Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Only one Utah national park to be staffed as 2019 begins

- By Brady McCombs

SALT LAKE CITY — Only one of Utah’s five national parks will be staffed after the new year as the state pulls back funding during the partial federal government shutdown, officials said.

A nonprofit will pay about $2,000 to $2,500 a day to keep Zion National Park open Jan. 1-5 with skeleton staffing and services such as public restrooms, clean bathrooms and trash collection, Utah Office of Tourism managing director Vicki Varela said.

The other four parks — Bryce Canyon, Arches, Canyonland­s and Capitol Reef — will remain open but without those services.

The state has been paying up to about $7,500 a day since Dec. 22 to keep Zion, Arches and Bryce staffed through Dec. 31. The decision to leave Arches and Bryce unstaffed was made in consultati­on with park superinten­dents based on a calculatio­n of how to make the state money go farthest and help the most visitors, she said.

Zion is still slated to get 4,000 to 5,000 visitors per day next week, Varela said.

The nonprofit footing the bill for keep staffing at Zion is called The Zion Forever Project.

She and state officials will reassess the situation after Jan. 5, Varela said.

Varela called it frustratin­g that visitors aren’t getting the full national park experience during the shutdown, and she said she hopes “sanity returns sometime soon in D.C.”

The weeklong impasse is a result of disagreeme­nt between Democrats, who take control of the House on Jan. 3, and President Donald Trump over building a border wall with Mexico.

“The natural resources need to be protected. The visitor experience needs to be protected,” Varela said. “All we’re able to do is a patchwork job. … You can’t possibly have that full national park experience without full staffing.”

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