Play

Billionaire Wilderness

 

Guests

Diane Regas

President and Chief Executive Officer, The Trust for Public Land

What happens when wealth meets wilderness?

For many of us, the story of the American wilderness begins when Europeans arrived on these shores and began conquering it. The wide open spaces of the American West loom large in our country’s mythology. But what often gets written out is the history and culture of those native societies who were here to begin with - and whose relationship to this land is very different.

“From an indigenous perspective, the land is a relation and all the things on the land are relatives, explains American Indian Studies expert Dina Gilio-Whitaker. Rather than a U.S.-based “rights-based society,” native societies are responsibility-based.  “Because when you see the natural world and all the things in it as relations as relatives; you are then responsible to them.  So that sets up an entirely different kind of way that you engage with the land.”

These days, being at one with nature could mean flying there in a private jet. In Justin Farrell’s book, “Billionaire Wilderness,” the Yale professor describes wealthy landowners in expensive cowboy boots, swaggering through the saloons of Jackson Hole, Wyoming. These and other one-percenters have contributed generously to preserve and protect the pristine wilderness they love. Environmental stewardship is a proud American tradition that goes back to the founding of our National Parks system and the Sierra Club. 

But leveraging wealth and privilege for access to nature glosses over the human cost.

“The idea of ...giving your time and philanthropy to protect nature is through this elite sort of white lens that can be based on, you know, this romanticized view of nature,” Farrell says. “And a nature that for example for Yellowstone had to remove certain people to create that Eden.”

Most of their philanthropic dollars are going to arts and environmental organizations that are already well-funded, Farrell says. “Meanwhile, the people who work for the wealthy who are there to enjoy this idea of nature are struggling, working two to three jobs.”

Despite our country’s vast natural beauty, the truth is that Access to the outdoors is more and more becoming a luxury, not a right. And for those in low income communities, it may be out of reach. 

“A hundred million people in this country, and that’s 28 million kids, do not have a park close to home,” says Diane Regas, president of the Trust for Public Land. “Do not have a green space close to home that they can access.  

“At The Trust for Public Land, we’re actually about closing that gap. Because we know we all need access to nature… to solve the big problems facing the world, as well as to address the public health and community issues that we see now more than ever.”

Additional interview: Jessica Newton, Founder, Vibe Tribe Adventures

Related Links:

The Trust for Public Land
Billionaire Wilderness: The Ultra-Wealthy and the Remaking of the American West (Justin Farrell)
As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock (Dina Gilio-Whitaker)
Vibe Tribe Adventures

This program was recorded via video on July 7, 2020.

Greg Dalton: This is Climate One. I’m Greg Dalton. 

The wide open spaces of the American West loom large in our country’s mythology. But that romantic narrative has always left something out.

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  ...the virgin wilderness, a place that was unpeopled, this place is where only animals roamed...But the reality of that is that native people have always inhabited these spaces. [:14]

Greg Dalton: One percenters have contributed generously to preserve America’s wilderness, going back to the founding of our National Parks system. But leveraging wealth and privilege for access to nature glosses over the human cost.

Justin Farrell: The idea of ...giving your time and philanthropy to protect nature is through this elite sort of white lens that can be based on, you know, this romanticized view of nature.  And a nature that for example for Yellowstone had to remove certain people to create that Eden. [:18]

Greg Dalton: Billionaire wilderness. Up next on Climate One.

---

Greg Dalton:  What happens when wealth meets wilderness?

Climate One conversations feature energy companies and environmentalists, Republicans and Democrats, the exciting and the scary aspects of the climate challenge. 

For many of us, the story of the American wilderness begins when Europeans arrived on these shores and began conquering it. What often gets written out is the history and culture of those native societies who were here to begin with - and whose relationship to this land is very different.

Dina Gilio-WhitakerBecause when you see the natural world and all the things in it as relations, as relatives, you are then responsible to them.  [:08]

Greg Dalton: Dina Gilio-Whitaker [DEE-nah JIH-lee-oh WIH-tah-kur] is an American Indian Studies expert and the author of “As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock.”

These days, being at one with nature could mean flying there in a private jet. In Justin Farrell’s book, “Billionaire Wilderness,” the Yale professor describes wealthy landowners in expensive cowboy boots, swaggering through the saloons of Jackson Hole, Wyoming and congratulating each other on their environmental stewardship and philanthropy.

Justin Farrell: And the money...most of it is going to environmental and arts organizations who have tens of millions of dollars in the coffers.  Meanwhile the people who work for the wealthy who are there to enjoy this idea of nature are struggling working two to three jobs. [:16]

Greg Dalton: Access to the outdoors is more and more becoming a luxury, not a right. And for those in low income communities, it may be out of reach. 

