December 10, 2011
Some answers about that national park
Page 2 of 2
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Rodd said she wasn't sure if the Park Service would allow trapping on the preserve. However, a subsequent Internet search of several preserves' websites showed that trapping is allowed on most of them.

The question of ginseng hunting caught Rodd by surprise; she said she "would have to talk the Park Service about that." As to ramp digging, she harbored a rather strong opinion: "I dig them too, so naturally I would want [that] to be allowed."

One of the more ticklish questions surrounding the preserve concept would be whether the state Division of Natural Resources or the National Park Service would have primary control of fishing-related issues.

In the New River Gorge National River, for example, DNR officials manage fisheries as they see fit. One sticking point has arisen, though. Park Service officials several years ago asked that non-native fish - rainbow and brown trout, specifically - not be stocked within the park's boundaries. Stockings continue to this day.

In the state's mountain highlands, trout fishing is a big issue. Most of the state's most popular stocked-trout streams and rivers are in the preserve area, and most of the fish stocked are rainbows and browns. Rodd said she didn't know whether DNR or Park Service policies would prevail.

"That's too technical an issue for me," she said.

Rodd said provisions to address any or all of sportsmen's concerns could be written into legislation that would establish the park.

"That's a long way off, though," she said. "The [upcoming] study is called a reconnaissance study. If it finds that the area is unique enough to be included in the national park system, a resource study would follow. And then there would be a period of time to write the legislation and get it passed. Park and preserve status is still years away."

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