America's national parks are underfunded by as much as $600 million a year. That is distressing, but it's more of a sad refrain than a news headline. Whenever the federal budget has been stressed - and that's been almost every year for the last quarter-century - the parks have been among the first squeezed.
Ultimately, that scrimping packs a cumulative heavy blow. It's not just maintenance that's deferred. It means the collection of artifacts at the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument sits in a storeroom, not on display. It means there are no rangers to protect Chaco Canyon cliff-dwellings from relic thieves. The National Parks Conservation Association annually lists the 10 most endangered parks. No. 5 on the current list is Joshua Tree National Park, which sprawls across the deserts of Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
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We think something larger would be in order: a one-time, nationwide campaign to preserve all the parks, modeled on the 1980s campaign to refurbish the Statue of Liberty.
Over the longer haul, however, there's only one answer. The national parks are Americans' heritage. Congress should give them the budget respect they deserve.
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