Diane RegasA hundred million people in this country, and that’s 28 million kids, do not have a park close to home.  Do not have a green space close to home that they can access.  We’re actually about closing that gap. [:12]

Greg Dalton: That’s Diane Regas [REE-gahs], president and CEO of The Trust for Public Land. On today’s program, we’ll talk about the history of the American outdoors, the intersection between public and private land interests, and how to make contact with nature more sustainable and inclusive for all. 

We start by exploring the myths and realities of the American west. As Dina Gilio-Whitaker points out, there’s more to the story than most of us have heard.

PROGRAM PART 1

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  We often hear this phrase that the National Parks are America's greatest idea or something to that effect.  And it always begins this narrative begins with this sort of common sense understanding about the wilderness as, you know, the virgin wilderness, a place that was unpeopled, this place is where only animals roamed and you know, maybe there were Indians there at one time but they were like the animals and they’re roaming around on the land aimlessly.  But the reality of that is that native people have always inhabited these spaces everywhere every square inch of this of the land on this continent was indigenous territory.  They were spaces and lands that native people used for a variety of purposes.  

They were, most tribal people were actually farmers so, you know, to debunk the myth of the wandering nomadic native.  This is largely something that's very not really true.  There were people, however, that did that were you could say migratory and they traveled between homelands between places in what we sometimes call the seasonal round.  So there were much like people today have you know, winter homes and summer homes.  Native people had the same kind of land-use patterns where they would travel from their winter homes to their summer homes and back, depending on food sources and ceremonial cycles and things like that.  

So and this is what happens with some of the state are these National Parks like Yellowstone like Yosemite and Glacier National Monument which are the first three that become National Parks.  And the actual history of them is that they were not empty spaces that needed to be preserved, but they were empty spaces that needed to first be created as Mark David Spence notes in his decision from his book, Dispossessing the Wilderness.  And so this is, you know, part of a larger history of American genocide land theft and indigenous dispossession that most people don't really connect with when they think of National Parks.

Greg Dalton:  Thank you.  Justin Farrell, as a native of Wyoming you note in your book that you gain access as a white man from the Ivy League that a person from another background wouldn’t have.  So how did race and class offer you access into the ultra-wealthy in Jackson Hole you write about the real upper percent there. 

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, so historically there hasn’t been a lot of work within the academy on the ultra-wealthy on economic elites at least from the ground level from their perspective, through interviews and observation.  And so in terms of this project I really played up kind of both aspects of my identity.  And I do talk about in the introduction of my book, how I am a white man I was able to navigate these spaces in almost in an unquestioned way through these private clubs.  If I were even walking through the lobby, you know, of the Yellowstone club or some other elite private clubs no one was gonna stop me and ask me what I was doing there or ask me why I was there.  And so I had that an aspect of my identity that allowed me to gain access into these spaces. 

But also being, you know, born in Wyoming I also have this gravitas that the folks I interviewed often admired and tried to emulate.  So I had this kind of dual identity of this, you know, Yale elite gravitas and then the Wyoming Western gravitas that ties into this myths of authenticity and masculinity and was able to kind of pair those together to get the interviews and to get into these spaces.

Greg Dalton:  Diane Regas, for generations the Astoria Hot Springs in Jackson were a community gathering area.  In the 1990s they were closed to the public and the developer has plans to convert it to a private spa.  What happened next?

Diane Regas:  Well, what happened was the community didn’t like that plan.  And in fact, a couple of those developers went bankrupt.  And The Trust for Public Land believes that everybody needs access to the outdoors, at every economic level.  Every race, native people, everybody.  We can live longer, healthier and happier lives if we have access.  So Astoria Hot Springs which is about halfway between Jackson Hole and Alpine, a city where a lot of people who work in Jackson live.  We figured out who owned it and tracked him down and began to engage the community and what would they like to see at Astoria Hot Springs.  And what people wanted was a restoration of a place that they had access to as kids.  And people who'd immigrated to the area a lot of the Hispanics who live around there live in Alpine really wanted a place that they could go and recreate with their families.  So we had thousands of people involved in designing what Astoria Hot Springs could look like going forward.  It’s one of the only Hot Springs in the country that is now run by a nonprofit and we’re hoping to reopen it. It will be ready physically this year with provisions to make sure that everybody can have access.  So I'm really excited about it. I'm really excited to get to go see it.

Greg Dalton:  And Justin that really runs against kind of the theme of what you've written about which these private enclaves gated communities large mass of lands sort of preserved for people who own them or their friends.  So where's the wealth coming from and how is it reshaping the American?

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, it's coming from the shift within the United States and even globally with the increase of wealth among a select few.  And so for example, we’ve seen globally a 13% increase just over one year in the number of ultra-wealthy people.  In the United States there are more than 100,000 ultra-wealthy people now and that's commonly known in terms of just the wealth concentration and the income inequality that has resulted.  

