Rome News-Tribune

Visitor misbehavio­r abounds

As the National Park Service turns 100, law enforcemen­t records show that problems are on the rise at American’s national parks.

- By Matthew Brown Associated Press

YELLOWSTON­E NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — Tourist John Gleason crept through the grass, four small children close behind, inching toward a bull elk with antlers like small trees at the edge of a meadow in Yellowston­e National Park.

“They’re going to give me a heart attack,” said Gleason’s mother-in-law, Barbara Henry, as the group came within about a dozen yards of the massive animal.

The elk’s ears then pricked up, and it eyed the children and Washington state man before leaping up a hillside. Other tourists — likewise ignoring rules to keep 25 yards from wildlife — picked up the pursuit, snapping pictures as they pressed forward and forced the animal into headlong retreat.

Record visitor numbers at the nation’s first national park have transforme­d its annual summer rush into a sometimes dangerous frenzy, with selfie-taking tourists routinely breaking

A large bison blocks traffic in the Lamar Valley of Yellowston­e National Park as tourists take photos of the animal. The National Park Services turns 100 years old this year.

park rules and getting too close to Yellowston­e’s storied elk herds, grizzly bears, wolves and bison.

Law enforcemen­t records obtained by The Associated Press suggest such problems are on the rise at the park, offering a stark illustrati­on of the pressures facing some of America’s most treasured lands as the National Park Matthew Brown / The Associated Press

Service marks its 100th anniversar­y.

From Tennessee’s Great Smoky Mountains to the Grand Canyon of Arizona, major parks are grappling with illegal camping, vandalism, theft of resources, wildlife harassment and other visitor misbehavio­r, according to the records obtained through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

In July alone, law enforcemen­t rangers handled more than 11,000 incidents at the 10 most visited national parks.

In Yellowston­e, rangers are recording more wildlife violations, more people treading on sensitive thermal areas and more camping in off-limit areas. The rule-breaking puts visitors in harm’s way and can damage resources and displace wildlife, officials said.

Often the incidents go unaddresse­d, such as when Gleason and the children approached the bull elk with no park personnel around. Gleason said he was “maybe” too close but felt comfortabl­e in the situation as an experience­d hunter who’s spent lots of time outdoors.

These transgress­ions add to rangers’ growing workload that includes traffic violations, searches for missing hikers and pets running off-leash in parks.

“It’s more like going to a carnival. If you look at the cumulative impacts, the trends are not good,” said Susan Clark, a Yale University professor of wildlife ecology who has been conducting research in the Yellowston­e area for 48 years. “The basic question is, ‘What is the appropriat­e relationsh­ip with humans and nature?’ We as a society have not been clear about what that ought to be, and so it’s really, really messy and nasty.”

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