Environment
Solutions lag as North Atlantic right whale nears extinctionDecember 30, 2024
By David Pendered
Jan. 13 – The Okefenokee Swamp was chosen over the site of the fatal bombing at Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church and 17 other sites for nomination to the United Nation’s World Heritage List.
Advocates of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge helped sway the site-selection committee, which is overseen by the US Department of the Interior.
The swamp received “many” supportive comments during a public comment period in 2023, compared to a level of support for other sites, “in particular sites associated with Civil Rights history,” according to a notice in the Federal Register, the government’s daily journal. Public comments are an important consideration of the Federal Interagency Panel for World Heritage.
The UN’s World Heritage Committee is to consider this nomination and others at a session expected to convene in mid-2026.
Three civil rights sites, all in Alabama and under the heading of “Civil Rights Movement Sites,” are on the U.S. World Heritage Tentative List. Because they are on the list, they remain eligible for future nomination along with other sites that could be added to the category:
Other US sites that were not selected and remain on the Tentative List include:
Mount Vernon; Ellis Island; Chicago’s early skyscrapers; Central Park; Brooklyn Bridge; Moravian Bethlehem district in Pennsylvania; Petrified Forest in Arizona; Marine sanctuaries and more in Central California; Big Bend National Park in Texas.
In announcing the selection of the swamp, outgoing Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said in a statement: “This nomination serves as a recognition of the refuge’s unparalleled natural and cultural significance, and of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service employees, local communities and Tribes that have stewarded these lands for generations.”
For the entire US World Heritage Tentative List, click here.
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