But it is nice to hear a story like Astoria Hot Springs that you have this community collaboration.  And you have a nonprofit you know, getting in touch with the community and building it around their needs, which is very different than an hour north in Jackson Hole which was the topic of my book.

Greg Dalton:  Right.  And you write about the how the wealthy relate to the environment.  And also, there is also talk about somewhat about the people who live there who are very, you know, making $20,000 a year and these wealthy people like to pride themselves that they can sit at the cowboy bar and people don't know that they’re a billionaire and they mingle with regular folk.  What’s their approach to the environment and the intersection of race?

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, so I talked about how they use the environment to solve these dilemmas that they face.  And there’s these economic dilemmas; you’ve made all this money how should you enjoy it, how should you give it away.  But then there's also the social dilemma which you’re kind of touching on here in terms of how do they wrestle with and respond to the social stigma of being rich of feeling like perhaps they’re not authentic people or perhaps for some feeling guilty about having all that wealth.  Not all, just some.  And that plays into their attraction to these areas and to the idea that again kind of going back to Dina’s point that this is a preserved Eden, you know, that they can enjoy they can relax and they deserve to relax in because they work so hard to get their wealth.  

And so what’s really interesting is the way it plays out again across these race and class lines.  The sense that, you know, when you move to a place like that I write in the book how they're trying to become more authentic people and they’re trying to resolve these existential dilemmas they face as wealthy as folks who are sometimes targeted in the media and the like.  And so they try to form relationships with “normal people” and often times those relationships are based on economic exchange.  So I did interviews with the working poor, mostly immigrants from Mexico and asked them are these really your friends? Do they really care for you?  What is your sense of how their environmental ethic and how they enjoy the environment.  And so all this is wrapped up again in race and class and impacts how they see the natural environment and then it ultimately impacts their philanthropy and which organizations they give money to and the impact that has on the community and the ecosystem.

Greg Dalton:  Diane Regas, The Trust for Public Land works with community groups and acquires lands and hands them over to local control.  Do you think that, you know, Native Americans other people of color traditionally have been left out of a lot of those conversations, what is Trust for Public Land try to be inclusive with the people who are around the land now and as Dina mentioned earlier may have been related to it or occupied it earlier. 

Diane Regas:  Well it takes time and care to make sure that we engage the communities.  And so we put equity at the center because equity in the outdoors is absolutely essential.  It's not easy to achieve I think for some of the reasons that Justin has pointed to.  So we look is the organization invited into the community.  Have we looked at the data and are informed about who's in the community, how to engage them and are we involving them.  And it's really exciting to me to see how when we invite in a genuine way the opportunities for communities to engage with us with partners for what they want to see in their community for the outdoors, it’s truly transformational it changes the community it strengthens the community in addition to providing wonderful opportunities for people to get outdoors.  

Just one example, here in California where both Dina and I are right now.  The Kashia Band of the Pomo Indians had been kicked off of their historic lands and limited to a very small reservation.  And some of their sacred lands they actually had to get permission to go whether it was to do traditional food gathering whether it was to sacred ceremonies.  It’s along the coast of Sonoma which you probably have heard of is a pretty wealthy area.  Some of the families that had owned that land allowed the Kashia to come on but they had to ask.  And so a few years ago we got the opportunity to work with the tribe and help them create a new Kashia preserve along the coast.  So that for the first time they have ownership and management of that land first time in 150 years since they were kicked off the land.  For me that creates a sense of optimism that we can make progress in addressing the very serious issues that communities have with historic inequities, historic lack of access, historic changes in even their access to their most sacred places.

Greg Dalton:  Dina Gilio-Whitaker.  I realized preparing for this program how ignorant I am of Native American history and I went to some pretty good schools and I don’t know if I blocked it out of my mind because I didn't want to -- it was hard to confront those things.  So address the educational inadequacies and also what terms we should be using.

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  Your experience is unfortunately just common, so, I mean it doesn't matter.  You could have, you know, an advanced degree and still not know the actual history and political structure of this country is relative to American-Indians because it's not taught.  And, you know, studies actually show that across the board in all 50 states in the K-12 level, the teaching of American-Indians stops at about 1900.  So what that does in effect is render native people as people of the past, people that no longer exist.  And so it's no wonder that if we do show up in popular culture or in, you know, demographic studies, and things like that, most of the time we’re not there, especially.  But when we are, we are painted with these broad brush strokes of being, you know, not modern people, and you know, relegated into this frozen past.  

