Los Angeles Times

A shake-up in leadership at Yosemite

Trump administra­tion reassigns Supt. Mike Reynolds. The move may signal changes in how the park is run.

- By Louis Sahagun

In a move that is raising questions about the future of Yosemite National Park, the National Park Service announced Wednesday that it was reassignin­g park Supt. Mike Reynolds, a 34year park service veteran who grew up in Yosemite.

Reynolds will become regional director of the agency’s Lower Colorado Basin, Upper Colorado Basin and Arkansas-Rio Grande-Texas-Gulf regions. He is expected to begin his new assignment by the end of the year, park service officials said.

Reynolds’ departure comes amid controvers­ial proposals for increasing recreation and tourism in the park, reportedly put forward by Interior Secretary David Bernhardt. They include a proposal that would for the first time allow boats on the park’s Hetch Hetchy Reservoir.

Cicely Muldoon, superinten­dent of Point Reyes National Seashore since 2010, will serve as acting superinten­dent at Yosemite after Reynolds departs and until a permanent superinten­dent is named, officials said.

News of the switch drew mixed reactions from conservati­onists and national parks watchdogs.

“Mike was moved, in part, because of the disagreeme­nt over Hetch Hetchy,” said Destry Jarvis, a former director of external affairs for the park service. “We understand that he is not a happy camper right now.”

The park service did not immediatel­y comment on speculatio­n that Reynolds’ reassignme­nt was related to disputes over Hetch Hetchy, the source of most of San Francisco’s drinking water. At the same time, Jarvis and other critics of the administra­tion were not completely dismayed by the outcome.

“His promotion is legitimate, and his new post is important,” Jarvis said of Reynolds. He described Muldoon as “terrific and needed in a park that has struggled to deal with management and workforce issues.”

“The male rangers in Yosemite have long been known as the ‘Yosemite mafia’ because they are so hard-nosed and selfrighte­ous,” he added. “Cicely will take that whole situation by the throat and wrestle it to the ground.”

At Yosemite, Reynolds oversaw an iconic park that covers more than 750,000

acres in the Sierra Nevada and is staffed by 1,200 park service employees and about 1,700 hospitalit­y business workers. In his new role, he will oversee 89 park units in nine Western states.

“Mike is one of the most experience­d and respected leaders in the National Park Service,” said NPS Deputy Director David Vela in a statement. “His dedication to our employees, the parks we protect, and the visitors we serve will be of enormous benefit to the 89 national park sites and regional office which he will lead in his new assignment.”

Reynolds took charge of Yosemite in 2016 amid an unfolding scandal over workplace harassment that had rocked the national park system.

He replaced Don Neubacher, who stepped down as superinten­dent amid allegation­s that a hostile work environmen­t where employees, particular­ly women, were bullied, belittled and marginaliz­ed had been allowed to develop.

A short while later, Neubacher’s wife, Patty Neubacher, who faced accusation­s she had protected him as a federal official partly responsibl­e for overseeing national parks, announced her retirement.

The Yosemite scandal was only one of several involving allegation­s of sexual harassment and bullying that roiled the National Park

Service administra­tion in 2016. It led to the resignatio­ns of at least four senior national park managers and a series of congressio­nal hearings.

Now, Yosemite is part of the Trump administra­tion’s shift in a management strategy on public lands, raising the profile of industry and recreation and putting less emphasis on conservati­on.

The proposal to allow kayaks and an electric-powered ferry on Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, first reported by the San Francisco Chronicle, is moving ahead with support from Spreck Rosekrans of Restore Hetch Hetchy, a nonprofit advocacy group based in San Francisco. In an earlier interview, he said he has discussed that proposal with Reynolds and May.

The public has been forbidden from boating on the 300-foot-deep reservoir since the 1920s, when it was impounded by O’Shaughness­y Dam, which is managed by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission.

“It was a constructi­ve adult conversati­on about the practical challenges and benefits of putting boats on the water at Hetch Hetchy,” Rosekrans recalled. “The challenges include that an existing boat ramp is too narrow, the area needs a wilderness toilet and it won’t be easy getting funding and permits.

“I’d like to say that Mike Reynolds suggested we move forward with this proposal, but he didn’t,” said Rosekrans, adding he has high respect for Reynolds and wished him the best in his new position.

For her part, Muldoon has worked in national parks across the country, including a stint as acting deputy superinten­dent at Yosemite.

Overcrowdi­ng, congestion and trash have worsened as the number of Yosemite visitors has increased from 3 million in 1986 to more than 5 million in 2016.

With only about 6,500 parking spaces, officials say, traffic accidents are up, as is the number of park visitors reporting on Yosemite’s Facebook page that they had a miserable experience at the park.

 ?? National Park Service ?? MIKE REYNOLDS will leave Yosemite to become a regional director in the National Park Service.
National Park Service MIKE REYNOLDS will leave Yosemite to become a regional director in the National Park Service.
 ?? Chris Kleponis Sipa USA ?? INTERIOR SECRETARY David Bernhardt speaks with National Park Service rangers in Washington D.C. Bernhardt has proposed allowing limited use of boats on Yosemite National Park’s Hetch Hetchy Reservoir.
Chris Kleponis Sipa USA INTERIOR SECRETARY David Bernhardt speaks with National Park Service rangers in Washington D.C. Bernhardt has proposed allowing limited use of boats on Yosemite National Park’s Hetch Hetchy Reservoir.

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