Yes.
National parks are protected. Nobody can cut down trees in a national park. This would stop deforestation.
no
They do have areas to do that if not don't you could burn down the forest.
devolution
No. Most countries already have too few schools for them to be closed down for not having more robust facilities. What the government should do is allocate funds previously not set for education to add playgrounds and libraries to these schools or create legal agreements between local parks and libraries for shared use with the school.
a close out or a shut down
Most government offices and functions will close. Services from federal courts to federal parks to passport processing will close. Employees will essentially be put on furlough and not paid until services reopen.However, government shut down was avoided last night. (April 8, 2011.)It means that all gov run buildings will close, such as the Smithsonian in D.C, and basically, no one in the government is getting paid
Generally "parks" as in national parks, are reserved by the government for wildlife and camping/sports. They are protected from harvesting. As for the question how many wild animals lose their homes when an area of woodlands is cut down for wood, it depends on the size of the area. Generally though, a large number could become displayed in a large harvesting operation.
1787
Yes, it will close down this year....this month (June 2009) 50% of production will be cut down! It's nice to work in NSCZ....but we can't fight our jobs if it's a corporate decision that can help recover the company's business....
she was in it
It was a threat to the authority of the national government.