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Unease Hangs Over National Parks As Partial Shutdown Continues

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Illegal camping at Death Valley National Park is one visible impact of the ongoing government shutdown. What isn't seen by the public could be more long lasting/Basin and Range Watch

Sinking morale among the National Park Service ranks and accumulating human waste and garbage are just some of the symptoms of the ongoing government shutdown that has left many national parks open but without adequate staffing.

Not so visible are the impacts being suffered in long-term environmental monitoring, work on visitor management plans and environmental impact statements, and even potential setbacks to the hiring of next summer's seasonal rangers.

"It just sounds like, to be honest, the partial shutdown was well-intentioned, but it’s not working very well and it's impacting the parks,” Frank Dean, president and CEO of the Yosemite Conservancy, said during a call Thursday. "It was simpler before when it was all closed, so I don’t know if this experiment makes a lot of sense, particularly as it gets protracted.”

Since the National Park Service was told to keep as many units of the National Park System open as possible, but only with essential personnel, many have struggled with skeleton contingents of law enforcement rangers. With no maintenance crews to collect trash or maintain restrooms, and no budget to pay for outside help, many parks have been blighted by litter and human waste. There have been reports of illegal off-road travel, metal detecting on battlefields in the park system, and damage to resources. Dean told of a visitor to Yosemite who hiked the Vernal Fall Trail with his dog, something that's illegal. Then there were families who brought their kids with their sleds into the park, pulled onto the side of snow-covered roads, and let the kids sled down the road.

Those issues are just the most visible impacts to the parks. What isn't seen by the general public could be more damaging. While the messes being left behind can be cleaned up, long-range planning is being delayed and scientific research is being pelted with information gaps.

"It all just grinds to a halt," former Park Service Director Jon Jarvis said Thursday when asked about all the planning work that is done year-round throughout the system. "I think there are a number of things that are not very obvious to the general public, like the trash and toilets (are), that are pretty consequential when you have a shutdown. I’ve been talking to some of my former colleagues about things like the long-term inventory monitoring sites that are incredibly important to understanding ecosystems, and particularly climate change. These things require regular data collection, and if you interrupt that data collection with a blank, you basically bifurcate that data set into two datasets or more, and undermine its scientific relevancy and credibility.

"... And, of course, some of them are extraordinarily important to happen at a particular moment, if you’re trying to capture plant phenology or migration of a species, or whatever," he added. "Seasonality change in water temperature, where you want to get that data point at the same time every time every year. And we’re basically missing that at the moment." 

Entrance traffic jam at Arches National Park/NPS

Halting work on plans for managing crowds at Arches and other national parks could impact the summer travel season/NPS

Planning work in parks such as Acadia, Arches, and Zion on how best to manage visitor traffic also has been stalled by the shutdown, 

"Indeed, important planning, monitoring, research, and maintenance will be short-changed by having these vital NPS staffers on the sidelines for any period of time," said Friends of Acadia President and CEO David MacDonald. "As you know, FOA is extremely concerned about issues like climate change, rapidly-growing visitation, and deferred maintenance backlog, and the park’s ability to meet these challenges will be hampered by the shutdown."

Unlike parks such as Yosemite, Big Bend, Grand Canyon, Great Smoky Mountains, and Rocky Mountain, winter is definitely the slow season at Acadia. Still, the locals in the surrounding towns love the winter months and enjoy snowy days in the park.

"More folks might feel the immediate impacts of the shutdown as more winter weather moves in – snowfall today will close the Ocean Drive and all parking lots at trailheads which have been open and easy to use for the past 10 days," pointed out MacDonald.  "More snow is in the forecast for next week, and (FOA) members will be surprised and unhappy, I think, if our volunteer crews are not able to go out and groom cross-country ski trails."

At Great Smoky, the Great Smoky Mountains Association paid to keep the visitor centers open for a while, but that ended on New Year's Day.

