Rare Yellowstone closure from historic floods spells hardship for
'gateway' towns
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[June 15, 2022]
By Ruffin Prevost
CODY, Wyo. (Reuters) -Emergency crews
scrambled on Tuesday to reopen roads and restore utilities in rural
communities of Montana and Wyoming cut off by historic floods in the
first natural disaster to force a summertime closure of Yellowstone
National Park in 30 years.
Major sections of the park's northern half are expected to remain closed
for the rest of the season, dealing an economic blow to adjacent gateway
communities counting on a rebound in Yellowstone tourism for the park's
150th anniversary following two years of COVID-19 restrictions.
Montana Governor Greg Gianforte declared a statewide disaster, with
rescue and relief efforts focused in three counties after days of record
rainfall that triggered epic flooding, mudslides and rockfalls in the
greater Yellowstone region.
The upheaval followed one of the region's wettest springs in many years
and coincided with a sudden spike in summer temperatures that has
hastened runoff of melting snow in the park's higher elevations from
late-winter storms.
Record flooding and rockslides prompted park officials to shut down all
five entrances to Yellowstone to inbound traffic on Tuesday, marking the
park's first disaster-related closing in summer since wildfires roared
through the area in 1988.
By Wednesday, all of Yellowstone's visitors, at least 10,000 people, had
been safely evacuated, except for a dozen back-country campers still
making their way out on their own, Superintendent Cam Sholly said in an
online news briefing.
Sholly said the park's harder-hit northern tier would likely remain
closed to visitors through the season. But the southern end of
Yellowstone, encompassing Old Faithful Geyser and many of the park's
other famous geothermal features, could reopen on a limited basis in a
week or less, depending on how extensive the damage there turns out to
be, he said.
Sholly said the park would probably explore a timed-entry or reservation
system to prevent overcrowding of the park's southern loop when it
reopens.
SURGING FLOODWATERS
No deaths or injuries from the flooding have been reported, but
startling video footage showed an entire riverfront house being swept
off its foundation and into the raging torrent of the Yellowstone River
north of the park on Monday. Sholly said the house, whose six
park-employed residents had evacuated hours before, floated down the
river for 5 miles.
At the request of local law enforcement agencies, the Montana National
Guard sent helicopters to assist in search and rescue efforts in the
small towns of Roscoe and Cooke City.
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High water levels in the Lamar River erode Yellowstone National
Park's Northeast Entrance Road, where the park was closed due to
heavy flooding, rockslides, extremely hazardous conditions near
Gardiner, Montana, U.S. June 13, 2022. Picture taken June 13, 2022.
National Park Service/Handout via REUTERS.
Gianforte said severe floods were "destroying homes,
washing away roads and bridges, and leaving Montanans without power
and water services.”
The only road out of Gardiner, home to some 900 people, many of them
Yellowstone staff, was partially cleared Tuesday, after multiple
rockslides and washouts had isolated the community, where Sholly
said thousands of park visitors had been stranded. Residents and
visitors were allowed out, while only delivery and emergency traffic
was allowed in.
Floodwaters along the Yellowstone River were nearly a meter higher
than their previous record highs measured more than a century ago,
according to the National Weather Service.
Officials were still seeking to assess the condition of roads and
bridges that wind through Yellowstone park and around Yellowstone
Lake, the largest alpine lake in North America.
The winding North Entrance Road between Gardiner and park
headquarters in Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming, was carved away in
multiple places by surging floodwaters - washouts that will likely
take months to fully repair.
Closing half of Yellowstone for the season will be a seismic
shockwave for its devoted visitors and the gateway communities
catering to them.
"This is going to be a pretty big hit," said Bill Berg, a
commissioner of Park County, Montana.
The world’s first national park and one of the most popular outdoor
destinations in the U.S., Yellowstone hosts 4 million visitors each
year. Its $159 million annual budget helps maintain more than 1,500
buildings and 450 miles of road.
During peak summer season, up to 750 Park Service employees work in
Yellowstone, along with 3,500 concessions workers who staff the
park’s nine hotels and other guest facilities such as restaurants
and gift shops.
Mike Darby, owner of the historic Irma Hotel in Cody, Wyoming, at
Yellowstone’s East Gate, said two years of pandemic constraints
followed by record high gasoline prices and spiraling inflation
"have just been the perfect storm — and now we have this devastation
in the park."
Darby said he expects local residents will band together to help
each other and visitors navigate an uncertain season, much as they
did during the 1988 fire.
“People love Yellowstone, and no matter what happens, it’s not going
anywhere,” he said. "It’s always going to that special place for so
many."
(Reporting by Ruffin Prevost in Cody, Wyo.; Editing Steve Gorman,
Aurora Ellis and Gerry Doyle)
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