The National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) is a directorate of the New South WalesDepartment of Planning and Environment and responsible for managing more than 890 national parks and reserves, covering over 7.5 million hectares of land across the state of New South Wales, Australia. Despite its name the NPWS is a state government agency rather than federal government, likewise as other states and territories National Parks agencies around Australia. However the states and territories agencies around Australia do still work closely together.[1]
History
The NPWS was established in 1967 when the Fauna Protection Panel and the Parks and Reserves Branch of the NSW Lands Department were amalgamated[2] under Lands Minister Tom LewisAO.[3] Lewis also established a charity, the National Parks Foundation, to assist the NPWS in raising funds for conservation.[4] The first Co-ordinator General of the NPWS was Sam P. Weems, a former superintendent in the US National Park Service.[5] Seven years after the founding of the NPWS, various state laws regulating flora and fauna were consolidated together into the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974, which remains the enabling legislation for the NPWS to this day.[6] Training of NPWS staff and rangers was conducted at an academy training facility located within the Royal National Park area.[7]
Nearly 900 protected areas of a variety of types have been declared in New South Wales under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974, most of which the NPWS has the responsibility to manage. Covering over 70,000 square kilometres (7,000,000 ha),[12] these range from national parks where the NPWS is tasked with conserving biodiversity and protecting ecological integrity to other less restrictive categories of parks and reserves where more intensive human activity must be balanced against maintaining natural and cultural values.[13] This is controlled through the preparation of plans of management which determine how the NPWS manages conservation, hazard protection, research, education, and sustainable visitation activities in its parks and reserves.[14] The NPWS also administers fire management strategies for the land it manages in order to limit risks from bushfires,[15] such as by conducting hazard reduction burns in collaboration with other state agencies such as the New South Wales Rural Fire Service.[16]
Organisational structure
The NPWS is divided into four branches: Business Delivery, Park Operations (Coastal), Park Operations (Inland), and Conservation and Aboriginal Partnerships. It is led by a Deputy Secretary, who reports to the Coordinator-General of the Environment and Heritage Group, who reports to the Secretary of the Department of Planning and Environment, who in turn reports to the Minister for the Environment, the minister responsible for the NPWS.[11]