A Voice for Acadia
While 2025 brought its share of challenges, it also showcased the strength of proactive leadership, trusted partnerships, and sustained advocacy in protecting Acadia’s future. Supported by a dedicated government affairs lead, Friends of Acadia significantly expanded its engagement with policymakers, federal agencies, and national partners – ensuring Acadia’s priorities were heard and acted upon at the highest levels.
Throughout the year, Friends of Acadia advanced major initiatives that directly strengthened park operations, infrastructure, and the visitor experience. By working closely with Maine’s congressional delegation and national park partners, we elevated concerns about the federal hiring freeze and nationwide workforce reductions. This sustained advocacy helped secure seasonal hiring exemptions essential to visitor services, trail maintenance, and fee collection, supporting the continuity of core park functions.
When a federal budget proposal threatened the largest cut to the National Park Service in its history, Friends of Acadia responded with swift, coordinated advocacy. By partnering with national coalitions and drawing on strong relationships with key lawmakers, we helped build the momentum needed to protect park funding and played a role in securing stable federal appropriations for the National Park Service.
During the federal government shutdown, Friends of Acadia remained a steady, solutions‑oriented partner. We provided weekly briefings to Maine’s congressional delegation and local officials, documenting impacts on park operations, staffing, and gateway communities. Friends of Acadia encouraged visitors to make voluntary entrance‑fee‑equivalent donations and ensured Acadia’s priorities remained clearly visible to decision-makers throughout the shutdown.
Friends of Acadia also helped strengthen advocacy capacity across the broader parks community. Through leadership on the National Parks Friends Alliance Board and within its Government Relations and Affairs Working Group, our team fostered peer learning and provided guidance on coalition-building, government relations, and effective engagement with decision-makers, helping Friends groups nationwide navigate an increasingly complex policy landscape.
Together, these accomplishments highlight Friends of Acadia’s growing role as both a leading advocate for Acadia and an influential national voice for America’s parks and public lands.
(Photo caption, right: Friends of Acadia President and CEO Eric Stiles, Board Chair Bill Eacho, and Government Affairs Manager Veronica Torres, along with colleagues from Schoodic Institute, meet with legislators in Washington, D.C.)