So, but the important thing to know is that as people we are not ethnic minorities, right, that's probably the biggest misnomer that we deal with.  We are not ethnic minorities. It is not correct to think of us in terms of people of color, as you know, people part of the large brown mass, like we are nations, we are people with political relationships to the state because of the treaty relationships.  There are over 300 treaties that are still extent that are still in force because they don't expire they are made in perpetuity.  And that constructs our relationship to the United States which is usually a thorn in the side of the state.  Because for them, for the American government we have always been a problem, the Indian problem is something to be solved.  Which they tried to do by usually by trying to get rid of us in one way or another. 

So we’re always fighting against that impulse.  We say the impulse of the settler state is to eliminate the native to gain access to our lands and that is not something that has ended.  We saw it recently with the Trump administration early on in the COVID crisis, with the disestablishment of the Wampanoag reservation in Massachusetts.  So, you know, we are still basically under attack, our lands we're still trying to protect them.

---

Greg Dalton: You’re listening to a Climate One conversation about the American wilderness. Coming up, making the great outdoors more inclusive.

Diane Regas:  It's not enough to just have the land and trails there; people have to feel welcome. [:05]

Greg Dalton: That’s up next, when Climate One continues.

---

Greg Dalton:  This is Climate One. I’m Greg Dalton, and we’re talking about wealth and wilderness in America. My guests are Dina Gilio-Whitaker of Cal State San Marcos, Diane Regas of The Trust for Public Land, and Justin Farrell of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies

Greg Dalton:  In his book, “Billionaire Wilderness,” Professor Farrell explores the lives of the uber-wealthy, living on ranches and in gated communities in Jackson, Wyoming, near the majesty of the Grand Tetons. Like many, they’re drawn to that state’s pristine beauty and are dedicated to preserving its natural wonders. But there’s a deep irony there.

PROGRAM PART 2

Justin Farrell:  Wyoming is the largest producer of coal and substantial oil, natural gas.  And that in a lot of ways is made possible this what I call a tax haven in Wyoming and it is very lucrative to move there for at least part of the year.  They have very loose restrictions on what counts as being a resident.  And so you see over time this rush of wealth to that corner of the state.  And for example by 2015 eight out of every $10 made in Teton County and from investment dividends.  Just interest rather than a salary from a job. And so the state is able to continue not to have a state income tax a corporate tax and so it's a very lucrative place.  When you do connect that to climate change and I would ask them about, you know, maybe they worked in finance or maybe they work for an oil and gas or were CEO of an oil and gas company.  And a lot of the conversations that we would have what kind of move away from these issues that I call buzzkill issues or issues that might place one in more choppier political waters because climate change is inherently a political issue and is gonna be resolved at that level.  And so, you know, it was really interesting to me to understand and to write about how they kind of navigate all of that in terms of they love the area they love a pristine ecosystem and yet climate change is wreaking havoc on that very ecosystem.  So it was just difficult for them to kind of even conceptualize and discuss too.

Greg Dalton: When Jessica Newton tried inviting her daughter's friends on family hikes, many of their moms said no way.  She realized that not all black women were as comfortable out in nature as she was.  She started a Meetup and later an organization called Black Girls Hike.  Three years later she renamed the group to Vibe Tribe Adventures and now they go hiking, zip lining, river rafting and more.  They’re based in Denver with chapters around the U.S. and a few overseas.

[Start Playback]

Jessica Newton:  I've always been an outdoorsy girl black women were already very communal anyways.  And so being able to say, hey black girls let’s go out and hike.  Well, number one it attracted women who were already outdoorsy.  And then I started seeing other women who had never been outdoors and it was like, hey I saw you guys you’ve made a post on Facebook and I just want to try it.  There are tons of black women across the globe who want to get outdoors, but they may not have the education on how to be outdoors.  They may not have the resources to get outdoors and there's a fear of wilderness.  

We did have an incident where we went hiking and the state patrol Park Rangers and the Border Directors were called in us for hiking.  What they tried to say is that we didn't have a permit because there were so many of us but we had no idea that there was gonna be this many out.  And so the fear manifested itself I saw people who are trying to explore outdoors and they already have a fear of wildlife.  Now we have to worry about other human beings who don't necessarily think this is a place for us or a place to be diversified.  Denver is not, you know, our percent for being African-American is about 2% to 5%.  So typically, our guides will go scout a trail to see how it feels out there if we get the you know the look like hey what are you doing here it’s like, nah, this is not a good city we’re gonna go to the next one.  I do know that Colorado Parks and Wildlife is definitely, definitely trying.  Taishya Adams she's actually the first African-American Commissioner for the Colorado Parks and Wildlife.  You just look at the history on the wall you just walk down the hall and you see poster a picture after picture after portrait after portrait.  And there's no Native Americans, no Asians like it's crazy.  I'm like wow this is what parks and recs is made of.  And so for me it's a joy to see someone like her step into a position of action to say here is where we change our policies our legislative efforts.  How do we work on getting the brown community the black community outdoors and just really integrate into the outdoor atmosphere?

