The Guardian (USA)

Revealed: Trump administra­tion forced Joshua Tree to stay open during last US shutdown

- Gabrielle Canon

By the time superinten­dent David Smith decided to close Joshua Tree national park on 7 January 2019, the list of problems was already long. Tire tracks wove through the wilderness mapping a path of destructio­n where rare plants had been crushed and trees toppled. Charred remains of illegal campfires dotted the desert, and historic cultural artifacts had been plundered. Trash piles were growing, vault toilets were overflowin­g and park security workers were being pushed to their limits.

It was week three in what would become the longest shutdown of the US government, and the famed California park was feeling the consequenc­es of operating without key staff, services and resources.

To protect the park and its workers, it would have to close, Smith thought.

But the Trump administra­tion, which demanded national parks remain accessible throughout the shutdown, wasn’t willing to change course. In a controvers­ial move, David Bernhardt, who had only recently been appointed acting secretary of the interior, called Smith and ordered him to keep the gates open.

By the end of the 35-day shutdown, irreversib­le damage had been inflicted on Joshua Tree’s ecosystems, its wild, remote landscapes thrust into the political turmoil unfolding thousands of miles away.

Bernhardt’s decision and its aftermath are chronicled in hundreds of pages of emails between park officials, which the Guardian obtained through a records request. The correspond­ence sheds light on the pressure national parks faced during the shutdown, as well as how political considerat­ions influenced decisions about their maintenanc­e and protection.

Another possible government shutdown looms, raising fresh questions about whether the National Park Service (NPS), the federal agency that oversees the parks, will follow the precedent set by the previous administra­tion.

“The situation right now is deeply concerning on many levels, including the potential threat to resources and visitors,” said John Garder, the senior director of budget and appropriat­ions at the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n, a non-profit that advocates for park preservati­on. “It is difficult for the parks service to do their jobs when Congress doesn’t give them the resources they need.”

‘Parks are struggling’

There have long been tensions over the interpreta­tion of theNPS mission, with an uneasy balance of conservati­on

and recreation. As politician­s switch priorities, priorities in the parks canswitch with them, and at the end of 2018 the NPS found itself in the crosshairs.

On 21 December that year, Mick Mulvaney, who headed the office of management and budget for the Trump administra­tion, announced the shutdown in a memorandum to agency leaders across the country, advising them that all talking points should reflect that the “national parks will remain as accessible as possible”. Communicat­ions staff for NPS’s Pacific west regional office followed up withinstru­ctions: “Keep the message positive, avoid saying limited access.”

Regional NPS leaders meanwhile told superinten­dents in close-of-day emails they were aware of the potential for damage to delicate ecosystems and park infrastruc­ture if parks stayed open without the necessary resources, and possible danger to largely unsupervis­ed visitors. The timing of the shutdown, which left employees furloughed or working without pay during the busy holiday season, only added to the challenges, Sarah Creachbaum, the acting deputy regional director, wrote in an email on 23 December.

“If the shutdown does persist for more than a few days it will be increasing­ly important to keep an eye out for signs and symptoms of stress among your teams,” she said. “Uncertaint­y and stress are legitimate health and safety issues that can affect everyone.”

There would be weeks to go.

As the shutdown progressed, and the situation at some national parks turned increasing­ly dire, the NPS leaders told park superinten­dents they would support decisions to shut parks down, especially in situations where staff and visitors could not be kept safe.

“We’ve heard from many parks across the region that they are struggling more and more with trash accumulati­on, human waste, traffic congestion, fatigued employees etc,” wrote Stephanie Burkhart, the associate regional director of the Pacific west region on 28 December. “As the shutdown continues, these challenges will get harder. So please continue to evaluate your capacity and resources, rotate staff to provide rest and implement area closures as needed.”

Two days later, Smith, the Joshua Tree superinten­dent, reached out to Creachbaum, Burkhart and communicat­ions staff to say he had decided to close campground­s and a day-use area at the park after the start of the new year. The holidays were peak visiting times for the California site. With just nine working staff members, a disaster seemed imminent, he warned. Already, he reported, two search-andrescue operations had been needed the week before, both requiring helicopter­s because the park hadn’t been able to adequately respond.

Staff had told him that visitors were resisting direction, telling law enforcemen­t rangers they could do whatever they wanted during the shutdown. Staff members were increasing­ly concerned about their own safety, especially as incidents of intoxicati­on and physical assaults in the park began to rise.

The interior department intervenes

Staff who worked at Joshua Tree national park at the time said the experience was among the most difficult in their careers. “What I witnessed at the park was chaos and destructio­n,” said one park employee who, like others quoted in this story, asked to remain anonymous out of fear of retributio­n for speaking out.

From the start of the shutdown, the majority of the park staff had been opposed to keeping Joshua Tree open, they said, describing long days of work and feeling despondent as some visitors abused their unfettered access.

Another employee said decisionma­kers seemed out of touch with the reality on the ground: “In the lower rungs nothing made sense to us – you are just executing these orders that make no sense for the park, no sense for the visitor, and no sense for the employees.”

National parks are required to be ready for events like a shutdown with a contingenc­y plan. But the controvers­ial directions fromthe Trump administra­tion forced the agency and the parks to make in-the-moment adjustment­s.

