首页
登录
职称英语
As the federal government shutdown approaches the two-week mark, it’s become
As the federal government shutdown approaches the two-week mark, it’s become
游客
2025-01-19
13
管理
问题
As the federal government shutdown approaches the two-week mark, it’s become painfully apparent that the public can no longer run amok virtually unsupervised in the national parks. What’s the evidence of that? The litter, vandalism and trampled ground. The human feces overflowing the public toilets and the urine along the roads.
Unlike the last lengthy shutdown in 2013, the Trump administration this time has opted to keep the national parks open but largely unstaffed. Private concession operators and nonprofit groups have helped with maintenance where they can. Some states have dipped into their own
coffers
to keep parks staffed and operating — at least for a while. Many other states, including California, have not.
With tens of thousands of park employees furloughed, that means many parks have no workers collecting entry fees at the gates, patrolling the campgrounds or emptying the garbage cans and portable toilets. But the visitors keep coming. The lack of maintenance and oversight is taking a toll. There are reports of illegal camping and off-road driving in sensitive habitat areas. Unsupervised tourists were harassing elephant seals at the Point Reyes National Seashore, prompting officials to close off part of the beach.
Visitors have posted pictures on social media of overflowing garbage bins. Empty champagne bottles were left strewn on the ground at Joshua Tree. Yosemite officials had to restrict entry to certain areas of the park after the accumulation of human urine and feces became a health hazard. The National Park Service has the authority to turn away visitors for safety, health or environmental protection reasons. That’s what the Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks did Wednesday, when they closed large sections because of concerns that visitors could be endangered on icy roads and hiking trails.
And the threat isn’t just to the natural wonders and to public safety. The national parks are full of cultural and historic resources that could be damaged or stolen with so little oversight and protection. During the 2013 shutdown, the Obama administration ordered the national park system completely closed. That was a controversial decision at the time. Visitors who had traveled great distances to visit the parks were turned away. Local businesses that rely on park tourism suffered. Others saw the closures as a political tactic by President Obama to drum up negative publicity for the Republican-led shutdown. But given the damage currently being inflicted on the nation’s most majestic open spaces, temporarily closing some parks might be the best way to protect them.
Indeed, as one former National Park Service director said, keeping the parks open but unstaffed is like leaving
the Smithsonian
open without employees minding the priceless artifacts. It invites abuse and practically guarantees damage to some of the nation’s most treasured public lands.
Yes, it’s a loss to the tourists who planned their vacations around a visit to Yosemite Valley, or who had hoped to hike through the forests of Sequoia National Park. Yes, there will be an economic cost for local communities. But that is the cost of a government shutdown. The political
stalemate
in Washington — the failure of President Trump and congressional leaders to reach a budget deal as they haggle over his insistence on a costly border wall — has real-world consequences.
The nation’s most magnificent public assets shouldn’t be sacrificed to this political battle. It’s worth noting that the national park system already struggles with an $11-billion backlog of deferred maintenance and with massive crowds that stress existing capacity. There are potholed roads, crumbling trails, aging sewer systems in need of repair to prevent contamination of nearby streams. Throwing open the gates to all comers with little control or oversight only exacerbates those problems.
Americans love their national parks, but don’t always treat them with the care they deserve. The parks should shut down until the federal government reopens. [br] Which of the following statements is NOT true of President Obama?
选项
A、He ordered the government to close all the national parks in 2013.
B、His decision to close the national parks was much disputed.
C、He closed the national parks to show the negative effects of the Republican-led shutdown.
D、He believed closing some parks might be the best way to protect them.
答案
D
解析
推断题。根据选项定位第5段,仔细甄别后可知,D与原文(目前关闭一部分公园也许是最佳的保护方法)不符,因为奥巴马执政时公园是全部关闭的,故正确答案为D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3920110.html
相关试题推荐
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Theeraofdividedgovernmentbegins,inauspiciously.Willthepresidentbea
Asthefederalgovernmentshutdownapproachesthetwo-weekmark,it’sbecome
Asthefederalgovernmentshutdownapproachesthetwo-weekmark,it’sbecome
Asthefederalgovernmentshutdownapproachesthetwo-weekmark,it’sbecome
随机试题
Thebenefitstocitizensofmodernindustrialsocietymayhave【C1】______some
WriteacompositionentitledALetterinReply.Youshouldwriteatleast120wo
Comparisonsweredrawnbetweenthedevelopmentoftelevisioninthe20thcen
国家有计划地加强统计信息化建设,推进统计信息( )技术和统计数据库体系的现代化
患者年高体衰,病属虚寒,久已卧床不起。今日晨起突然面色泛红,烦热不宁,语言增多,
Thechangeinthatvillagewasmiraculou
巴塞尔委员会认为,操作风险是银行面临的一项重要风险,商业银行应为抵御操作风险造成
室颤电流是通过人体引起心室发生纤维性颤动的最小电流,当电流持续时间超过心脏周期时
选择电流互感器的规定条件中,下列哪一条是错误的?()A.220V电流互感器应考
(2020年真题)下列措施中,可以达到消除挂篮组装非弹性变形的是()。A.提
最新回复
(
0
)