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Interior Secretary, National Park Service Director Lament Looming Budget Cuts

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A budget sequestration could reduce the ranks of national park rangers this summer and make emergency responses to visitor accidents slow. NPS photo of Grand Teton climbing rangers at work.

Fewer rangers for search-and-rescue missions, closed campgrounds, and possibly more devastating forest fires are facing the National Park Service as a result of the looming budget fiasco, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis said Monday.

If Congress fails to avert the budget sequestration set to arrive Friday, the Park Service will delay plowing in snow-bound parks such as Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Glacier, seasonal hires will be delayed, leading to problems down the road, and some park facilities will be shuttered, the two said during a conference call with reporters.

"This department faces a perfect storm of impact, because we do so much in the summer months, which is so important to tourism here in this country," Secretary Salazar said. "So for us, when you’re looking at this level of cuts, it means impacts to visitors, our ability to fight fires, our ability to do the maintenance, and education, and support the hunting and fishing world which is so much a part of our economy.”

The phone call was just the latest step by Interior and Park Service officials to raise public concern over the opening and operational ability of national parks with the summer travel season just a few short months off.

In late January, Director Jarvis sent a memo out across the system that directed park officials to begin planning for layoffs and reductions in the hours of visitor centers. Then last week another, more detailed, memo of possible closures was released, and park superintendents were given permission to discuss how the sequestration would affect their specific parks.

On Monday the two officials reiterated those potential impacts.

“This will include reduced hours of operation for visitor centers, shorter seasons and closing of campgrounds, hiking trails, and other recreational areas when there is insufficient staff to ensure the protection of visitors, staff and the resources," said the Interior secretary.

Added Director Jarvis, "Great Smoky Mountains National Park will be closing five campgrounds and picnic areas, Blue Ridge Parkway will have to close seven contact stations, and Mammoth Cave will actually have to close a portion of the cave tours because we don’t have the staff to operate that. That could affect hundreds of thousands of visitors.”

To help cope with the cut, which comes atop $159 million in reduced federal funding the past three years, the Park Service already has delayed filling vacant permanent positions.

When a question was raised over how a 5 percent cut could lead to such extensive reductions in visitor services, Director Jarvis explained that, in reality, 85-90 percent of a park's budget is tied up in fixed costs, such as salaries and benefits and utilities, and so that 5 percent must come out of the remaining fraction. Too, he stressed, parks are being asked to exact 5 percent of their entire fiscal year over a period of six months.

"The last little bit of discretionary funding, which often runs arounds 10 percent, sometimes less in the smaller parks, is what you run your summer operation on. That’s your seasonal workfoce, that’s your little bit of discretionary budget that you can make decisions with each year," said the director. "And of course a lot of that varies on weather, how much snow you need to plow or whether you’ve got a lot of trees down in the campground to pick up at the beginning of the season.

"So 5 percent is really a significant hit on the discretionary part of a park’s operating budget. And so we have to figure out how to absorb it, and so it really comes into the front-line visitor services, which is really the thousands of seasonals that we hire every year.”

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In something of a budgetary oxymoron, parks would be allowed to retain entrance fee revenues, but might not have the staff to operate the entrance stations. Kurt Repanshek photo.

To add to that perspective, a 5 percent decrease in the Park Service's budget reduces it to roughly $2.45 billion, which is about what the agency's budget was in 2008. Against that reduction, inflation has driven up the agency's costs in terms of fuel and utilities. And, since nearly six months of the fiscal year have passed, the agency has already obligated about 42 percent of its budget for full-time employee salaries, according to the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees.

With those figures in mind, it would take a cut of roughly 60 percent of the agency's seasonal hires, about 6,000 jobs, to achieve the 5 percent reduction this late in the fiscal year.

Though some might view the media event by Secretary Salazar and Director Jarvis as an effort to massage public opinion, their staff pointed out that national parks "are inspirational, provide respite from daily stress, encourage exercise and are just plain fun."

"They are also important drivers of our national economy, especially for the local communities near national parks," the staff added.

To buttress that last point, Secreteary Salazar and Director Jarvis noted both the economic might of the parks, and the impact that will be felt by gateway communities if the sequestration is implemented.

Visitation to the National Park System in 2011 visitors generated $30.1 billion in economic activity and supported 252,000 jobs nationwide, according to a peer-reviewed report released Monday by the National Park Service.

“Places like the Grand Canyon or the Statue of Liberty take our breath away and inspire us with their beauty and history, but our national parks also serve as anchors for our nation’s economy,” said Secretary Salazar. “People who visit parks need transportation, places to stay, and meals to eat – all of which support businesses and provide jobs in local communities.”

The statistics for 2011 are based on the spending of nearly 279 million national park visitors; more than one third of that total spending, or $13 billion, went directly into communities within 60 miles of a park. The numbers are on par with previous years, though last year the park system welcomed about 283 million visitors.

The sequestration would have an immediate economic impact on the gateway communities, said Director Jarvis.

“Yellowstone and Glacier will be delaying the plowing of the roads (by up to a month) to open those up, as much as a month, and that will have a direct impact in the gateway communities around Cody, or Jackson Hole or up in Glacier at White Fish," he said. "The communities there know that their season starts the day the road opens, and it closes the day the road closes. And that can be as much as $1 million a day lost to local economies.

“Grand Teton will be closing the Jenny Lake Visitor Center and the visitor center at the Rockefeller Preserve as well, impacting as many as 300,000 visitors this summer," he added.

