logo
US national parks staff in ‘survival mode' to keep parks open amid Trump cuts

US national parks staff in ‘survival mode' to keep parks open amid Trump cuts

Yahoo07-08-2025
Across the US's fabled but overstretched national parks, unusual scenes are playing out this summer following budget cuts by Donald Trump's administration. Archeologists are staffing ticket booths, ecologists are covering visitor centers and the superintendents of parks are even cleaning the toilets.
The National Park Service (NPS), responsible for maintaining cherished wildernesses and sites of cultural importance from Yellowstone to the Statue of Liberty, has lost a quarter of its permanent staff since Trump took office in January, with the administration seeking to gut the service's budget by a third.
But the administration has also ordered parks to remain open and accessible to the public, meaning the NPS has had to scramble remaining staff into public-facing roles to maintain appearances to the crowds of visitors. This has meant much of the behind-the-scenes work to protect endangered species, battle invasive plants, fix crumbling infrastructure or plan for the future needs of the US's trove of natural wonders has been jettisoned.
'It's nearly impossible to do the leadership role expected of me,' said one superintendent who heads a park in the western US who didn't want to be named for fear of retribution from the administration.
'I'm doing everything now. That means I regularly have to make sure the doors are open, I have to run the visitor center, I have to clean the bathrooms. I'd say I'm cleaning the bathroom on a weekly basis now because there's no one else to do it.'
This sort of triage situation is occurring across the 433 sites and 85m acres – including 63 national parks and an array of battlefields, monuments and cultural sites – that make up the national park system in the US, multiple current and former NPS staff have told the Guardian, risking long-term degradation of prized parks.
'It's frustrating to realize you can't execute your talents to be the best steward of these public resources because we are just trying to keep the parks open. We are just in survival mode,' said the park superintendent, who added that they are considering leaving the NPS; under Trump, more than 100 park superintendents have already departed the service.
'For the public, it's hard to understand. People will say: 'Why would you mess with national parks? They were doing just fine, they are America's best idea. Why would you mess with them?''
In one of his first actions as president, Trump slashed the NPS workforce by 1,000 people, an action known as the 'Valentine's Day massacre' at the agency, as part of a broader effort to shrink the federal workforce. Thousands of others have left the park service since this cull via early retirements or resignations, while some of those who remain have organized as 'resistance rangers', even launching an anonymous podcast.
Doug Burgum, Trump's secretary of the interior, has said that the agency can be slimmed down while still maintaining services such as campgrounds, bathrooms and visitor centers. 'I want more people in the parks, whether they're driving a snowplow in the wintertime or whether they're working with [an] interpreter in the summertime or they're doing trail work,' Burgum told a Senate hearing in June. 'I want more of that. I want less overhead.'
But even as staff are pressed into frontline roles, gaps are appearing that critics say can endanger safety. All 13 lifeguard positions are vacant at the Assateague Island national seashore in Maryland and Virginia, according to advocacy group the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA), a site where a man drowned last week.
Understaffing encompasses more than 50 vacancies including senior leadership roles across three national park sites in Boston, the loss of 60 staff from regional NPS offices in Alaska and the departure of half of all employees from the Big Bend national park in Texas, according to the NPCA.
A history center at Yosemite was forced to close after several artifacts were stolen, a symptom of low staffing, according to the association. It said about 4,000 staff have left in total, nearly a quarter of the total NPS workforce, with potential further cuts if the administration pushes ahead with mass firings, called a reduction in force.
'Some parks have lost as much as a third of their staff and it's difficult or impossible to keep frontline visitor services when that happens,' said John Garder, a senior director at NPCA. Garder said some parks have shortened visitor center hours, with long lines at entrance gates and cuts to tasks that mostly occur out of sight from tourists, such as law enforcement, archeological and ecological work.
'This is not sustainable in the short term and certainly not in the long term as visitors start to notice the lack of maintenance and work on landscapes,' Garder said.
