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posted by Fnord666 on Monday January 14 2019, @05:10PM   Printer-friendly
from the business-as-unusual dept.

Two weeks into the government shutdown, National Parks are starting to close. The public has been getting free access, since there are no employees to collect entrance fees of up to $35 per car. But neither are employees there to collect trash and clean bathrooms. So, with overflowing trash cans and toilets posing a threat to human health and safety, parks are shutting down.

But in the nation's oldest national park, Yellowstone, local businesses are pitching in to pay park staff to keep it open — or at least parts of it.

[...] Jerry Johnson owns a business that rents snowmobiles and sends seven guided tours a day into Yellowstone in the winter. He calls it 'the trip of a lifetime.' When the shutdown began, he received a big spike in phone calls from people who had already booked trips, and he didn't want to tell them their Yellowstone adventure was cancelled because politicians in Washington D.C. couldn't resolve their differences.

[...] "If you don't groom," explained Johnson, "the trails will get very rough, and you get bumps, moguls, in them, and it'll be — it's just miserable."
So, during the shutdown, private businesses that operate inside the park are picking up the tab — about $7,500 dollars a day to groom Yellowstone's 300-plus miles of snow-covered roads, and to keep one paved road open to cars. Xanterra Parks and Resorts, which runs the only hotels operating inside the park in winter, is paying most of that — paying park service employees to perform the same grooming duties they do under normal circumstances.

Xanterra asked the 13 guide services that operate in the park to chip in to help pay, and all of them did. It adds up to about 300 bucks a day for each of the guide services.


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  • (Score: 2) by fadrian on Monday January 14 2019, @06:16PM (1 child)

    by fadrian (3194) on Monday January 14 2019, @06:16PM (#786528) Homepage

    It will fail miserably as summer comes along with many more visitors. I predict total closing by April, if the shutdown is not resolved.

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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday January 15 2019, @02:04AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday January 15 2019, @02:04AM (#786741) Journal
    I'm not sure myself, but you're probably right. They still need to clean bathrooms, enforce laws, and empty the trash. And the money for that has to come from somewhere. Summer at Yellowstone has about 90% of the total year's visitation of well over 4 million visitors (the winter covering most of the remaining 10%). In other words, they'll probably see an order of magnitude jump in costs of keeping Yellowstone open over the present, depending on how expensive snow removal and grooming is today. Currently, the NPS (US National Park Service) is tapping emergency reserves [nps.gov] to pay its Yellowstone employees (and a bunch of other NPS employees).

    “The NPS currently has funds derived from entrance, camping, parking and other fees collected from park visitors that would typically be used for future projects at parks. After consultation with the Office of the Solicitor at the Department of the Interior, it has been determined that these funds can and should be used to provide immediate assistance and services to highly visited parks during the lapse in appropriations.

    “We are taking this extraordinary step to ensure that parks are protected, and that visitors can continue to access parks with limited basic services.

    “In the coming days the NPS will begin to use these funds to clean up trash that has built up at numerous parks, clean and maintain restrooms, bring additional law enforcement rangers into parks to patrol accessible areas, and to restore accessibility to areas that would typically be accessible this time of year. While the NPS will not be able to fully open parks, and many of the smaller sites around the country will remain closed, utilizing these funds now will allow the American public to safely visit many of our nation’s national parks while providing these iconic treasures the protection they deserve.

    As some people are aware, I work for a private concessionaire in Yellowstone. Currently, the shutdown has had little effect on us aside from funding a portion of the above costs of keeping the park open. But it'll be a tough call, if my employer is willing to help fund keeping the park open should the shutdown continue into the beginning of the summer because that's a whole different ball game by then. Still might happen since revenue is much higher during the summer and Yellowstone closing could be a propaganda coup for the Trump Administration's many opponents.