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Parts of Mammoth Cave might not have tours this summer due to staffing shortages. NPS photo.

At Yosemite, plowing of the Tioga Road through the park's high country will be delayed, affecting tourism on the eastern side of the park in towns such as Bishop, Mammoth and Lee Vining.

At Mount Rainier National Park, the Ohanapecosh Visitor Center would be closed this year.

“I am concerned about the impact to visitor safety, because there will be a reduction in the number of our rangers in the field this year as a result of these impacts," added the Park Service director. "As we gear up for summer, we hire a lot of summer seasonals, many of them are returning seasonals that have extraordinary skills in fire-fighting, and search-and-rescue, and river running and high-angle work, and if we are not able to hire that seasonal workforce, then clearly our capacity to respond to emergencies will be reduced.

“As a consequence we may be reducing access to some areas because of that concern."

But all these impacts don't need to occur, said the Interior secretary.

“This is certainly an avoidable consequence that just requires the members of Congress to do the right thing," he said.

Comments

Sure, i would be more than happy to compare your tax rate to Mitts. How much did you give to charity? How much of your income was from dividends that have already been taxed at up to 35%. How much of your income was from corporate capital gains that have already been taxed at up to 35% or more? How much of your income was from municipals that accrue ar a lower interest rate because the Constitution doesn't allow the US government to tax that income. How much of Romney's income came from taxpayer funded pensions?

and if you want to talk about the public teat, tell us how much in total taxes you paid versus Romney. Then we will see who is living off who.

Finally, i sure would like to see some examples were corporations are profiting at taxpayer expense.


Well, ec, if big farms are making more in crop insurance subsidies than their crop insurance runs, yeah, I guess I'd call that profiting at taxpayer expense.

Last year’s drought is pushing crop insurance claims toward a record $15 billion – most of which will be shouldered by taxpayers. Over the years, the cost of crop insurance has steadily grown from $2.9 billion in fiscal year 2003 to $13.1 billion in FY 2012, according to USDA’s Risk Management Agency. That exploding price tag is drawing lots of attention in a year when cutting government spending is at the top of Congress’ agenda.

Taxpayers pick up so much of a farmer’s crop insurance premium that, Taylor writes, “U.S. farmers could be claiming $3.85 for every dollar they paid to insure their 2012 crops.” And this can’t just be dismissed as a result of the drought. Taylor cites estimates by Kansas State economist Art Barnaby that from 1988 to 2011 farmers got back $1.89 for every dollar of their premium payments. Most taxpayers can only dream of getting that kind of return from their auto or homeowners insurance; it doesn’t happen.

http://www.ewg.org/agmag/2013/01/crop-insurance-something-s-gotta-give


Oil companies. Airlines. Even WalMart. Whether local, state, or Federal taxes, subsidies to businesses are so widespread that it's impossible to list them. Tax breaks to entice a big business to build in a city or county are just one more form of subsidy. Subsidies that are not available to mom and pop local businesses that allow the big guys to drive local businesses out of business. And, according to many who know more about economics than I do, it is simply not true that capital gains have "already been taxed." One banker I know points out that it's wrong to exempt capital gains profits while for other ordinary folks any interest earned on savings accounts or 401K accounts are taxed. He was a member of our state legislature for a number of years but was never able to get his GOP colleagues to agree to a bill that would exempt interest earnings from our state taxes.

Certainly I paid less in total taxes than Mitt and his friends, I certainly didn't donate as many dollars out in charitable donations, but my percentage may have been equal or even greater.

All I ask is to level the playing field. But that probably won't happen as long as only those who have enough money to spend millions on election campaigns are making the laws that favor themselves or their buddies.

We can get into another endless and fruitless argument here, so let's let other readers make their own decisions and go from there.


I live on a budget,why can't this government? I'll tell you why because it's like when you give a kid candy if they eat to much they get fat and that's just what's happened to our government.The more you give them the more they want.This President was a community organizer before becoming President and nobody told him how to run a government to date the way I see it.Sad


To take a partisan approach, I'd like to remind everybody that our budget went into deficit under a Republican president and Congress. The deficit is not really a left/right issue as some seem to think. It's always the same thing. Everybody talks about reducing spending as long as it's not one pet program. Both sides are guilty of it. What worries me about the tea party and its ilk, is that they're approaching the deficit as if it was a moral issue. It's not. It should be approached from an economist standpoint, and resolved in a pragmatic fashion.

As for federal employees, the future is certainly filled with pay & benefit cuts/freeze and job cuts. It's a matter of when, not if.


Quiet, I'll post only one of several dozen easily available things to dispel the idea of reckless spending by our current President. This is from the Wall Street Journal of all places. It's a couple of years old, but still holds true. Do yourself and everyone else a favor and try to learn some facts before posting.

http://articles.marketwatch.com/2012-05-22/commentary/31802270_1_spendin...


Deficit?

It is NOT 'you can have your social programs or you can have your parks but not both'.

It IS 'if you have a decade of unbudgeted two wars, you WILL have a deficit."

The parks are such a slim portion of the budget that I'd need a new pair of trifocals to find it.


Kurt - looks like you got one there. And I am 100% with you. End the farm insurance program. End federal flood insurance and every other federal insurance program as well. Oh and stop paying people not to grow crops, subsidies to ethanol producers and subsidies to purchasers of alternative energies.


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