A Land of Giants

国家公园【2】:  Peace and Quiet at Isle Royale National Park

国家公园【1】: The Relaxing Waters of Hot Springs National Park

VOA 国家公园: Grand Teton National Park is for Exploring

VOA 国家公园: Wild Surroundings at Black Canyon of the Gunnison

VOA 国家公园: The Strange and Beautiful World of Arches National...

VOA 国家公园: Wrangell-St. Elias: The Largest National Park in...

VOA 国家公园: Mammoth Cave: Grand and Gloomy

VOA 国家公园: Underwater Exploration at Biscayne National Park

VOA 国家公园: Shenandoah: A Western-Style Park in the East

VOA 国家公园: Risks and Rewards at Zion National Park

VOA 国家公园: Glacier Bay: A Land Reborn

VOA 国家公园:Virgin Islands National Park: America's Paradise

VOA 国家公园:Petrified Forest National Park: Ancient and Spectacular

VOA 美国国家公园: Voyageurs National Park: A Land of Lakes

VOA国家公园: There's Something for Everyone at Olympic National Park

National Parks Traveler Relives History in Southeastern US

VOA 美国国家公园: A National Park for the Father of Parks




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推荐:

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