Where Have All The Rangers Gone?

The LA Times ran an article on the decline of Park Rangers within America’s National Parks and how many a private citizen are helping out. Very interesting. There’s a snippet below.

LA Times:”If there are four or five programs a night, maybe only one is done by a National Park Service ranger,” said Scott Gediman, a Yosemite spokesman. It’s possible, he said, to spend several days in the park and attend a full schedule of walks and programs without ever encountering a park ranger.

Even the daily van tours of Yosemite Valley are run by Delaware North, albeit with a real ranger on board. The price: $22.50 per adult.

Gediman said Yosemite had maintained services by recruiting private help. At other parks, however, a dearth of interpretive rangers means fewer nature walks and evening programs and shorter visitor center hours.

At Sequoia and Kings Canyon in the southern Sierra Nevada, the naturalist program is “significantly smaller” than it was 20 years ago, said Bill Tweed, chief naturalist for the twin national parks.

In that time, he said, the parks have lost about a quarter of their back-country rangers (a dozen patrol the two parks, which total 865,952 acres), half the staff at wilderness permit stations and more than a third of their naturalists, who now number 25.

“We have reduced programming proportionately,” Tweed said.

In the 1980s, when it was still a national monument instead of a park, Death Valley conducted more than 100 naturalist programs per week in winter, said Terry Baldino, chief of interpretation. Now, it runs about half as many.

“Death Valley would normally have about 110 permanent employees,” he said. “We’re short about 35 positions that we can’t fill because we don’t have the funds to do it.” Five of the unfilled slots are for interpretative staff.

Without more money, Baldino said, he may need to eliminate half the interpretive programs next winter.

It’s tempting to blame the invisibility of park rangers on budget cuts. But naturalist Tweed, who’s been at Sequoia-Kings Canyon for more than 25 years, said the problem is more complicated.

Financially, “this has been the best year for the park service in a number of years,” he said.

After recently losing ground, he said, “we received support from Congress that turned out to be a small net gain, instead of a small net loss. In the longer run, over the last 20 years, the overall pattern has been one of very significant growth in budgets.”

However, budgets haven’t kept pace with inflation and increased demands on the parks’ mission, he said.

“It costs enormously more to build a trail today than 50 years ago,” Tweed said. “Then, all you needed was a guy with a rake. Today, we’re building handicapped-accessible trails, with hardened bases and 5% grades. We need an engineer, a surveying crew, a contracting officer and more.”

Twenty years ago, he said, about the only medical care available in parks was first aid. Now, many rangers are trained up to paramedic level. Jobs such as air quality specialist, cave manager and aquatics systems manager didn’t exist in the past; now they’re routine, he added.

“Law enforcement is now a much more complex business,” Tweed said. “Twenty years ago, a ranger could write a $20 citation to a visitor without any training.” Now, rangers are trained up to police standards at a federal law-enforcement academy in Georgia.

At Sequoia-Kings Canyon, rangers battle marijuana growers who have set up shop in the wilderness, a long-running problem “that began to pop off the charts about three years ago,” Tweed said, after the U.S. border with Mexico was tightened.

Such competing demands on tight budgets force parks to divert money and ranger staff from interpretive programs to other tasks.

“Are we still making hard decisions?” Tweed asked. “Every day.”

Surprisingly, the last place you may encounter a ranger is at the visitors’ desk or other park hub. That’s because they’re busy organizing activities or supervising staff behind the scenes.

“We do some roving, but we don’t do as much as we’d like to,” said Yosemite’s Gediman. “You’re more likely to see an interpretive ranger on the trails in the Tuolumne Meadows than you are in Yosemite Valley.”

The fact is that private groups are doing jobs once performed by park rangers. The devotion of these citizens who volunteer their time and money is inspiring. But the federal government traditionally has funded the basic operations of these public treasures.


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One response to “Where Have All The Rangers Gone?”

  1. Scott Avatar

    Good article. Now that I am sitting in front of a computer again I think being an NPS employee is a much better way to go.