Lodi News-Sentinel

Yosemite offers electronic entrance passes

- By Mia Taylor

The number of public lands and national parks offering electronic visitor passes and permits is growing.

Yosemite National Park, in California, recently announced that it has joined the YourPassNo­w program, which offers visitors new digital passes. Yosemite began offering the passes June 21.

Through YourPassNo­w, those planning to visit a participat­ing location can go online and purchase a pass in advance. Once paid for, the digital pass can be saved to a cellphone digital wallet or downloaded and printed. Rangers can then scan the pass at the park’s entrance station.

The program is already available to visitors at several National Park Service sites across the country including Acadia, Everglades, Grand Canyon, Theodore Roosevelt, Sequoia, Kings Canyon and Yellowston­e National Parks; Castillo de San Marcos and Colorado National Monuments; Whiskeytow­n National Recreation Area; Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area; Wayne National Forest; and the Bureau of Land Management’s Lake Havasu Field Office.

“We are pleased to offer this opportunit­y for visitors to purchase park passes at home or on their mobile devices,” Yosemite National Park Superinten­dent Michael Reynolds said in a statement. “This exciting technology provides visitors with the option for buying their park entrance passes in advance while on the road or from home.”

There is no additional cost for purchasing the passes through YourPassNo­w. Among the Yosemite passes available through the program are private vehicle entrance ($35, valid one to seven days), motorcycle entrance ($30, valid one to seven days), individual/bicycle entrance ($20, valid one to seven days) and the Yosemite annual pass ($70 valid for one year from month of purchase).

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