U.S. national parks, led by Utah's Zion,
weigh limits on visitors
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[August 04, 2017]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - Zion National Park in Utah, one
of the premier outdoor attractions of the American West, is considering
a first-ever admissions cap in a move supported by conservation
advocates and veteran park employees to stem overcrowding at a time of
record visitation.
Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), a watchdog
group representing U.S. park rangers, foresters and other land managers,
endorsed setting visitation limits for Zion while urging similar
restrictions for national parks across the board.
In a statement on Thursday, PEER credited Zion as one of the few
national parks seeking to remedy "crippling overcrowding" but faulted
the National Park Service as failing to widely heed a little-known
mandate requiring "carrying capacities" to be established for all 108 of
its major park units in the United States.
Zion, famed for its scenic canyons, steep red cliffs and river gorges in
southwestern Utah, has seen record visitation during four of the past
five years and a 60 percent increase in admissions over the past decade,
according to a park newsletter.
More than 4.3 million tourists flocked to Zion last year.
“The incredible increase in crowd size supports the need for developing
a plan to proactively manage visitor levels to protect park resources
and provide the exemplary experiences visitors expect,” Zion
Superintendent Jeff Bradybaugh wrote in the newsletter.
The public has until Aug. 14 to comment on options the park is
considering, including an online reservation system limiting the number
of tourists who would be permitted at any given time in the most heavily
visited parts of the park.
PEER director Jeff Ruch said the Park Service has long resisted such
restrictions due to “extreme political sensitivity” on the subject.
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General view from the State Road 9 as it passes through the Zion
national park, Utah, U.S. August 20, 2012. REUTERS/Charles
Platiau/File Photo
“The National Park Service believes there can be no such thing as
too much visitation and, as a result, no matter how bad the
overcrowding gets and how much damage is done, their approach is:
'Don’t worry, be happy,'” Ruch told Reuters.
Park Service spokesman Thomas Crosson was not immediately available
for comment.
A 2016 PEER report found just seven of the 108 national parks,
preserves, reserves, recreation areas and seashores had established
carrying capacities of any sort, and just one – Golden Gate National
Recreation Area near San Francisco – had set a capacity limit
covering the entire unit.
Luke and Dorrie Prange of Salmon, Idaho, who have visited roughly a
dozen national parks, said their trip to Zion last year was not
marred by large crowds but said they would support a reservation
system.
“Our national parks are world treasures that should be available for
everyone who wants to see them but, at the same time, we have to
minimize the impact of each individual,” Luke Prange said.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Salmon, Idaho; Additional reporting
by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Steve Gorman)
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