"The money we were able to donate was the net proceeds we thought we could earn by operating our in-park bookstores during the holiday (Dec. 22 through Jan. 1) period," said Laurel Rematore, the association's CEO. "That is in fact how it played out; we had the sales volume we expected, so we were able to cover our expenses as well as the NPS expenses. We are not in a position to donate more without diverting money from GSMA or park planned programs, or from GSMA operating reserves that are intended to protect GSMA’s employees and the organization from just this situation."

How long the shutdown drags on will determine whether other efforts will be made to support the park's visitors, she said.

"There are discussions starting in the business community about the feasibility of funding park visitor center operations over Martin Luther King, Jr. Weekend, which would be the next big surge of tourist activity for Sevier County (where Gatlinburg is), but no firm plans that I know of," Rematore said. "I’m sure they will also be looking at the Valentine’s Day through Presidents Day weekend too; since Gatlinburg has been recognized as a wedding capital of the U.S. (at one time second only to Las Vegas, or so the local lore goes), Valentine’s Day tends to be really big in these parts."

At Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota, there is no funding to maintain snowmobile and cross-country ski trails, monitor ice conditions and pressure ridges, plow roads, or help keep visitor facilities staffed for public programs. Research projects and education programs are in limbo.

"Even if Voyageurs is technically still accessible, a government shutdown is never good news for our national parks. Voyageurs and all our parks are underfunded and under-staffed already," said Christina Hausman, executive director of Voyageurs National Park Association. "It’s frustrating to see Park Service staff dealing with income uncertainty. We need them; there’s a lot of work to be done, not only to preserve places like Voyageurs but to ensure public safety."

If the shutdown lingers on into next week, the association plans to provide funding to the park for some operations, such as visitor center operations and visitor safety.

Overflowing garbage cans in Big Bend could attract black bears/NPS

Big Bend National Park could soon get help cleaning up day-use areas from the surrounding tourism community/NPS

Down in West Texas, the tourism community around Big Bend National Park was mulling the possibility of donating to cover custodial services at the park's day-use areas. However, park officials said any funds that materialize could not be used to open campgrounds.

"With the continued absense of a viable reservation system due to the shutdown, it would have required more ranger staffing to manage the overnight use in the campgrounds," said Superintendent Bob Krumenaker.

"Opening restrooms in day-use areas of the park makes more sense, and can be sustained with limited staff," he said. "Big Bend rangers, and other rangers around the NPS, are the unsung heroes during the shutdown, and their safety is not something we will compromise."

County officials are expected to take up the matter next week.

What could prove to be an unintended consequence of overflowing trash bins as the shutdown continues is wildlife habituation to human foods. Sequoia National Park and neighboring Kings Canyon National Park closed entirely Wednesday night because of human waste issues and trash that was being spread around by wildlife looking for meals. 

"One of the concerns that a couple of my colleagues talked about is that we spent absolutely decades weaning the bears of Yosemite from human food, and that was a concerted effort to making sure there was proper garbage disposal, food storage," Jarvis said. "You get information when you get there about not leaving your cooler in the backseat of your car and all of that. All of that has gone out the window, and there is garbage all piled up in trash cans throughout Yosemite. That could easily result in a habituated bear that could result in a human-bear encounter" that could end with the bear ultimately being euthanized."

Five years ago, during the October 2013 shutdown that last 16 days, all parks were closed initially. A handful later were allowed to open when states promised to pick up the tab. After the government got back to work, Jarvis, as the Park Service director, was called into an hours-long joint hearing of the House Oversight and Natural Resources committees. A smug, biting, and sarcastic roster of Republicans bashed Jarvis over how the Park Service handled the closure of the park system.

The former Park Service director recalled that hearing Thursday.

“I think their motivation for leaving the parks open (this time) was to avoid the public outcry that they received during the last shutdown. The national parks were the public face of the shutdown," said Jarvis. "I got grilled on the hill for five hours over it, and being accused that closing them was a political act. And I vehemently disagreed with that, that it was a stewardship act, that we felt that without the employees there to manage and provide stewardship, that the parks would be vulnerable to impact.

"I think we’re actually seeing that play out now.”