[End Playback]

Greg Dalton:  Jessica Newton, founder of Vibe Tribe Adventures, an outdoor group for black women.  Diane Regas, your great great grandmother I believe came and homesteaded in what is now Denver where you grew up.  Your reflections on how that group based in Denver and how certain people just don't feel welcome in the outdoors.

Diane Regas:  First of all, it's unfortunately all too common that people experience these kinds of incidents.  And I love Jessica's leadership at bringing people together and getting outdoors.  I think it demonstrates a couple of really important things.  One is that it's not enough to just have the land and trails there; people have to feel welcome.  And that requires everything from community leadership to leadership at the governmental level to work from groups like us frankly, because the conservation movement needs to change to address these issues of people who need to feel welcome outdoors.  And so I love that work it’s absolutely fantastic, but I think to me the core of it is that community creating that she's doing.  And what we find is that centering around community, whether it's in a Black neighborhood a Hispanic neighborhood whether it’s working with a tribe.  The centering around community is where you create that power and create that welcoming atmosphere and people really begin to sense that they own these public lands.  They have a right to be there.  

Greg Dalton:  Dina, white people often look at land as something to be developed or improved something to own.  And parks are a little bit different they’re held in common.  Tell us about how, you know, Native Americans view land obviously very differently, something to be shared and stored it when you hear about seventh generation.  Tell us about that conceptual difference and connection to the land.  

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  We have this word , I’m gonna throw out a jargony word here.  And the word is called “epistemology” and it's an academic term.  And it just simply means how we come to know what we know.  So it's like knowledge.  And we talk about indigenous epistemologies as - or worldviews we could say worldviews -- is very different than the Eurocentric worldviews that we are raised within.  That views land as anthropocentric, right, where that is human centered that is in service to humans that is ultimately commodified.  And so thus we have, you know, capitalism mediates these extractive industries that we know of, you know, like with the oil and gas industry with mining and the ways that we use the land to create wealth.  

But from an indigenous perspective, the land is a relation and all the things on the land are relatives.  We talk about our nonhuman relatives.  So this is a worldview that is relational that decenters humans and it also decenters a discourse or a narrative of rights.  And that's another thing about the Eurocentric worldview in individualist democracy, “democracy” like we have in the U.S. that is what we call a rights-based society. And native societies, they are responsibility based societies because when you see the natural world and all the things in it as relations as relatives you are then responsible to them.  So that sets up an entirely different kind of way that you engage with the land. 

Greg Dalton:  Diane Regas.  Trust for Public Land puts people at the center which is different than some environmental organizations which are some of them are focused on saving cute furry creatures or whole ecosystems.  Is Trust for Public Land anthropocentric is it human centered and are the humans above more important than other members of an ecosystem?

Diane Regas:  Greg, I think that’s a first of all really good question.  And I think there's a lot of commonality between the ideas that Dina is describing and what we’re aiming for.  We believe that communities need to be at the center.  And if you think historically in this country about the phases of the environmental and conservation movements we created the national parks that’s wonderful and it’s work that needs to continue to conserve places.  And then we had I would say, I would probably mark it with silent spring where we started to really be worried about the chemicals and we had the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act.  A lot of those pollution oriented that was really about trying to control human behavior.  And in the 80s we kind of added to that and said corporations also have to take responsibility.  But I believe that conservation needs to shift back to more of a focus on the relationship with people.  And people at the center of our work means that we’re thinking about the relationship between people and land.  People and close to home parks people in faraway parks and what that means for the community.  And to me that's the next step for conservations to really be bringing people in those relationships back in and recognize we are not gonna solve climate change.  We are not gonna solve widespread species extinctions unless we really take into account people and communities.

Greg Dalton:  Justin Farrell, you write about the charitable industrial complex and kind of the new Rockefeller paradigm.  So where is that paradigm is that human centered is that kind of preserving pretty landscapes for a relative few?  Explain what the charitable industrial complex is.

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, I also wanna connect that with what Dina and Diane are saying too.  And I think with this the charitable industrial complex as I described it is built upon some of the myths especially Dina was mentioning in how we see nature and how we use nature.  And to Dina’s earlier point about indigenous people being locked in time and oftentimes the preservation of nature, especially in the area that I wrote about you know it works differently in different areas which we can talk about that.  But out in especially in Wyoming in the West around Yellowstone, Grand Teton National Park.  The idea of nature and the idea of giving money and engaging in, you know, giving your time and philanthropy to protect nature is through this elite sort of white lens that can be based on, you know, those romanticized view of nature.  And a nature that for example for Yellowstone had to remove certain people to create that Eden and to create that mentality and that romantic idea that is still kind of beneath some of the organizations who work in these areas.  But the charitable industrial complex I refer to just as this short-term phrase in this area that describes, you know, how folks give their money who they give their money to and often times it goes to these issues that are serving themselves or serving their view shed or improving in some instances improving their property value.  In the community of Jackson in Teton County you have it's the wealthiest county per capita in the nation but also has the largest gap between the rich and the poor there. 