'What is important to visitors is healthy ecosystems and cultural landscapes, whereas this administration sees these places more like theme parks than national parks. It's a Potemkin village scenario where the public can't see things falling apart behind the scenes.'
One current NPS employee who works at Yosemite said that law enforcement is now so overstretched that 'people can wreck the park with no consequence' and that visitors are doing potentially dangerous things such as not properly storing their food.
'That's an issue because we have bears here and we don't want bears eating people food because they can get aggressive,' the staffer said.
'I worry the park will degrade to the point where safety is a problem. I don't think visitors notice yet but they will soon. We are all doing jobs outside the scope of our roles. People are stepping up to fill the gaps but everyone is on the fast track to burnout.'
The Trump administration has imposed a hiring freeze upon the NPS but has allowed for nearly 8,000 seasonal hires, although barely half of this total has been achieved before the summer peak. Last year, a record 331m visits were made to national parks – a record – and a new high mark may be reached again in 2025.
'We've successfully hired thousands of seasonals and in most parks, staffing is on par with last year,' an NPS spokesperson said.
'As in other years, we are working hard to make it another great year for visitors. Our employees are hard-working, experienced problem-solvers and it's not unusual for them to adapt to changing conditions.'
'It's not unusual or unique to this year for national park employees to work around obstacles to ensure we provide memorable experiences,' the spokesperson added about the superintendent cleaning toilets. 'Rangers have always worn multiple hats.'
The spokesperson added that lifeguard shortages such as at Assateague 'are a nationwide concern even outside of our public lands' and said it was important for people to understand the risks of riptides.
A focus on seasonal roles and public-facing positions threatens to reorient national parks to being mere facades for tourists rather than sustainable, ecologically rich places connected to local communities, some park staff warned.
'Keeping these iconic places open is an ongoing process of protection, preservation and maintenance and it's scary and chilling to think about that being eliminated along with future planning,' said Marisa, who was an NPS employee of a regional support office until last month and did not want to give her full name.
'The push is to keep up this facade for visitors that things are normal but that's not the case. There's a targeting of the functions that sustain the agency.'
National parks, widely beloved by the American public and long seen as a rare bastion of bipartisanship in a fractured country, have also been dragged into the culture wars by the Trump administration. Signs have been erected in each of the parks asking visitors to report any materials that are 'negative about either past or living Americans or that fail to emphasize the beauty, grandeur and abundance of landscapes and other natural features'.
The NPS will be reviewing signage from this public feedback and targeting 'interpretive materials that disproportionately emphasize negative aspects of US history or historical figures', an agency spokesperson said.
However, park staff have said many of the responses, sent via a QR code on the signs, suggest the public is reluctant to scrub away uncomfortable truths such as the US's legacy of slavery or mistreatment of tribal people.
'Are we such weak, fragile people that we can't view the full length and breadth of our history?' reads one of the responses from a visitor to Muir Woods, California, and seen by the Guardian. 'Are we so afraid that we have to hide factual history from the telling of our past? Oh, please!!'
Further, albeit milder, pushback is coming from Congress. While the White House's suggested budget for next year demands a 30% cut in NPS funding, a reduction that would decimate many of the agency's core functions, Republicans in Congress have been more circumspect, drafting proposals that would trim the budget by far less.
'There is deep concern among the public about what's happening to our national parks,' Garder said. 'There is concern in Congress, too, although more needs to be done to restore staffing levels and prevent the selloff of federal land.'
But even if further steep cuts are averted and parks cope with this summer's crush of visitors, lasting damage may have already been inflicted upon America's best idea. 'This is not a normal situation,' said Kevin Heatley, who resigned as superintendent of Oregon's Crater Lake national park in June due to staff losses. 'This is a paradigm shift that is having repercussions that will last for at least a generation.'
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Journalist recounts harrowing broad-daylight sex assault in DC – says cops refused to include the attack in crime stats
Journalist recounts harrowing broad-daylight sex assault in DC – says cops refused to include the attack in crime stats

