Call & Times

Proposal seeks to modernize campground­s at national parks

- By FELICIA FONSECA

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Food trucks. Wi-Fi. Hot showers.

Those campground upgrades could be coming to a national park near you.

The Interior Department is reviewing recommenda­tions to modernize campground­s at national parks. The recommenda­tions posted online this week come from an advisory committee created under former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke that has been looking at ways for private businesses to operate on public lands.

The vice chairman of the Outdoor Recreation Advisory Committee, Derrick Crandall, said many campground­s don’t meet visitors’ expectatio­ns. Allowing the private sector to run them would free up park staff for interpreta­tion, safety needs or other visitor services, he said.

Redesignin­g some campground­s, and adding running water, tent and cabin rentals, food trucks, extended family sites and Wi-Fi at select parks also could boost revenue and encourage more people to stay overnight, the committee said.

“We’re basically suggesting that would be a way to improve overall camping experience­s,” Crandall said. “Are we talking about pricing people out of national parks through this? Not at all.”

The Interior Department isn’t obligated to enact the recommenda­tions but has said it doesn’t have the money to modernize the more than 1,420 campground­s in its system nor does every campground need upgrades.

“Once the report is reviewed, we’ll respond accordingl­y,” department spokesman Nicholas Goodwin said.

Environmen­talists say the proposal would price out some visitors and benefit special interest groups. The committee largely is made up of representa­tives from the tourism, manufactur­ing, hospitalit­y and recreation industries.

More than one-third of the country’s 419 national park units have campground­s that range from primitive, backcountr­y sites with no amenities to campground­s that are easy to reach by road. About 6% are operated by concession­aires, according to the committee. Few campground­s have amphitheat­ers, Wi-Fi, electricit­y or hot showers year-round.

The Interior Department disputed reports that it would turn to privatizin­g campground­s to reduce a nearly $12 billion backlog in maintenanc­e at national parks, including $331 million needed for campground­s.

Gift shops, whitewater rafting, mule rides, bicycle rentals and hotels are some of the services that already are contracted to private businesses at more than 100 national park units, the agency said.

Campground­s at the Grand Canyon in Arizona, Yosemite in California, Zion in Utah, Rocky Mountain in Colorado, Acadia in Maine and Assateague Island National Seashore off the coast of Virginia and Maryland have the highest occupancy rates within the Park Service.

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