And so you do have a lot of social problems. You have some homelessness in the schools and there are a lot of issues that need attention.  And the money as I show on one of the chapters of the book is not going to any of those social services organizations who really need it.  Most of it is going to environmental and arts organizations who have tens of millions of dollars in the coffers.  Meanwhile the people who work for the wealthy who are there to enjoy this idea of nature are struggling working 2 to 3 jobs.  And so highlighting that disconnect between caring for the people and to Diane's point what do we want our communities to look like.  And ones that are more Democratic or the one that are shaped by a wealthy few.  And so that's all kind of part of this makeup in the community and philanthropy plays a huge role in that.  And also does a lot of good in the community but I kind of highlight some areas where folks are more concerned about environmental issues that serve themselves or serve their elite experience of nature rather than a more holistic approach.

Diane Regas:  Greg, if I could just jump in a second on that.  Because I think it's a really complex point and one that's worth giving a lot of thought to.  And I would agree that people who’ve got wealth can and should do more.  But I don’t wanna lose sight of the reality that access to nature is actually essential for all humans.  And if you look at the data they show absolutely clearly a couple of things.  One is having access to nature has a bigger impact on health the lower income people are.  So if you're high income and you've got all the other needs of life and a lot of the wants, access to nature actually does help your health.  But if you're in the lower income it helps your health more.  So we believe that access to nature is essential and don't want to lose sight of that.  The other thing is this and I found this statistic quite shocking when I first came to The Trust for Public Land.  When I learned that a hundred million people in this country and that’s 28 million kids do not have a park close to home.  Do not have a green space close to home that they can access.  And The Trust for Public Land has been working about closing that gap because we know we all need access to nature.  I think it's needed to solve the big problems facing the world, as well as to address the public health and community issues that we see now more than ever.  I think the COVID pandemic is highlighting how important it is for people to have a place get outdoors close to home.

Greg Dalton:  Diane Regas, you've also written about how public spaces and public parks have been used as gathering spaces.  You put out a statement about Lafayette Square in front of the White House and noted it’s been used as an encampment for soldiers and sites of duels, the longest-running anti-war protest in the U.S. as well as a slave market and a zoo that was new to me.  And parks are public forum where we can gather, celebrate, protest and mourn.  So talk to us about the importance of public spaces, especially now.

Diane Regas:  Well, if you think about what has happened in our lifetimes and where people go when they're feeling a need to gather when they're responding to challenges facing the country, we go to public spaces.  I lived in Washington after 9/11 and I know we all flocked to public spaces to gather and mourn.  But that's true with in big historic events. It's also true in communities when you get together for a picnic at a social distance now or the community comes together for a market or a parade or a community meeting to really imagine and create what they want their community to look like, oftentimes it’s in parks and public spaces.  So public spaces play such enormously important roles they help define culture they help define community and create community.  So that’s why we put community at the center and we think it's so important to look at the data and make sure that everybody is actually getting access to these spaces. 

Greg Dalton:  Justin Farrell, makes me think also about the community in Jackson Hole with these ultra-wealthy people like to be amongst themselves and their gated communities.  But they also like to go down to the local bar and think of themselves as an average person.  And you write about how they're trying to recapture something that they’ve lost in their accumulation and chase of wealth.  They fancy themselves as being accessible and relatable and not pretentious.  Tell us about some of those inner conflicts that you found in these people. 

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, this was fascinating and that was that dichotomy between this privatized elite access to nature kind of the opposite of what Diane was talking about and everybody needs that.  So they had their own kind of enclaves whether it was a private club or a gated community and so forth.  But then there was this whole other side about you know trying to overcome or wrestle with or respond to the social stigma of being rich and the extent that they would go to prove to themselves or prove to others that money hadn’t turned them into these out of touch monsters.  And so interestingly I found to solve some of these dilemmas that they use this combination of rural people or this romantic idea about rural people as a vehicle for transformation.  And so they’re able to create these new versions of themselves that are more in tune with nature but that are also more authentic more community minded.  And again it was based on this romanticized ideal of rural people and poverty.  And some of that was called the Noble Native American locked in time or the Noble Cowboy also locked in time.  And that was sort of their lens to see some of this.  

---

Greg Dalton: You're listening to a conversation about accessing nature.This is Climate One. Coming up, climate change, conservation and being a good steward. 

