AMC Action Plan for 2025-30

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I've spent weeks in their MWI the past few years, using their boats and roads and campsites and shelters, and given them precisely $0 for what have been some of the best camping and fishing and wildlife and stargazing experiences of my life. If they want to preserve the 100 Mile while charging what they do for everything else, more power to them.
 
I've spent weeks in their MWI the past few years, using their boats and roads and campsites and shelters, and given them precisely $0 for what have been some of the best camping and fishing and wildlife and stargazing experiences of my life. If they want to preserve the 100 Mile while charging what they do for everything else, more power to them.
Very nice. Sounds like you had a good time. Like I said. Get your check book out.
 
I just read the entire AMC Action Plan 2025-2030, twice. With growing membership from 90,000 to 150,000, member and public
programs, loaning gear, DEI initiatives etc. I have no problems, and I cannot easily imagine how anyone could. I have found AMC people
I have met to be welcoming and inclusive throughout my membership of 30+ years. Likewise for advocacy of conservation issues
in the NE USA. Like all mission statements, this has big dreams but leaves specifics till later. It is like a party platform in politics.

That being said, some of the initiatives will need public money, and lots of it. The LWCF $300,000,000 needs a vote of Congress;
the AMC may advocate, but they will not of themselves fund that. They are one among many partners, and compromises will happen.

Region-wide, 30 new partner organizations? The AMC works now with existing groups that are smaller and more local, while being
just as committed to the same goals. "30 new" sounds a mere advertising claim that ignores the good work done together.

"Greater White Mountains Region​

Using the Franconia Ridge Trail project as a model, we will work with land management partners to secure funding for three large-scale, multi-year restoration projects. Projects like these restore highly popular trails, which can see up to 1,000 hikers a day on summer weekends and have experienced significant erosion, washouts, and overall trail degradation due to climate change." - Action Plan 2025-2030

These mountains are a land of heavy rains, steep slopes, thin organic soils. Many older trails run up and down the fall line. It takes not very much foot traffic to cause significant erosion on such trails. AMC and other pro crews, volunteer crews, and individual adopters, have all been relocating trails to lesser grades, building waterbars, steps, and pavers, chopping blowdowns and cleaning drains etc. for at least
50 years. Climate change has hastened some erosion, but trail conditions more often result from steep design, lack of erosion control
fixtures, or failure to maintain what's there. How do 3 more FRT jobs, in only 5 years, put any more workers on these other existing trails?
In fairness, the AMC and other groups are trying to do just that, but you'd not know that from this appeal.

Over to you fellow hikers. Am I fretting over a squall in a shot glass?
 

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