Specifically?

Charter groups will continue to meet and grow. Led by nonprofit leaders who are organizing from a base of 500 supporters and citizens, charter groups combine official leadership with grassroots leaders and civic influencers.

Based on each of our charter commitments, the groups will build on our NPC designation, strengthening and birthing more programs while envisioning more gutsy and thoughtful growth.

Mayor Kelly Chattanooga

Chattanooga's government will introduce a new NPC committee that formalizes our policymaking influence while the city mayor will continue wide-reaching work that echoes the spirit of NPC, including plans to revert ownership of the riverfront land back to its original inhabitants, the Cherokee Nation.

Chattanooga water fun

Groups once siloed will now have a very clear umbrella under which to gather and combine forces. Media attention will intensify. The Parks and Outdoors Department, already emboldened by its strong budget and new Parks and Outdoors Plan, will become a household name.

Children drinking smoothies

Most of all

There will be an immeasurable boost of confidence, a little swagger in our step as we nod in agreement: yes, we knew all along, Chattanooga is a special National Park City.

Chattanooga Community Meeting

We can’t name all the stories. Like leaves in the forests, there are too many to count.

But we can tell you some. In these pages and videos, we’re telling you some stunningly beautiful stories.

After all, storytelling is our love language … ya’ll.

Once, there was a time when there were no parks. Everything was a park: vibrant, alive, accessible, completely free.

Over time, we lost something precious.

Today, we’re trying to get it back. Yes, we face challenges. Some are so big, they seem unsurmountable.

But we wake up each day, under the presence of the mountain Tsatanugi and continue to work, dream and ask:

What if we became North America’s first National Park City?

Mayor Kelly

From the grassroots to the grasstops, we are deep in a movement too large to be contained or neatly packaged.

It is both literal and spiritual, existing in everyday programs and organizations – the trails we hike, the blueways we paddle – and the hearts and minds of immeasurable Chattanoogans.

If we truly believe that nature heals trauma, then becoming a National Park City is the appropriate and visionary response to Chattanooga heartache. This designation could help heal generations. 

When Dr. Martin Luther King stood at the Lincoln Memorial for his historic “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963, he spoke of Chattanooga. 

“Freedom must ring from every mountainside. Let it ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee. Let it ring from every mountain and hill of Alabama.”

Dr. King was calling forth a new vision of a new America and, by extension, Chattanooga. National Park City work is freedom work.