![]() Participant in Alaska Gateway Communities workshop Photo: Delia Clark |
Every two years, a national training course, “Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities,” offers assistance to public land–gateway community teams to plan and carry out collaborative community-based initiatives. During the workshop, teams of public land and community representatives work together to craft strategies that can be implemented in their home regions. The national course has attracted teams from Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the neighboring Nantahala National Forest, Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Cape Lookout National Seashore, and Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Parks, among others.
![]() Participant in Alaska Gateway Communities workshop Photo: Delia Clark |
Often requests for follow-up workshops and technical assistance
originate with teams that attend the national course. This
was the case with the teams from Denali National Park and
Preserve (Alaska) and the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway
(Minnesota and Wisconsin). Follow-up technical assistance
from CSI Director of Community Engagement Delia Clark assisted
the Alaska team with conducting a vision-to-action workshop
that launched a community conservation and sustainable development
initiative complementing national park efforts to develop
the new Denali south-side visitor center. The team from
the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway developed a series
of eight regional workshops in 2003 designed to address
the needs of communities along the 25-mile-long river corridor.
These workshops created a sense of regional identity and
a common agenda among the communities along the two-state
river valley.
Opportunities
for Communities that Neighbor Public Lands: A Guide to Federal
Programs 2006





























