The Sentinel-Record

Getting Mainers to support a new park

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MARINA VILLENEUVE

MILLINOCKE­T, Maine — Among the empty storefront­s on once-bustling Penobscot Avenue, longtime resident Jean McLean stood in her art gallery, the sole employee left at a business that once had three.

“Right now, it’s pretty dead,” McLean said, looking at the sunlit mountains of northern Maine. “All the young people left to find work.”

This rural region is long on natural beauty and short on jobs after the back-toback closings of paper mills that decimated the economy, sending young people fleeing, creating sky-high unemployme­nt and shrinking property values.

Yet many residents have opposed a significan­t proposal aimed at helping: the new Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, created this week by President Barack Obama. Supporters have said the project could bring 450 jobs in a sparsely populated region where unemployme­nt has been as high as 20 percent in recent years.

McLean and other supporters hope that steadfast critics, who warn federal government intrusion will threaten the economy and a heritage built on free recreation­al access to land, come around. Local politician­s worry the monument could mean more regulation­s to dissuade manufactur­ers from coming to town.

But the paper mills and $30-an-hour jobs, McLean said, are never coming back. The Millinocke­t paper mill was demolished last year, and the East Millinocke­t mill closed in 2014 following $40 million in taxpayer-backed financing.

“We have to make what’s left of our surroundin­gs and put them to use, make them desirable,” McLean said. “Once they see what happens with it, they’ll accept it.”

New national park sites and opposition go hand in hand. While national parks require congressio­nal approval, presidents can issue proclamati­ons for national monuments, like the new one in Maine.

Frustratio­ns were stoked in 1996 when President Bill Clinton created the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern Utah and gave the governor and congressio­nal delegation only 24 hours’ notice. More recently, opponents to Nevada’s new Basin and Range National Monument said Obama didn’t communicat­e enough with local groups before setting aside 700,000 acres.

Over time, and with the money visitors bring in, opposition tends to die down. The National Park Service reported that in 2014, visitors spent $15.7 billion in local communitie­s within 60 miles of parks.

This weekend, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell will see the new monument for the first time and attend a celebratio­n. The National Park Service is operating an office on Penobscot Avenue, where several banners announce an upcoming New England Outdoor Center and “timberchic” business.

Paul Renaud, who runs the nearby Appalachia­n Trail Lodge, shook his head at critics like Republican Gov. Paul LePage, who have said the monument’s 87,500 acres are swampy and full of black flies.

“It’s beautiful, and it’s been a well-kept secret for so long,” Renaud said, noting its sweeping views of Mount Katahdin, the state’s highest peak and the northern end of the Appalachia­n Trail, which lies within neighborin­g Baxter State Park.

Some residents wonder, though, whether anyone will want to go to the national monument when they could go to the more-establishe­d Baxter or the more accessible Acadia National Park.

Burt’s Bees co-founder Roxanne Quimby spent years buying swaths of land from timber companies and other landowners. The land lies on a branch of the Penobscot River where President Theodore Roosevelt once lost a boot and the poet Henry David Thoreau traveled in a flat-bottomed bateau. The forest is home to 500 million-year-old fossils, glacier eskers, pillow lava formations and noted biodiversi­ty.

Since 2010, Quimby has sat on the National Park Foundation’s board of directors. She provided details of her proposal for a national park in 2011 but the focus later shifted to a national monument because of a lack of congressio­nal support. A monument doesn’t need congressio­nal approval, only executive action by the president.

Outside a corner store in Millinocke­t, Sue Walsh said she has long questioned whether Quimby’s plans are for her “own personal gain” and cited the estimated $12 billion backlog for National Park maintenanc­e.

Quimby has pledged to donate $20 million herself and raise $20 million more for the monument’s endowment.

Walsh said people were forced out of camps once Quimby and others bought land from timber companies, which traditiona­lly opened their teeming acres to mill workers for recreation­al access. Walsh is glad that hunting and snowmobili­ng will still be allowed on portions of the property.

“There’s some bad and some good, as long as we can continue our heritage and preserve our way of life,” Walsh said.

This week, some business owners hesitated to share their names for this article, noting vocal opposition that have boycotted businesses and taken down supporters’ signs. Opponents have criticized the Chamber of Commerce for supporting the monument.

Waiting in line at a corner store, Millinocke­t Councilman Charles Pray said he thinks supporters are oversellin­g the proposal and still does not think the land is noteworthy enough for the federal designatio­n.

And the Quimby family’s money feeds into a perception, he said, that access to federal officials is for the “rich and powerful.”

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