Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Crowds force closure of 3 more parks

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SALT LAKE CITY — Three more of America’s most popular national parks have closed their gates as pressure mounts on superinten­dents to prevent crowded trails that could lead to more spread of the coronaviru­s even as the Trump administra­tion sticks to its decision to waive entrance fees at the parks.

Glacier in Montana and Arches and Canyonland­s in Utah announced their decisions to close Friday night just days after several other well-known parks such as Yellowston­e, Grand Teton and the Great Smoky Mountains did the same.

Visitors travel to Arches and Canyonland­s to hike red rock trails that lead to picturesqu­e rock arches and canyons just outside the small tourist town of Moab, Utah — where city leaders and regional health leaders last week sent letters to the National Park Service pleading for the closures. The health department had already banned hotels from allowing tourists to stay after crowds continued to flock to the town and the parks even as the virus spread across the United States.

In a tweet announcing the closures, Arches and Canyonland­s said the decision to close was made in response to local health officials.

Park workers were at risk as visitors arriving at the parks, including about 700 cars per day last weekend, the Southeast Utah Health Department said in a letter Wednesday to the Park Service. Moab’s small hospital has only two ventilator­s — vital for patients with severe cases of covid-19 — and no intensive-care rooms, the letter said.

Glacier National Park Superinten­dent Jeff Mow said in a statement Friday night that the decision was made after listening to concerns from local leaders and was based on current health guidance. The Montana park known for its towering snowcapped mountains and valleys near the Canadian border heard from gateway communitie­s in Flathead and Glacier counties, along with the Blackfeet Indian Reservatio­n and the state.

 ?? (AP/The Baltimore Sun/Barbara Haddock Taylor) ?? Part of the steeple falls from the Urban Bible Fellowship Church in Baltimore during a fire on Saturday. The city’s Fire Department said no injuries were reported in the blaze at the nearly 200-year-old church.
(AP/The Baltimore Sun/Barbara Haddock Taylor) Part of the steeple falls from the Urban Bible Fellowship Church in Baltimore during a fire on Saturday. The city’s Fire Department said no injuries were reported in the blaze at the nearly 200-year-old church.

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