Uhmmmmmm.....
He’s right.
They felt they didn’t need the land and likely didn’t want to pay the taxes.
So they entered into a conservatorship arrangement.
Gubmint is stoopit. These guys are big on keeping everything clean as stewards of the area and because their product is sensitive to the environment.
They are being undermined by competitors, using the gubmint to shut down competition.
New York Times - November 1, 2009
Click for article with map and pictures of the site
It seems a perfect marriage of nature and commerce. As boats ferry oysters to the shore, pelicans swoop by and seals pop their heads out of the water.
But this spot on the Point Reyes National Seashore has become a flashpoint for a bitter debate over the limits of wilderness and commercial interest within Americas national parks.
The National Park Service has said it cannot renew the permit to farm oysters in a tidal estuary here, which lapses in 2012, because federal law requires it to return the area to wilderness by eliminating intrusive commercial activity.
Kevin Lunny, the owner of the Drakes Bay Oyster Company, says he feels persecuted by the National Park Service and has sought legislation that could allow him to continue operating.
He argues that the 70-year-old oyster farm, which predates the park, is part of the historical working landscape of the area and every bit as in need of protection as the harbor seals and eelgrass that share the bay.
Mr. Lunny and his allies also accuse the park services regional office of issuing faulty scientific reports exaggerating the threat that the oyster farm poses to baby seals and flora in the estuary accusations given credence last spring by the National Academy of Sciences.