New York Post

timea minute ago

  • New York Post

Journalist recounts harrowing broad-daylight sex assault in DC – says cops refused to include the attack in crime stats

A formerly DC-based journalist revealed Thursday that she was 'violently attacked and sexually assaulted' in the nation's capital – and that the city's police department refused to include the incident in their crime stats. Anna Giaritelli, a homeland security reporter with the Washington Examiner, detailed the heinous, broad-daylight assault against her, as well as the response from the Metropolitan Police Department and the court system, in a dramatic op-ed – which comes days after President Trump announced a sweeping crime crackdown in Washington, DC. 'On a Saturday morning in 2020, I walked out of my apartment on Capitol Hill to mail a package at a post office several blocks from the US Capitol. I put on my black sweatshirt and black sweatpants then headed out the door. I never made it to the post office,' Giaritelli wrote. 'Just one block from my apartment building's entrance, I was attacked by a large man well over six feet tall. He charged at me for a reason that I still do not understand. In broad daylight and on well-traveled 2nd Street NE next to Union Station, I fought to get away as he sexually assaulted me,' she continued. 'If it had not been for others in the vicinity, including a construction worker named Donny who heard my screaming and ran to my rescue, I don't know if I would be here today.' Trump has deployed the National Guard and hundreds of federal law enforcement officers to the streets of DC to address crime in the city. Giaritelli explained that the attack demonstrated to her, firsthand, how 'DC police and the courts fail the public.' Despite her attacker, described as a 'homeless man,' being apprehended 'months later' and sentenced to prison time, Giaritelli wrote: 'If you look for evidence that the attack happened in the city's crime statistics, you won't find it.' 'DC police covered up the unspeakable wrong that the stranger did to me,' the reporter said. The Metropolitan Police Department's online 'Crime Cards' statistics page – which purportedly tracks criminal offenses and pegs them to a map, showing where they occurred in the district – does not include Giaritelli's attack and sexual assault, she claims. 'When I asked MPD in 2020 why my incident was not on its crime map, an MPD spokesman said the city only includes 1st degree felonies under its crime stats,' the reporter explained. 'That would mean that for every person robbed, assaulted, or sexually abused in anything less than egregious ways, you have not been counted into the total tally.' 'The pain you suffered was not severe enough, according to MPD's standards.' The reporter said her attacker was arrested five times — and released from jail every time — as he awaited trial for his sex crimes. Giaritelli said she was then told by MPD, this week, that the crime map does include 'some sex abuse charges, but not all of them.' She noted that the crime against her is still not listed in the online database. Giaritelli praised DC law enforcement's immediate response to the attack, noting that they collected DNA evidence which they were able to match to a vagrant about two months later, leading to his arrest. Her attacker, however, was 'immediately released from jail' by the judge handling the case, leading Giaritelli to very reasonably fear that he was back 'living in a tunnel' just blocks from her apartment. The vagrant was 'arrested in five separate incidents' and allowed out of jail every single time, while he awaited trial for the sexual assault, Giaritelli said. MPD did not immediately respond to The Post's request for comment. Trump on Monday claimed that DC's crime statistics – showing violent offenses down about 26% compared to last year – were 'phony' and promised that Attorney General Pam Bondi will be 'looking into that.' The president further noted that a DC police commander was suspended last month for allegedly falsifying crime data to make trends appear more positive.