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Comments

NPS staffed overworked? Parks underfunded?  Nope.  My experience is that the NPS staff works very little for the good of visitors.  The NPS staff also have a haughty attidtude towards the citizens that use the Parks. What they usually do often make the Parks less visitor friendly, like closing trails or trail removal.  It's rare to visit a Park that does not need obvious repairs but I doubt if it's from underfunding. The more likely case is too much funding for the many bigshots and not enough funds for the few real workers. Privatize the Parks and get rid of the hordes of useless bureaucrats.  Many Parks are already being run by others than the Feds during this shutdown and are doing well.


Gee, Bill, are you talking about American national parks?  

 


Bill Baehr:" Many Parks are already being run by others than the Feds during this shutdown and are doing well."

What? Where? These private associations are providing minimal services in some cases, and are incapable of doing so in many others. Are you reading these stories or leading with ideology first?

 


Thanks for playing, Bill Baehr. We have some nice parting gifts for you.


My experience is that the NPS staff works very little for the good of visitors.

And exactly what is your experience, Bill Baehr? Have you ever worked or volunteered for even a single day at any NPS unit? 

 

The NPS staff also have a haughty attidtude towards the citizens that use the Parks.

My experience gained from attending dozens of park programs, visiting dozens of visitor centers, and asking for assistance/advice and just plain chatting with countless park personnel at all levels (yes, from a bathroom cleaner up to even a superintendent or two) is exactly the opposite. I've never felt that anybody believed that I was a nuisance or displayed any less pride in their work & workplace than any other worker in any other job, public or private. Maybe it's your attitude rather than theirs that's the issue.

 

Privatize the Parks and get rid of the hordes of useless bureaucrats.

Who doesn't want to visit "Hilton's Yosemite National Park"?

 

Many Parks are already being run by others than the Feds during this shutdown and are doing well.

I'd really like to see a source that indicates even a single park is "doing well". What I've seen is mostly that a few "friends of..." groups have for very finite periods given some financial assistance to open visitor centers and help with trash removal, things like that... using funds that normally go back to the park for things such as youth programs, trail building and maintenance, and vc upkeep. Also some neighboring communities and perhaps even states have kicked in some funds to help keep parks open in a limited manner, so that the tourist $$$ don't immediately disappear.

NPS staffed overworked? Parks underfunded?  Nope.

This one doesn't really need a rebuttal, does it?  

 


Malaise is a mild word.

This is Day 18.

Have you all contacted your elected officials and told them to open up our government, and our parks?

What about our president? Does he know where you stand on the government shutdown?

Are you letting them know that our national parks should be funded properly?

Danny Bernstein

www.hikertohiker.com


I am really sorry that you feel that way - most of us don't.  I have visited over half of the parks in the NPS system and have never, and I mean never, experienced anything but wonderful, knowledgeable, interesting, and kind staff.  I have had Zion staff call me on my cell to see if I was okay when I was running late driving at night from Canyonlands to Zion, I have had a ranger at Big South Fork give me alternate directions to the double arch so that I walked out on the arch instead of on the trail, I have had rangers give me Junior Ranger badges (De Soto) when I helped some kids, I have had a ranger call from Wupatki to Sunset Crater to let them know that I was coming and to please stay open for me and then another ranger led the way for me to follow, I have had a ranger call another ranger to leave the gate open at Cowpens so that I could drive through before they locked it, I have had a ranger leave my room key taped to the office door (Canyon de Chelly) because I was driving at night from Chaco, I had a ranger catch up to me at the natural entrance of Carlsbad Caverns and walk with me the entire way telling stories and then allowed me to turn off all of the lights behind us, and on and on it goes.  I have had nothing but wonderful experiences from underpaid and overworked rangers, volunteers, and staff.  The parks would be in much better shape if the maintenace backlog was fully funded.  Most of us do pack out what we pack in and in many cases, pick up other people's trash as well.  I am as sorry as I can be that you don't see the parks the way most of us do and as they were intended to be seen.


Amazing that uninformed people come to THIS website to spout their "talking points" about how the parks should work or are just fine without supervision or should be privatized. Shouldn't they do that at Breitbart or some other RWNJ website? Ignorant is too kind a word.


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