Tag Archives: climate-change-at-Acadia

Judge orders NPS restore signs on climate change at Acadia

A federal judge in Massachusetts is ordering the Trump administration to reinstall signs that warn of climate change at Acadia National Park, and that mark the significance of Cadillac Mountain to the Wabanaki people, saying their removal set a dangerous precedent of censorship.

The signs at Acadia were among hundreds of interpretive materials removed by the administration of President Donald Trump from national parks across the country in a move partly aimed at eliminating “improper partisan ideology” at parks. Six signs were removed from Cadillac and four from the Great Meadow.

US District Court Judge Angel Kelley also is prohibiting the administration from removing any more signs or interpretive materials at National Park Service sites. She wrote that the actions set “a dangerous precedent of censorship and sanitization” of climate change at Acadia and educational materials at other national parks.

The National Park Service stored away 10 signs, including nine on climate change and one on the Wabanaki tribe, behind a building after the Trump administration ordered them removed from Cadillac Mountain and the Great Meadow.

Signs about climate change at Acadia and the significance of Cadillac to the Wabanaki people, squirreled away behind a building along with old canoes and toilets after a 2025 Trump administration order, may soon be restored atop Cadillac and along the Great Meadow.

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Top 11 Acadia National Park events that defined the decade

Eleven important Acadia National Park events shaped the decade at the Maine national park and left some lasting changes including new records in visits, a generous donation of land and projects in the Schoodic section, the park’s 100th anniversary, a new superintendent, a presidential visit and a heightened awareness of climate change.

Here are some key moments, happenings and trends that dominated Acadia National Park during the 2010s:

Legacy of President Barack Obama

President Barack Obama hikes Acadia National Park

The beauty of Acadia has drawn generations of visitors, most notably President Barack Obama and family in July 2010 (White House photo)

A presidential visit may have been the most memorable  of Acadia National Park events. On the heels of his biggest political victory – passage of a national health insurance plan – Barack Obama became the first sitting president to visit Acadia National Park. The president’s family vacation in July 2010 drew crowds and created a lot of excitement in Bar Harbor and the park. Obama, his wife, Michelle, and daughters Malia and Sasha spent three days in the park including hiking the summit loop on Cadillac Mountain and Ship Harbor and visiting Bass Harbor Head Light. While the short vacation put the national spotlight on Acadia, possibly Obama’s most important legacy in Maine occurred in August 2016 when he used the Antiquities Act to unilaterally approve a new national monument – the Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. Both Acadia and the new Maine monument were created with private land donations and both overcame political hurdles. Obama also started the Every Kid in a Park initiative in 2015, renewed every year since, in which the National Park Service gives every fourth grader and family free admission to national parks. President Donald J. Trump has affirmed Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, and Every Kid in a Park (although the Trump administration now calls it Every Kid Outdoors).

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