Dina Gilio-WhitakerWhen you live on the land and for thousands and thousands of years as our ancestors did that is the very definition of sustainability. [:11]

Greg Dalton: That’s up next, when Climate One continues.

---

Greg Dalton: This is Climate One. I’m Greg Dalton.  We’re talking about preserving and protecting the great outdoors. My guests are Diane Regas of The Trust for Public Land, Justin Farrell, author of “Billionaire Wilderness: The Ultra Wealthy and the Remaking of the American West,” and Dina Gilio-Whitaker, author of “As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock.” She is currently writing a book that explores how indigenous knowledge can help address climate change.

PROGRAM PART 3

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  In my view climate change well, and not just climate change, but really the world that we live in that has led to the state of profound environmental degradation is the result of it is a problem of not just science not just capitalism even, well capitalism is a huge problem it’s part of it.  But it's a problem of philosophy.  So and that worldview in that orientation that we have to the world if we inhabit an orientation to the world that just is it results in this extractive relationship to the earth then that's going to just keep perpetuating these environmental problems that we keep intensifying.  But if we change the way that we relate to the world if we understand the land and the eco systems and the fundamental limitations of them and learn to respect those limits and our relations within them.  Then it changes the kind of decisions that we make about how we use the land.  

So I think that that's really the key use of indigenous knowledge.  Because as indigenous peoples, I mean when you live on the land and for thousands and thousands of years as our ancestors did that is the very definition of sustainability, Land tenure and longevity on land without having destroyed your environment means that you fundamentally understand what sustainability is and you live it.  So that's why in this country indigenous people need to be listened to, we need to be paid attention to and engaged at all levels of decision-making.

Greg Dalton:  Diane Regas.  Let’s talk a little bit about land-use post-COVID, you know, there’s a huge housing shortage a lot of places.  Maybe that will change as people move away from urban centers and they can do their job remotely.  But affordability crisis and a lot of not just U.S. cities around the world and a lot of that gets to some of that is, you know, conserving land where housing can’t be built.  So how do you see coming out of COVID with people already moving away from the coast moving away from urban areas that's gonna put some development pressure on less populated areas.  How do you see that playing out?

Diane Regas:  You know it’s interesting, there was already pressure on some of those more small to midsize cities.  I think about Bozeman, Montana or Gunnison, Colorado, places that are beautiful, have access to public land and trails.  People are able to work remotely and the process have been accelerated under COVID.  I think that that commitment to equity that we need the conservation and environmental movement to build deeply build into everything we do brings a new set of challenges.  And especially these issues the issues of house in which you need a piece of land to build a house on, you need a piece of land to build an apartment on, you need a piece of land to live on.  And I think there are some good examples around the country of how to begin to navigate that and in Gunnison which I mentioned we were able to help with a land swap that created some trails and access for people but also ended up with a big contribution millions of dollars to create hundreds of units of housing in the Gunnison area.  Same thing in Bozeman, Montana where someone had evicted low income people from their homes to do a new big development that went bankrupt.  We were given the piece of land to build a Central Park for Bozeman which is a wonderful thing to do and engaged lots and lots of hundreds and thousands of people in what that should look like.  But there's a responsibility there to think about what about that housing shortage.  And so there's interesting new solutions like in that case we’ve carved off a few acres to create housing in addition having the Central Park. 

What I'm seeing is more and more partnerships that cross somebody's traditional issue learns like an environmental group or conservation group also cares about housing also cares about equity also cares about public engagement voting.  And we can get to that by really thoughtful partnerships with local communities whether it's a rural community whether it’s an urban community, whether it's a small city or town.  If you’ve ever gone for a vacation in a small town a lot of times there’s nowhere to get outside.  And so these issues that we’re grappling with whether it’s housing whether it's equity, whether it's access beyond doors and they show up differently in every community in our country.  And we need to be very flexible and bring in allies to work on them.

Greg Dalton:  Justin Farrell, you've testified before Congress about dark funding of climate disinformation and the connection with philanthropy.  So there’s sort of a dark side I’m curious if any of the people you interviewed are funding climate denial organizations while preserving the trout streams in Wyoming but funding climate denialism.  Did you get into any of that?

Justin Farrell:  Yeah, I would say I'm sure there is overlap within those networks because a lot of it runs within some of these conservative think tanks that do all sorts of work not just climate denial.  And actually most of that has went underground in recent years.  So during the 90s and early 2000’s you had you know, Exxon funding a lot of these groups or even creating imitation environmental groups to disparage the facts on climate change and just spread misinformation.  And so that testimony before the Senate committee was about that process and the history of fossil fuel companies and their allies to essentially confuse the American public on climate change.  And so, there's some commonalities between my new book and that.  But that's the fossil fuel funding of climate denial is much more nefarious much less complex in its motivations and whereas in this this book there are a lot of really interesting ironies and complexities and there's a lot of goodwill even that just kind of falls flat sometimes whereas in climate denial it was they had the mission and they mostly accomplished it.

