ACT NOW to protect the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument!

The U.S. Forest Service is seeking public comments on the draft management plan for the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument.
Established in 2014 by President Obama, the Monument (346,000 acre) is an astonishing landscape of high peaks, rugged canyons, forests and chaparral, and free flowing rivers and streams that provides outdoor recreation opportunities for more than 3.5 million visitors every year.
The Monument Plan is intended to ensure protection of the outstanding scientific and historic features of the San Gabriel Mountains while improving recreational opportunities for the 17 million people who live nearby in the greater Los Angeles urban area. But unfortunately, the draft plan falls short of providing decisive management direct that will fails to balance improving the visitor experience while protecting the mountain range’s outstanding natural and cultural resources.
The draft Monument Plan fails to specifically identify the scientific and historical features for which the Monument was established to protect. Protected features identified in the President’s 2014 proclamation include:
- 55 miles of streams determined eligible for Wild & Scenic River protection, river systems providing critical habitat and recreation (as well as drinking water for downstream communities),
- existing Wilderness and roadless areas providing untrammeled backcountry recreation,
- an extensive and popular trail system (including four nationally designated trails),
- “backyard” recreation opportunities for many adjacent highly urbanized and culturally diverse communities.
The draft plan gives short shrift to other protected features of the Monument, including its striking geological features, current and past scientific research conducted at Mount Wilson and and the San Dimas Experimental Forest), the Aliso-Arrastre heritage resources area and other sensitive Native American cultural sites (some of which date back at least 8,000 years), former resorts and other historic camps associated with the “Great Hiking Era”, the historic mining town of Eldoradoville and other sites associated with the San Gabriel Mountains’ gold rush, and rich ecological vegetation diversity providing habitat for many rare, sensitive, threatened, and endangered plant and animal species
The draft plan also lacks real on-the-ground actions needed to improve recreational opportunities, while protecting fish, wildlife, habitat, water quality, and historical/cultural resources. To truly protect and conserve this magnificent landscape, the Forest Service needs to articulate a clear strategy and action plan that protects natural and cultural resources, while providing high quality and sustainable recreational opportunities.
The Monument Plan should:
· Describe in sufficient detail the specific scientific and historical features for which the Monument was established, particularly the Monument’s eligible Wild & Scenic Rivers and roadless areas.
· Commit to developing more detailed management plans for the San Gabriel River Canyons and other high-use gateway areas.
· Improve recreational access while easing overcrowding by working with local transportation agencies to develop public transportation to trailheads, picnic areas, and other recreational sites.
· Provide robust multi-lingual visitor education and outreach, coupled with more rangers on the ground in high visitor use areas.
· Provide a clear strategy to protect and restore wildlife habitat and water quality, improve visitor facilities (including trails, picnic areas, campgrounds, and access roads), and secure sufficient funding from the federal government and through partnerships with other agencies and user groups.
· Address climate change by facilitating more research, developing a program that identifies and removes non-native plant species, and ensuring that the Monument provides crucial biological corridors for the migration of species.
The Forest Service is soliciting public comments in writing and by email through November 1, 2016.
Please submit written comments by:
- Visiting the Forest Service’s comment web page at: http://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=46964
Feel free to cut and paste the Sample Comment email and add any personal experiences or thoughts you may have about the San Gabriel Mountains. Please note: that the Forest Service will not consider your comments unless you provide your contact information.
Contact Steve Evans if you have any questions or want to learn more about this alert at sevans@friendsoftheriver.org.
To review the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument Draft Plan and Environmental Analysis, visit http://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=46964.