As
Brian has already noted, it is evident that Shelly Rasmussen wrote this before
the meeting of September 27th. I believe the article needs to be read keeping
that in mind. And, as Brian also mentioned, her statement that the State Land
Department, which administers the State Land Trust, prohibits Geocaching is
inaccurate. It is worth noting, though, that the Land Department does
specifically prohibit "...visiting archaeological sites (historic and
prehistoric)..." (see: http://www.land.state.az.us/programs/natural/rec_offroad_permit.htm).
I
think those of us who attended the meeting, and particularly those of us who got
involved in the informal discussion after the meeting was formally adjourned,
would all be in agreement that Ms Rasmussen's position allows no
compromise. Having met with her "boss", Mary Estes, since that meeting, I
am also very confident that her position does not reflect the attitude of the
State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), which is responsible for the Site
Steward program.
If I
understand SHPO's position correctly, they create no policy themselves. Rather,
their job is to execute the policies of the agency responsible for the land on
which the site lies. In other words, if the US Forest Service (or the City of
Tempe, for that matter) builds a trail on their land to an archaeological site
and posts signs about the site or direct people to it, SHPO can't turn around
and prevent people from visiting that site.
That
doesn't mean we shouldn't follow our own rules. Whether the land is USFS, city,
or some other agency, we should be securing permission from the appropriate
agency to hide a cache on their land. If we're asking for consent, presumably
the agency will tell us if the location we have in mind is sensitive, whether
it's because of an archaeological site or some other reason they may be
concerned about that area. But with permission in hand, we would have no reason
to believe we are threatening sensitive sites of any kind.
Ms
Rasmussen may well continue to sound the alarm, as is her right. I believe our
most powerful rebuttal is to practice responsible Geocaching, when
both hiding and hunting.
Steve
Team
Tierra Buena