Greg Dalton:  Dina Gilio-Whitaker, you live on the California coast where the term managed retreat is sometimes used.  You say that’s rich people's territory there’s a lot of wealthy coastal property that’s at risk.  How do you see that playing out?

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  Well, the way I see it playing out is that sea level rise doesn't discriminate.  So, you know, with these coastal properties that are by and large owned by wealthy people who will not be able to get flood insurance who still cannot get flood insurance.  They are facing you know, massive amounts of stranded assets which means that as we play that game as we talked about before that game of musical chairs somebody eventually is going to -- the music’s gonna stop and they’re gonna be holding property that is for all intents and purposes is worthless because it’s going to be underwater.  So the state has taken that approach the state of California considers it as a crisis now and that's how they're dealing with it.  And the fights around armoring and manage retreats are heating up.  And at the same time it's also you know, raising these questions about access and how do we protect access to public spaces to the coast for public people or people in the public and people who come from disadvantaged communities that don't have easy access to the coast.  And so this is the work of the Coastal Commission some of the great recent work of the Coastal Commission that, you know, I applaud and having done this work of creating environmental justice policy and engaging tribes.  

Greg Dalton:  As we wrap up, I wanna ask each of you to note a bright spot that you see because there is so much pain and the racial pain, COVID pandemic it’s heavy a lot going on right now.  Diane Regas, I think of the Land and Water Conservation Fund which is a pretty big recent bipartisan win.  So tell us, you know, what is it and what’s the significance of it?

Diane Regas:  Land and Water Conservation Fund is the federal fund.  It doesn't directly cost the taxpayers it’s funded from oil and gas revenues.  And it has been used to help accomplish some of the conservation some of the access to trails and parks that I’ve talked about.  Historically, we had to fight every single year for that to be funded.  And the Senate just passed and we are hopeful that the House will pass an agreement to fund it in perpetuity at about twice the level that has been funded.  And so to me that’s very encouraging.  

The other bright spot I can't resist mentioning is I see the young people who are currently engaged on issues of racism on issues of environment and climate on issues of building their communities.  And they’re so much smarter and wiser than I was at their age.  It just gives me a lot of hope that with all of the challenges that we’re leaving them they are stepping up and I love seeing that. 

Greg Dalton:  Dina Gilio-Whitaker, bright spots you see?

Dina Gilio-Whitaker:  I’m with you Diane about that with the youth because as a college professor and working with the youth that's who I place my faith in.  And I was nowhere near as savvy as they are at that age.  And I'm also really encouraged by what some people see as you know, civil unrest, and these ethnic uprisings is for me exciting because finally we’re starting to have some truth be told.  And the toppling of these monuments to oppression is a hopeful sign for me.  I love that we can say we can, you know, get rid of Columbus and Junipero Serra and John Sutter and all the other you know, symbols of colonization for indigenous people it’s not just Confederate monuments that are problem.  So, that gives me hope.

Greg Dalton:  Justin Farrell, what give you hope bright spot as we end here?

Justin Farrell:  My students, certainly, so I would echo that.  But I think, you know, looking at the landscape and kind of even in just the last few months.  There is more of an emphasis on systemic racism on economic justice as a systems issue which I say that because I think people aren't getting caught up as much as becoming bitter at you know, rich individual people or becoming bitter at individual moral failings of the rich but looking instead what policies can we create to alleviate these problems.  And so we’re not losing our way by fixing so much on these individual failings, but focusing again on these policies at the systems level which I think is a good way forward.

---

Greg Dalton: You’ve been listening to Climate One. We’ve been talking about wealth, privilege and how that relates to American wilderness. I’m Greg Dalton, and my guests were Justin Farrell, Associate Professor of Sociology at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Diane Regas, President and CEO for The Trust for Public Land, and Dina Gilio-Whitaker, American Indian Studies Lecturer at California State University San Marcos.

Greg Dalton:  To hear more Climate One conversations, subscribe to our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your pods. Please help us get people talking more about climate by giving us a rating or review. It really does help advance the climate conversation. 

Greg Dalton: Kelli Pennington directs our audience engagement. Tyler Reed is our producer. Sara-Katherine Coxon is the strategy and content manager. Steve Fox is director of advancement. Anny Celsi edited the program. Our audio team is Mark Kirchner, Arnav Gupta, and Andrew Stelzer. Dr. Gloria Duffy is CEO of The Commonwealth Club of California, where our program originates. [pause]  I’m Greg Dalton.