[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 29, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S7742]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JIM CORLESS
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, as Members of the Senate, we work every day
with public servants who fill an amazing variety of roles, and when one
of those servants fills his or her role with exceptional skill and
dedication, they deserve our praise. One such public servant, Jim
Corless, the superintendent of Keweenaw National Historical Park in
Michigan, is preparing to retire after nearly 30 years of Federal
service, the last 3 of which have come in helping build one of the most
unique national parks in the Nation.
Jim Corless came to Michigan's Copper Country from Klondike Gold Rush
National Historical Park in Skagway, AK, making him that rare person
who moved south to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. This was good
fortune for those of us who care about preserving the history of
Michigan's copper mining era because Jim's career had prepared him
well. As a trained historian, Jim had already helped bring alive the
drama of our Nation's founding, the frontier grit of the earliest Texas
settlers, the history of Ozark waterways in Arkansas, and the growth of
textile manufacturing in Massachusetts in parks from coast to coast.
Preserving the legacy of Michigan's copper mining industry has long
been a priority for many of us Michiganians. The Keweenaw Peninsula
contained perhaps the world's richest and purest deposits of copper,
and from native peoples 7,000 years ago to miners in the 19th and 20th
centuries, those deposits have had profound effects on human society
across our Nation and on the peninsula.
The park established in 1992 to preserve that history is like no
other in the Nation. Unlike the vast majority of National Park Service
facilities, in which the government owns and controls the land and
associated assets of the park, Keweenaw National Historical Park is an
unusual public-private cooperative venture. Private citizens, nonprofit
groups, and local governments own nearly all the park's historic
assets, and they are managed cooperatively, with the Park Service
providing coordination, advice and funding.
That calls for a superintendent who is part historian, part manager,
and part diplomat. Jim has skillfully served all three roles. He has
worked closely with officials at the Environmental Protection Agency to
simultaneously preserve the industrial legacy of the copper mines while
remediating the environmental impact of that legacy. And he has taken a
leading, but always cooperative, role in bringing together the various
community interests who have a stake in the park and its growth. Just
one example of this work is his work to help create the Quincy Smelter
Steering Committee to help preserve one of the park's most important
historic resources.
Jim describes Keweenaw National Historical Park as a ``parknership,''
and that illustrates the thoughtful way in which he has approached his
job over the last 3 years. All of us who care about Michigan's vital
mining past are grateful for his exceptional service, and we all wish
him and his wife Mary Jane the very best as they embark on the next
chapter of their lives.
____________________