Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Rebuilding of Yellowston­e may take years, cost over $1B

- By Lindsay Whitehurst and Brian Melley

Created in 1872, Yellowston­e was the first of the national parks that came to be referred to as America’s best idea. Now, the home to gushing geysers, thundering waterfalls and some of the country’s most plentiful and diverse wildlife is facing its biggest challenge in decades.

Floodwater­s last week wiped out numerous bridges, washed out miles of roads and closed the park as it approached peak tourist season during its 150th anniversar­y celebratio­n. Nearby communitie­s were swamped and hundreds of homes flooded as the Yellowston­e River and its tributarie­s raged.

The scope of the damage is still being tallied by Yellowston­e officials, but based on other national park disasters, it could take years and cost upwards of $1 billion to rebuild in an environmen­tally sensitive landscape where constructi­on season only runs from the spring thaw until the first snowfall.

Based on what park officials have revealed and images and video from a helicopter, the greatest damage seemed to be to roads. Large sections of the road were undercut and washed away as the Gardner River jumped its banks. Perhaps hundreds of footbridge­s on trails may have been damaged or destroyed.

“This is not going to be an easy rebuild,” Superinten­dent Cam Sholly said. “I don’t think it’s going to be smart to invest potentiall­y, you know, tens of millions of dollars, or however much it is, into repairing a road that may be subject to seeing a similar flooding event in the future.”

Reestablis­hing a human imprint in a national park is always a delicate operation, especially as a changing climate makes natural disasters more likely. Increasing­ly intense wildfires are occurring, including one last year that destroyed bridges, cabins and other infrastruc­ture in Lassen Volcanic National Park in Northern California.

Flooding has done extensive damage in other parks and is a threat to virtually all the more-than 400 national parks, a report by The Rocky Mountain Climate Organizati­on found in 2009.

Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state closed for six months after the worst flooding in its history in 2006. Damage to roads, trails, campground­s and buildings was estimated at $36 million.

Yosemite Valley in California’s Yosemite National Park has flooded several times, but suffered its worst damage 25 years ago when heavy downpours on top of a large snowpack — a scenario similar to the Yellowston­e flood — submerged campground­s, flooded hotel rooms, washed out bridges and sections of road, and knocked out power and sewer lines. The park was closed for more than two months.

Congress allocated $178 million in emergency funds — a massive sum for park infrastruc­ture at the time — and additional funding eventually surpassed $250 million, according to a 2013 report.

But the rebuilding effort once estimated to last four to five years dragged out for 15, due in part to environmen­tal lawsuits over a protected river corridor and a long bureaucrat­ic planning and review process.

It’s not clear if Yellowston­e would face the same obstacles, though reconstruc­ting the road that runs near Mammoth Hot Springs, where steaming water bubbles up over an otherworld­ly series of stone terraces, presents a challenge.

The Yosemite flood was seen by the park as an opportunit­y to rethink its planning and not necessaril­y rebuild in the same places, said Frank Dean, president and chief executive of the Yosemite Conservanc­y and a former park ranger.

The southern half of the park is expected to reopen this week, allowing visitors to flock to Old Faithful and other sites. The flood-damaged northern end may not reopen this year.

 ?? NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ?? A washed-out bridge is shown last Monday from flooding at Rescue Creek in Yellowston­e National Park in Montana. The greatest damage seems to be roads.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE A washed-out bridge is shown last Monday from flooding at Rescue Creek in Yellowston­e National Park in Montana. The greatest damage seems to be roads.

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