Yuma Sun

Popular nat’l parks will raise fees to $35, not $70

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WASHINGTON — The Interior Department is increasing fees at the most popular national parks to $35 per vehicle, backing down from an earlier plan that would have forced visitors to pay $70 per vehicle to visit the Grand Canyon, Yosemite and other iconic parks.

A change announced Thursday will boost fees at 17 popular parks by $5, up from the current $30 but far below the figure Interior proposed last fall.

The plan by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke drew widespread opposition from lawmakers and governors of both parties, who said the higher fees could exclude many Americans from enjoying national parks. The agency received more than 109,000 comments on the plan, most of them opposed.

Most of the rate hikes take effect June 1, the Na- tional Park Service said. The $35 fee applies mostly in the West and will affect such popular parks as Yellowston­e, Zion, Bryce Canyon, Mount Rainier, Rocky Mountain and Grand Teton parks, among others.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said the fee hikes were needed to help maintain the parks and begin to address an $11.6 billion maintenanc­e backlog.

“Every dollar spent to rebuild our parks will help bolster the gateway communitie­s that rely on park visitation for economic vitality,” Zinke said.

Zinke thanked those who made their voices heard through the public comment process: “Your input has helped us develop a balanced plan that focuses on modest increases,” he said.

The maintenanc­e backlog “isn’t going to be solved overnight and will require a multi-tiered approach as we work to provide badly needed revenue to repair infrastruc­ture,” Zinke added.

Theresa Pierno, president and CEO of the National Park Conservati­on Associatio­n, hailed the new fee structure.

“The public spoke, and the administra­tion listened,” she said, noting that the plan to nearly triple fees at popular parks was opposed by a range of businesses, gateway communitie­s, governors, tourism groups, conservati­on organizati­ons and the public.

The revised fee plan is “a big win for park lovers everywhere,” said Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, top Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee.

“This is a prime example that activism works,” Grijalva added. “The American people raised their concerns, participat­ed in the public comment period and made sure that the Trump White House knew the proposal was unpopular.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS FEB. 22, 2005, FILE PHOTO, with the North Rim in the background, tourists hike along the South Rim of the Grand Canyon.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS FEB. 22, 2005, FILE PHOTO, with the North Rim in the background, tourists hike along the South Rim of the Grand Canyon.

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