The Boston Globe

National parks phasing out cash

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At dozens of national parks and historic sites around the United States, getting away from it all to revel in the country’s wide-open spaces has taken on a whole new meaning.

Leave your dollars and coins behind, too.

The National Park Service is continuing to convert dozens of its sites across the country to cashless payments only, drawing complaints that not everyone has credit or debit cards.

The Park Service has been rolling out the policy for several years. In 2019, the service announced that it would only accept credit cards, debit cards, and special park passes at Pipe Spring National Monument in Arizona. Similar changes followed at other sites. (At many, annual passes can still be purchased with cash.)

In January, the Lake Mead National Recreation Area near Las Vegas also moved to a cashless system; reactions on the park’s forum were so testy that moderators issued reminders to keep it family-friendly.

The Park Service said it wants to reduce risk and the time employees spend managing cash, as well as increase revenue and accountabi­lity. At the Death Valley and Nevada parks, for example, rangers collected $22,000 in cash, which ended up costing over $40,000 in handling costs when factoring in the use of an armored car and time spent counting money and processing paperwork.

Of the more than 400 national parks, 108 charge an entrance fee, and most that have converted to cashless collection have had an “overwhelmi­ngly positive experience,” the Park Service says in a statement on its website.

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