BusinessMirror

Garbage, feces take toll on national parks amid shutdown

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WASHINGTON— Human feces, overflowin­g garbage, illegal off-roading and other damaging behavior in fragile areas were beginning to overwhelm some of the West’s iconic national parks, as a partial government shutdown left the areas open to visitors but with little staff on duty.

“It’s a free-for-all,” Dakota Snider, 24, who lives and works in Yosemite Valley, said by telephone this past week, as Yosemite National Park officials announced closings of some minimally supervised campground­s and public areas within the park that are overwhelme­d.

“It’s so heartbreak­ing. There is more trash and human waste and disregard for the rules than I’ve seen in my four years living here,” Snider said. The partial federal government shutdown, now into its 11th day, has forced furloughs of hundreds of thousands of federal government employees. This has left many parks without most of the rangers and others who staff campground­s and otherwise keep parks running.

Unlike shutdowns in some previous administra­tions, the Trump administra­tion was leaving parks open to visitors despite the staff furloughs, said John Garder, senior budget director of the nonprofit National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n.

“We’re afraid that we’re going to start seeing significan­t damage to the natural resources in parks and potentiall­y to historic and other cultural artifacts,” Garder said. “We’re concerned there’ll be impacts to visitors’ safety.”

“It’s really a nightmare scenario,” Garder said.

Under the park service’s shutdown plan, authoritie­s have to close any area where garbage or other problems become threats to health and safety or to wildlife, spokesman Jeremy Barnum said in an e-mail.

“At the superinten­dent’s discretion, parks may close grounds/areas with sensitive natural, cultural, historic or archaeolog­ical resources vulnerable to destructio­n, looting or other damage that cannot be adequately protected by the excepted lawenforce­ment staff that remain on duty,” Barnum said.

In the southern Sierra Nevada in Central California, some areas of the Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks were closed. In Sequoia, home to immense and ancient giant sequoias, General Highway was closed because overflowin­g trash bins were spreading litter and posed a threat to wildlife and the icy, jammed roadway was seeing up to three-hour delays, according to the National Park Service.

Also closed was the Grant Tree Trail, a popular hiking spot, because the government shutdown halted maintenanc­e and left the path dangerousl­y slick from ice and snow, with at least one injury reported, the park service said.

Campers at Joshua Tree National Park in Southern California’s deserts were reporting squabbles as different families laid claims to sites, with no rangers on hand to adjudicate, said Ethan feltges, who operates the Coyote Corner gift shop outside Joshua Tree.

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