Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Public denounces 180 percent park-fee rise

- DARRYL FEARS

Interior Department officials are backing away from a plan to dramatical­ly increase entrance fees at the most popular national parks after receiving more than 100,000 public comments from Americans nearly unanimousl­y opposed to the idea.

In October, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke proposed to increase peak-season entrance fees at 17 parks by 180 percent, from $25 to $70 — the largest rise since World War II. Joshua Tree National Park in California, where the peak season starts in January, would have been the first to charge the higher rate, followed by a dozen other parks where visitation peaks in May and June. The cost of riding a motorcycle into the parks would have risen to $50, and walking or biking in would have cost $30.

But as temperatur­es climb and parks prepare for another season of potentiall­y record-breaking visitation, Interior and National Park Service officials are rethinking the plan based on public comments that inundated the park service website over an abbreviate­d 30-day period.

“So the NPS would more than double the current entry fee for peak season,” read the first of 50,000 comments Interior provided The Washington Post. “I know if I were considerin­g a trip to one of these parks and suddenly found that the trip would incur an exorbitant entrance fee, I would not … repeat not take my family on this trip.”

“$70 is insane!” another comment declared. “What the hell? You need to go to Congress, get them to fund NPS, and then get our president to actually sign it.”

For every comment in support, there was a flurry of opposition. “This price hike is just too much,” said comment No. 11,424. “Having to pay $70 just to get in would definitely make me consider other options for our family vacation.”

An Interior official familiar with the changes now being discussed said some type of increase remains almost certain, but the dramatic increase is being reconsider­ed for fear that it would cause visitation to plunge, reducing sorely needed revenue at top destinatio­ns such as Yosemite in California, the Grand Canyon in Arizona, Zion and Bryce in Utah, and Yellowston­e in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming.

The parks with no entrance fees will stay that way, he said.

The official would not disclose the revised rate structures being considered but said the goal is a more modest adjustment to fees that haven’t increased in a decade. A 10 percent fee increase for all parks with entrance charges is on the table, as is a $20 increase in the $80 seasonal and senior passes.

Zinke and the Park Service’s interim director continue to meet on the issue, according to the official, who only was authorized by Interior to speak anonymousl­y.

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