US Parks Clean Up Messes Made During Shutdown

US Parks Clean Up Messes Made During Shutdown

February 1, 2019, 8:56 PM

US Parks Clean Up Messes Made During Shutdown

This undated photo provided by the U.S. National Park Service shows toilet paper strewn throughout Death Valley National Park, Calif. National parks across the United States are scrambling to clean up and repair damage caused by visitors and storms during the government shutdown.
This undated photo provided by the U.S. National Park Service shows toilet paper strewn throughout Death Valley National Park, Calif. National parks across the United States are scrambling to clean up and repair damage caused by visitors and storms during the government shutdown.

SALT LAKE CITY —

National park visitors cut new trails in sensitive soil. They pried open gates while no one was watching. They found bathrooms locked, so they went outside. One off-roader even mowed down an iconic twisted-limbed Joshua tree in California.

During the 35-day government shutdown, some visitors at parks and other protected areas nationwide left behind messes and damage that National Park Service officials are scrambling to clean up and repair as they brace for the possibility of another closure ahead of the busy Presidents Day weekend this month.

Conservationists warn that damage to sensitive lands could take decades to recover. National parks already faced an estimated $12 billion maintenance backlog that now has grown.

Many of the parks went unstaffed during the shutdown, while others had skeleton crews with local governments and nonprofits contributing money and volunteers.

National Park Service spokesman Mike Litterst in Washington, D.C., declined to provide a full accounting of the damage at more than 400 locations, saying it was isolated and most visitors took good care of the land.

But interviews with park officials and nonprofits that help keep parks running revealed a toll from people and winter storms when workers could not make fixes quickly.

Another shutdown

President Donald Trump has said another shutdown could start Feb. 15 if he and Democratic leaders can't agree on funding for a U.S.-Mexico border wall, compounding pressure on the park service to catch up on repairs.

Hiring seasonal workers who typically start in the spring as rangers, fee collectors and hiking guides also has been delayed.

"We're kind of ready to just have a bit more stability,'' said Angie Richman, a spokeswoman at Arches National Park in Utah.

Elephant seals and their pups occupy Drakes Beach, Feb. 1, 2019, in Point Reyes National Seashore, Calif. Tourists were unable to visit a popular beach in Northern California because it had been taken over by a colony of nursing elephant seals during the government shutdown.
Elephant seals and their pups occupy Drakes Beach, Feb. 1, 2019, in Point Reyes National Seashore, Calif. Tourists were unable to visit a popular beach in Northern California because it had been taken over by a colony of nursing elephant seals during the government shutdown.

A colony of elephant seals took over a Northern California beach in Point Reyes National Seashore without workers to discourage the animals from congregating in the popular tourist area. Rangers and volunteers will lead small groups of visitors to the edge of a parking lot starting this weekend to safely see the seals and their pups.

Grand Canyon officials said they have postponed a highly competitive lottery that awards permits for self-guided rafting trips on the Colorado River in 2020 because staff members have to catch up on other work. Matt Baldwin with the river permits office said the lottery was rescheduled for Feb. 16, which could change if another shutdown occurs. That could also lead the park to miss out on its main centennial celebration Feb. 26.

At Southern California's Joshua Tree National Park, Superintendent David Smith said officials still were assessing damage Friday but at least one signature tree died when an off-road vehicle ran it over during the shutdown. It's not the same toppled tree from a picture distributed by the park service early in the shutdown that was used widely to illustrate the perils of understaffed or closed parks.

Park spokesman Jeremy Barnum said rangers who discovered the tree initially thought vandals destroyed it during the shutdown but that botanists later determined it fell earlier. He said the park "apologizes for any confusion this initial report may have caused.''

Damage by off-road vehicles

Smith said several other Joshua trees, which can live hundreds of years, were damaged, including one that was spray-painted, but the park has yet to determine the exact number and when it happened. Someone also cut down a juniper tree, and off-road vehicles created extensive unauthorized trails, with wheel marks dug into the delicate desert soil nearly a foot deep in some spots, Smith said.

Employees at Death Valley National Park found human waste and toilet paper scattered in the desert and evidence people tried to kick in locked restroom doors, said David Blacker, executive director of the Death Valley Natural History Association.

This January 2019 photo provided by the U.S. National Park Service shows vehicle tracks in an area of Death Valley National Park, Calif., that park staff say can leave a lasting trench. National parks across the United States are scrambling to clean up and repair damage caused by visitors and storms during the government shutdown.
This January 2019 photo provided by the U.S. National Park Service shows vehicle tracks in an area of Death Valley National Park, Calif., that park staff say can leave a lasting trench. National parks across the United States are scrambling to clean up and repair damage caused by visitors and storms during the government shutdown.

A time-lapse video on Death Valley's Facebook page showed how it took staffers two hours to clean a restroom overflowing with trash and splashed with waste. Crews also have to rake and replant vegetation to repair ruts from off-road vehicles, which delays work elsewhere in the 3.4 million-acre park.

"It became pretty depressing, the kinds of things people will do when they are unsupervised,'' Blacker said.

Visitors at Arches in Utah left human waste outside a restroom, stomped out five trails in a permit-only area that was shut down and damaged an entrance gate to allow vehicles to drive on snow-covered roads when the park was closed after a storm, Richman said.

People in Colorado's Rocky Mountain National Park drove around locked gates and through meadows, spokeswoman Kyle Patterson said.

At Great Smoky Mountains National Park straddling the North Carolina-Tennessee line, visitors cut locks on some gates to closed roads and stole about $5,000 in maintenance tools, spokeswoman Dana Soehn said.

Officials at Zion National Park in Utah, Mesa Verde National Park in southwestern Colorado and Olympic National Park in Washington were fixing trails, roads and campgrounds damaged from winter storms. Mesa Verde wasn't set to open until Monday, and some areas were still closed at Zion and Olympic.

Effect on vacation planning

Campgrounds, visitor centers and trails that seasonal workers help prepare could face delayed openings, and families planning spring break or summer vacations might think twice about visiting if they don't think national parks are safe or fully staffed, said Phil Francis, chairman of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks.

"There are a lot of impacts that will be felt in the future that aren't being felt or even talked about now,'' he said.

Meanwhile, the prospect of another shutdown looms. Elizabeth Jackson, a spokeswoman for Guadalupe Mountains National Park on the Texas-New Mexico border, noted the stress on workers.

"It's a way of life if you're a federal employee,'' Jackson said. "Not to be glib, but it's something we face every year.''

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