Press Release
Anticipated Release Date: Week of December 17th, 2001
Omaha, Neb - The National Park Service (NPS) has been directed
by Congress to coordinate a comprehensive study of the routes of
the Lincoln Highway. Established in 1913, the Lincoln Highway was
the first transcontinental highway in the United States and includes
more than 3000 miles of roadways from New York City to San Francisco.
Today, the roads that comprise the Lincoln Highway approximate sections
of the present day Federal and State highway system: U.S. 1, 30,
40, 50, and I-80 traversing New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming,
Utah, Nevada, and California. At one point in its early history,
the highway also crossed through the northeastern corner of Colorado.
The Lincoln Highway Special Resource Study will include an evaluation
of the significance of the Highway and alternative ways of preserving
and interpreting significant features associated with the Highway.
The first part of this study will evaluate the national significance
of the Lincoln Highway, and its suitability and feasibility as a
potential unit of the National Park System. An area is considered
nationally significant if it is an outstanding example of a particular
kind of resource and retains a high degree of integrity as an unspoiled
example of that resource. To be determined suitable for inclusion
in the National Park System, an area must represent a theme that
is not already adequately represented in the system or already protected
by another agency. Feasibility factors include land ownership, acquisition
costs, costs of staffing, threats to the resource and local interest
in long-term preservation.
The second part of the Lincoln Highway Special Resource Study
will present management alternatives for long-term preservation
of the Highway, including alternatives involving state and local
governments and private sector organizations. The potential environmental
impacts of each management option will be evaluated as part of this
study. The study is expected to take three years to complete. Sändra
Washington, NPS Midwest Region Chief of the Planning and Compliance
Division said, "Our Lincoln Highway team will spend much of this
year studying the routes that make up the highway in more detail
and documenting the road itself and the roadside architecture and
attractions directly related to it." By this time next year, the
NPS hopes to have a set of management alternatives ready to present
to the public for comment.
Public comments on the general scope of the project are welcome;
general comments received by February 15, 2002 will be taken into
consideration before preliminary management alternatives are developed.
Those comments can be sent to Ruth Heikkinen, National Park Service,
Midwest Regional Office, 1709 Jackson Street, Omaha, NE 68102. She
also may be reached by email at Ruth_Heikkinen.nps.gov,
or by calling 402-221-7285. A newsletter and a website will be developed
to help the interested public follow the progress of this project
and provide feedback. Anyone interested in being included on the
mailing list for the newsletter should contact Heikkinen.
List of Regional Public Affairs Contacts:
NPS Northeast Region -- Edie Shean-Hammond
NPS Midwest Region - Flo Six
NPS Intermountain Region -- Rick Frost
NPS Pacific West Region -- Holly Bundock
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