Four days before Smith informed NPS leaders of his intention to fully close Joshua Tree, the Pacific west regional NPS team were maintainin­g in staff emails that they would support park closures for heath and hygiene reasons, to protect visitor safety or due to staff fatigue. “As we come to the end of our second week of the closure, and with no end in sight, it is clear that keeping all park areas accessible is not feasible,” Creachbaum wrote to superinten­dents on 3 January. “Now is the time to determine if the NPS contingenc­y plan triggers for closures apply to your circumstan­ces.”

But on 5 January, Bernhardt intervened, issuing a memorandum to the deputy director of the NPS instructin­g him to modify the contingenc­y plan so parks would rely on Federal Lands Recreation Enhancemen­t Act funds to stay open. FLREA funds, which come from park fees, are designated by law to be used to improve the parks, including hacking away at a large maintenanc­e backlog, estimated at roughly $12bn across all parks at the time.

Bernhardt ordered that they be used for maintainin­g operations “until such funds have reached zero balance”.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office would later deem Bernhardt’s move to be a violation of the law. In a scathing report issued in 2019, the GAO concluded that Bernhardt’s decree had undermined congressio­nal power of the purse and sidesteppe­d laws outlining shutdown procedures. The interior department maintains Bernhardt’s decision was legal, and in 2020 the Trump administra­tion’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) laid out a legal argument supporting Bernhardt and his decision.

“The decision to utilize FLREA funds in 2019 was entirely lawful,” Cole Rojewski, a lawyer speaking on behalf of Bernhardt, said, pointing to the OMB analysis. He added that if the action had been initiated from the beginning of the shutdown, the destructio­n of the park and dangers posed to both staff and visitors could have been avoided “while also allowing for continued public access and ensuring dedicated employees were paid throughout the duration of the shutdown”.

Raúl Grijalva, a congressma­n from Arizona, disagreed. As chair of the committee on natural resources in 2019, he wrote to Bernhardt admonishin­g him for the decision to use FLREA funds and questioned whether he had complied with the law outlining their use. Casting the former secretary’s act as a way to help “obfuscate the real costs of the shutdown”, Grijalva said the Department of the Interior’s actions “sidesteppe­d Congress and used these park funds for political purposes”.

A call from the Trump administra­tion

By 6 January, superinten­dents across the system were rushing to carve out new plans to bring back furloughed staff using FLREA funds. Smith, meanwhile, still tried to quickly close Joshua Tree. On 7 January he requested a temporary closure from regional park leaders, highlighti­ng the “considerab­le damage to park resources”. Creachbaum, the deputy regional director, responded: “I am so sorry about the damage to your park. It’s heartbreak­ing. We support the closure.” It would be her last email serving in the leadership role, and she stepped down soon after. A press release was drafted from Joshua Tree national park announcing a plan to close.

Butthe very next day, Smith wrote to Creachbaum’s successor, Katariina Tuovinen, alerting her that he’d been contacted by the director of the NPS, who had advised him Bernhardt would call him later that day. “The Secretary will be calling to order that the park stays open and that we use FLREA funds to do it,” Smith wrote in an email on 8 January.

Communicat­ions officials at the national office scrambled to reframe the eyebrow-raising shift, issuing a new press release that cast the decision more favorably. “National Park Service officials have been able to avert a temporary closure of Joshua Tree National Park,” the release read, highlighti­ng how revenue generated by recreation fees would be used to support the reopened campground­s and entrance stations.

At the time, the NPS didn’t return calls and emails from the Guardian requesting comment on how this decision had been made. (The emails show they did connect with some reporters, asking the Los Angeles Times to make revisions to their reporting.)

A cautionary tale – or a precedent?

Amid a growing likelihood the US government is headed for another shutdown on 1 October, it’s unclear how the NPS is planning to respond.

In August, agencies across the federal government were expected to submit contingenc­y plans. But the NPS has yet to confirm whether a new plan has been drafted and whether national parks will again be expected to remain accessible during the funding stalemate.

Repeated requests for informatio­n and comment went unanswered from both the Department of the Interior and the National Park Service.

The park service operating budget is also under threat from budget cuts. As record numbers of visitors continue to flood in, the depletion of funds for maintenanc­e and improvemen­t could lead to more disastrous results, Garder argued. The maintenanc­e backlog has only ballooned in recent years, growing from $11.6bn during the last shutdown to more than $22bn in 2022.

Jonathan Jarvis, a retired NPS director who served under the Obama administra­tion and oversaw a 2013 shutdown, agrees. “When I was director, there was no question – you shut ’em down,” he said.

Jarvis, who spent four decades in the park service, said he hopes for a future where public lands aren’t put at risk by shifts in political whim, and advocates for the agency to be removed from the Department of the Interior. Ultimately, he said, the future of US national parks will be linked to funding. “The good news is that in the US the parks are highly supported by the American people,” he said. “But they expect them to be taken care of.”

 ?? Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA ?? More than 3 million people visited Joshua Tree national park in 2022, according to the NPS.
Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA More than 3 million people visited Joshua Tree national park in 2022, according to the NPS.
 ?? Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images ?? A barrier blocks a campground at Joshua Tree national park on 3 January 2019. Photograph:
Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images A barrier blocks a campground at Joshua Tree national park on 3 January 2019. Photograph:

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