The Mercury News

Yosemite National Park may reopen as soon as next week.

Health officials will need to grant OK for campsites, hotels to reopen as well

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

After being closed for more than two months because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Yosemite National Park is ready to reopen as soon as Wednesday or June 11, but the plan hinges on state health officials granting approval for campsites and hotels to reopen in the surroundin­g communitie­s to handle many of the overnight visitors.

A letter Monday to Gov. Gavin Newsom and state health officials from the leaders of Mariposa, Mono, Tuolumne and Madera counties urges approval and says that under a plan developed by park officials, Yosemite

is prepared to reopen “on or about June 11.”

The park, an internatio­nal tourist destinatio­n renowned for its massive waterfalls, granite rock walls and Sierra forests, closed March 20. The first major step to welcoming back visitors begins Friday, when parks officials will allow people with overnight wilderness backpackin­g permits and permits to climb Half Dome to enter the park.

“We have been doing our best to incrementa­lly increase access to the park,” said Yosemite spokesman Scott Gediman. “Employees are coming back to work. Everybody is excited. Of course, our paramount concern is the safety of our visitors and employees, but we have everything from physical signs to enhanced cleaning. We are taking as many precaution­s as possible to prepare for it.”

Hotels, restaurant­s and other facilities in Yosemite will not be open Friday when the first few visitors with wilderness permits and Half Dome permits arrive.

“There will be no commercial services,” Gediman said. “We are asking anybody with one of these permits to bring all of their food, their beverages, their supplies and a full tank of gas.”

Meanwhile, another iconic Sierra Nevada destinatio­n, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, is scheduled to open June 11, although campground­s and the visitor center there will be closed.

Gediman said Yosemite workers began putting up the cables on Half Dome on Tuesday. The cables allow hikers to more safely scale the sheer granite slope to the top of the famed monolith, a strenuous hike that can take 12 hours or more round trip from the Yosemite Valley floor. Informatio­n about obtaining permits for overnight backpackin­g in Yosemite’s wilderness back country, or for dayhiking Half Dome are available at the parks’s website.

Anyone arriving at the park without a wilderness permit or Half Dome permit in the next

few days will not be allowed to enter, Gediman said.

He did not offer specifics about when the wider park will open.

Parks officials have drawn up a plan and shared it with local county supervisor­s and business leaders that will require all day-use visitors to obtain reservatio­ns online first, with the number of visitors limited to 50% of the park’s usual capacity to help social distancing so as to try to reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19.

That plan also calls for not running shuttle buses in Yosemite Valley. The Ahwahnee Hotel and Yosemite Valley Lodge would be open, along with two campground­s, North Pines and Upper Pines. Trails and parking lots also would be open.

But the exact opening date has been unclear for weeks.

Aramark, the park’s concession company, has posted on its website that preexistin­g reservatio­ns for hotels and tours in the park have been canceled, with full refunds, through Wednesday.

County supervisor­s who have been briefed on the plans say that they have been meeting weekly with one another and parks officials and in recent days have met with Dr. Sonia Angell, director of the California Department of Public Health.

They are asking Angell and Newsom to relax rules that currently allow only essential workers such as doctors to stay at local hotels, and to issue guidelines to reopen campground­s. Already, they say, crowds have arrived since Easter on sunny weekends, and with few places to stay, they have camped illegally, left trash and even caused several small fires in counties around Yosemite.

“We need to get campground­s open, and we need to get our hotels running so that when the park opens we can handle it. The people are coming anyway,” said Kevin Cann, chairman of the Mariposa County Board of Supervisor­s.

Roughly 70% of Yosemite’s overnight park visitors don’t stay in the park but rather stay outside it, he noted.

Cann, who worked at Yosemite for 18 years, including as deputy superinten­dent, said that Yosemite can open when it wants with or without California’s permission because it is federal property. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion slowly has been pushing national parks to reopen and has reopened Grand Canyon, Yellowston­e and other famed parks in recent weeks. But Yosemite officials and county leaders have worked together to come up with health guidelines to reduce political friction and to reduce the chances of an outbreak of COVID-19 that could force the park to close again.

“They are ready to go any time after June 10 or 11,” Cann said. “The superinten­dent says they want to get a couple of days in before a weekend. That makes total sense.”

State health officials say they are reviewing the communitie­s’ request for hotels and campground­s to reopen.

“Based on the science and data, the state will continue to give counties guidance on how to reopen the economy in ways that reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19 while we remain in this pandemic,” said Kate Folmar, a spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Public Health. “Those conversati­ons are ongoing and productive.”

In recent weeks, Newsom has allowed churches, barbershop­s, dine-in restaurant­s and summer camps to reopen.

“Everybody is waiting for the state to give us the green light to open lodging, and we’re not getting it,” said Stacy Corless, chairwoman of the Mono County Board of Supervisor­s. “People are coming anyway. And you can’t blame them when you think of the mental health impact and the solace and peace people find in the mountains, on their public land. People are coming, and we need to be able to accommodat­e the visitation.”

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 ?? JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? With El Capitan and Bridal Veil Falls in the background, Karl Bastian, of Parker, Colo., takes a walk on a log on the Merced River in 2017 at Yosemite National Park.
JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF FILE PHOTO With El Capitan and Bridal Veil Falls in the background, Karl Bastian, of Parker, Colo., takes a walk on a log on the Merced River in 2017 at Yosemite National Park.
 ?? JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Half Dome is seen from Yosemite Point in 2017 at Yosemite National Park.
JIM GENSHEIMER — STAFF FILE PHOTO Half Dome is seen from Yosemite Point in 2017 at Yosemite National Park.

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