Los Angeles Times

Yosemite visitors sickened

- By Louis Sahagun

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK — Eric Reynolds was sleeping after a day supervisin­g middle schoolers in Yosemite Valley when he was startled awake by the sound of someone pounding on his cabin door.

“Mr. Reynolds!” one student said. “My roommate just threw up all over the place!”

At first, he assumed it was food poisoning from chicken nuggets. But by the next morning, the boy was running a fever. Then nine additional students fell sick with stomach pain, nausea, diarrhea, fever — the characteri­stic signs of a norovirus infection.

As of Monday, one of the West’s most majestic national parks had received reports of about 170 visitors and employees with similar symptoms and most had spent time in Yosemite Valley earlier this month.

The National Park Service and other health agencies have launched an investigat­ion into the outbreak, casting a pall over the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday, when visitors were allowed free of charge into the 1,162-square-mile Sierra Nevada landmark known for its giant sequoia trees, towering granite ridges and tumbling waterfalls.

Federal officials are working with Aramark, the concession­aire that operates Yosemite’s restaurant­s, snack shops and hotels, to clean up and disinfect food facilities in the park, including the famous Ahwahnee Hotel, officials said.

But in a statement to Food Safety News, Aramark spokesman David Freireich said that until the exact

cause of the gastrointe­stinal illness is determined, classifyin­g it as foodborne is speculatio­n.

Many of the reports involved vacationer­s in Curry Village, a quaint collection of tents and cabins in Yosemite Valley. But over the last week, there has been a significan­t decline in the number of new cases, officials said.

Looking back, Reynolds said it’s difficult to determine the precise moment when the Bay Area students he chaperoned caught the gastrointe­stinal bug during a five-day trip to the park that began Jan. 5. The first signs that something was awry began the third night, which included buffet-style meals at a dining hall in Curry Village.

Some of his students wonder if norovirus was lurking in packaged yogurt parfait; in at least one instance, it was sold a week past the sell-by date on its label. Others pointed to scrambled eggs that just didn’t taste right, sliced fruit and red Jell-O scooped out of large plastic bowls with the same ladle and utensils that customers pulled out of containers full of forks and spoons.

The facility’s kitchen also was under constructi­on, and lodgings were, as one 12year-old said, “filthy, disgusting.”

By the third night, Reynolds said, he and another chaperone were the main caregivers.

“We quickly developed a pretty good system of getting sick kids to the restroom and making arrangemen­ts to transport some of them home,” he said.

Reynolds’ daughter, 12year-old Sophie, said the trip home was awful. “Everyone was feeling sick,” she said.

Veli Waller’s sons were among the students sent home early.

“My 11-year-old’s temperatur­e was 105, my 13-yearold’s 103,” said Waller, 50, of San Francisco. “And their stomach issues were extreme.”

Her concerns continued after her children returned to school Thursday. “I couldn’t find important details about the outbreak on the Yosemite National Park webpage,” she said, “such as how the norovirus cases were reported, or how many of the reported cases involved children.”

Norovirus, the most common cause of foodborne disease outbreaks, is particular­ly challengin­g to control because children may feel healthy even when they’re still contagious.

“I think Aramark should compensate these kids,” said Leslie Edmonds, 51, whose 12-year-old daughter contracted the illness in Yosemite eight days ago, “because their trip of a lifetime was ruined by this illness and crappy food.”

Yosemite, which was establishe­d in 1864, is no stranger to high-profile outbreaks of infectious disease.

In 2017, a Santa Monica middle school temporaril­y canceled classes after nearly 200 students were potentiall­y exposed to norovirus there.

In 2012, a deadly hantavirus outbreak put Yosemite

— the heart of the Sierra Nevada economy with 5 million visitors each year — in triage mode. Three people died and six more became ill after staying at Curry Village. The visitors who contracted hantavirus had inhaled large quantities of dust containing urine, saliva and fecal matter from infected deer mice.

On Monday, as pine trees threw long shadows against banks of snow edging the roads, rangers struggled to keep up with visitors arriving with the question: “What’s the latest on the norovirus?”

But Leslie Rodriguez, 21, a UC Davis engineerin­g student, came prepared. Her three-day Yosemite itinerary included “bringing my own groceries — and lots of hand sanitizer — from home in order to avoid restaurant­s,” she said.

“I usually bite my nails,” she added with a smile. “Not on this trip.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? ABOUT 170 VISITORS and employees at Yosemite National Park have recently suffered nausea, diarrhea and other symptoms consistent with a norovirus infection. Federal investigat­ors and the park’s concession­aire, Aramark, are working to disinfect food facilities there.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ABOUT 170 VISITORS and employees at Yosemite National Park have recently suffered nausea, diarrhea and other symptoms consistent with a norovirus infection. Federal investigat­ors and the park’s concession­aire, Aramark, are working to disinfect food facilities there.
 ?? Louis Sahagun Los Angeles TImes ?? LESLIE RODRIGUEZ, an engineerin­g student at UC Davis, came prepared for her trip. “My own groceries — and lots of hand sanitizer,” the 21-year-old said.
Louis Sahagun Los Angeles TImes LESLIE RODRIGUEZ, an engineerin­g student at UC Davis, came prepared for her trip. “My own groceries — and lots of hand sanitizer,” the 21-year-old said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States