Yellowstone National Park to partly reopen after rare closure forced by
floods
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[June 20, 2022]
By Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) - Yellowstone National Park will
partly reopen on Wednesday after record flooding and rockslides
following a burst of heavy rains that led the park to be closed for the
first time in 34 years.
The entire park, spanning parts of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, was
closed to visitors, including those with lodging and camping
reservations, from last Monday, as officials inspected damage to roads,
bridges and other facilities.
The closure came as Yellowstone was gearing up to celebrate its 150th
anniversary year, and as local communities heavily dependent on tourism
were counting on a rebound following COVID-19 travel restrictions over
the past two summers.
"While the park's north loop remains closed due to flood damage until
further notice, Yellowstone will begin allowing visitors to access the
south loop of the park at 8 a.m. on Wednesday, June 22, 2022," the
National Park Service said late on Saturday.
"To ensure the south loop does not become overwhelmed
with visitors and to balance park resource protection and economic
interests of surrounding communities, the park is instituting an interim
visitor access plan," the federal agency's statement added.
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Damaged infrastructure due to flooding and rockslides is seen in
northern portion of Yellowstone National Park, U.S. in this handout
picture obtained by Reuters on June 15, 2022. National Park
Service/Handout via REUTERS
All five park entrances were closed on Monday to inbound traffic for
the first summer since a series of devastating wildfires in 1988.
The south loop includes the Old Faithful geyser and Yellowstone Lake
and is accessed via the south, east and west entrances of the park.
Some of its parts will remain closed.
The flooding and slides that led to the park's closure were
triggered by days of torrential showers in the park and steady rains
across much of the wider Intermountain West following one of the
region's wettest springs in many years.
The park service characterized the rainfall and floods sweeping the
park as unprecedented, with the Yellowstone River topping its banks
beyond record levels.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Frank Jack
Daniel)
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