States help run U.S. National Parks in
federal government shutdown
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[December 22, 2018]
By Jonathan Allen
(Reuters) - While U.S. National Parks will
generally remain open with a skeleton staff through the federal
government shutdown, Republican governors in at least two states are
working to make sure public restrooms get cleaned and visitor centers
stay open.
The government shutdown of all but essential federal services due to a
fight on Capitol Hill over funding for U.S. President Donald Trump's
wall on the Mexican border comes at the height of the Christmas travel
season.
The National Park Service said this week that parks "will remain as
accessible as possible," in the same way as happened during a three-day
government shutdown in January, when the gates to about two-thirds of
national parks and monuments remained open.
"However services that require staffing and maintenance such as
campgrounds and full-service restrooms will not be operating," Jeremy
Barnum, the National Parks Service chief spokesman, said in a statement.
The Republican governors of Utah and Arizona have promised to step in to
fill some of the breach, in part to protect local businesses in and
around some of the country's most spectacular natural landscapes that
depend on tourist spending.
"Regardless of what happens in Washington, the Grand Canyon will not
close on our watch," Arizona Governor Doug Ducey said in a statement on
Friday. The Arizona Office of Tourism will help ensure that restrooms
are cleaned, trash is collected and shuttle buses operate throughout the
shutdown, Ducey said.
All five of Utah's national parks will remain open, and the three most
popular ones will have maintenance costs underwritten by the state
during the shutdown, according to Vicki Varela, the Utah Office of
Tourism's managing director.
Zion National Park alone drew 107,000 visitors between Dec. 22 and Dec.
27 a year ago, Varela said.
"This time of year is the most remarkable time of year to experience it
because the snow against that red rock is just breathtaking," she said
in a telephone interview.
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The Colorado River runs through the west rim of the Grand Canyon in
Arizona, U.S. February 28, 2018. Picture taken February 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi/File Photo
Utah Governor Gary Herbert authorized the temporary funding for
custodial and visitor center services, which will cost an estimated
$18,000 to $19,000 for Zion. "It's really modest on the part of the
state to protect the quality of the experience for visitors," Varela
said.
In New York, the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island closed down for
a day during the January shutdown before Governor Andrew Cuomo, a
Democrat, ordered state tourism funds be used to reopen them. His
office did not respond to questions about whether he would repeat
the exercise this weekend, and National Park Service officials in
New York declined to discuss their plans.
Some conservationists warned that it was safer to shutter the parks
entirely, as happened under Barack Obama's presidential
administration during a 2013 shutdown, rather than have them open
with skeleton staff.
During the January shutdown, a pregnant elk was killed in Zion and
tourists in Yellowstone drove snowmobiles dangerously close to the
Old Faithful geyser, said Theresa Pierno, president of the National
Parks Conservation Association.
"It's unrealistic and dangerous to think that parks can remain open
with only a skeleton crew and continue with business as usual,"
Pierno said in a statement.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman)
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