Crime ‘hot spots' targeted, encampments cleared, as feds expand D.C. push
Crime ‘hot spots' targeted, encampments cleared, as feds expand D.C. push

Boston Globe

timea minute ago

  • Boston Globe

Crime ‘hot spots' targeted, encampments cleared, as feds expand D.C. push

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up National Guard troops are trained in 'common sense, and they're very tough people,' Trump said. He later added that 'they're trained in not allowing people to burn down buildings and bomb buildings and shoot people and all the things.' Advertisement Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) officers walked on the National Mall on Thursday. Anna Moneymaker/Getty D.C. police data shows violent crime, after a historic spike in 2023, The 800 National Guard members mobilized to protect D.C. are not armed and will not be conducting law enforcement activities, Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson told reporters Thursday. That is the case, even though under federal Title 32 orders, which is the authority Trump used to activate them, they could conduct law enforcement if asked. Advertisement 'They will not be arresting people,' Wilson said. The statements from Trump administration officials came amid a flurry of developments, including D.C. police Chief Pamela A. Smith issued an executive order allowing the city's officers to share information about people who are not in custody and to transport U.S. immigration authorities and the people they detain. That cooperation on a major Trump administration priority does not change the D.C. law that prohibits local law enforcement from providing information about people in D.C. custody to federal immigration enforcement. On homelessness, District officials were bracing for the potential on Thursday night for the federal government to expand efforts to clear homeless encampments. City officials spent the day continuing to press people living outside to swiftly enter shelters so they could avoid being caught up in federal cleanup campaigns. The Trump administration has threatened to fine or arrest any individuals who refuse to be removed or placed in shelters. Local advocacy groups asked city officials to prepare for a possible increase in those seeking shelter, including those who have long objected to the strictures that can come with the services provided in such places. Homeland Security Investigations officers spoke with a food truck vendor on the National Mall on Thursday. Anna Moneymaker/Getty The National Park Service has regularly cleared homeless encampments on federal land in the District in past years. Earlier this week, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that '70 homeless encampments have been removed by the U.S. Park police' since March. In the same briefing, Leavitt said only two encampments remained in National Park Service jurisdiction in D.C. 'The removal of those two remaining camps is scheduled for this week,' Leavitt said. Advertisement Members of D.C.'s Health and Human Services team began clearing an encampment Thursday morning on a grassy no-man's-land near the Kennedy Center after giving residents a day's notice to remove their belongings. By 8 a.m., three people had already packed their belongings and scattered. Six more were busy wiping down their tents and folding tarps to meet a 10 a.m. deadline set by the District. Several residents said they had been at the encampment for months. 'It's a longer walk than it looks across the bridge to Virginia,' said David Beatty, 67, who has lived in the camp for eight months. 'If I can get my stuff in storage, I'll do what I usually do. … I have a broom and a dustpan, and I walk around sweeping up.' The District usually posts notices for clearing 14 days in advance, and the site had not been on the District's list for clearings. Rebecca Dooley, a spokesperson for the deputy mayor for health and human services, said the encampment's proximity to the highway qualified it for expedited removal, which requires only 24 hours' notice. Dooley said the decision to clear the site was made Wednesday by the city's health and human services agency. When asked if the White House was involved in the decision, she referred questions to the mayor's communications team. A White House official said on background that they were 'unable to confirm specific locations or details on operational efforts in the interest of the safety and security of all involved.' A sign advocating support for homeless people is shown at a homeless encampment near the Lincoln Memorial on Thursday. Win McNamee/Getty About a half dozen outreach workers from nonprofits helped residents pack up. Dooley said they made offers of shelter to the people who were leaving the encampment, but she was unsure if anyone had taken them up on it. Advertisement 'We're following our own protocol,' she said, noting that there are no plans to arrest people who turn down shelter referrals. She said it is the only cleanup scheduled for Thursday. William Wilson, 66, dragged his cart of clothes and camping gear up the hill. 'I'd like to invite the president to spend some time here in a tent with us,' he said. 'We're nice people. We're a family here — we get along.' Among those facing federal enforcement, and the prospect of being forced off the streets, one key issue is storage, said Amber Harding, executive director of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. 'Shelters have a two-bag maximum, so people might not want to go to a shelter if they don't want to throw away their stuff that can't fit into two bags. So we have been trying to work with the city to make sure they have storage options,' Harding said. Location is another factor. 'Right now the shelter spaces the government has are not downtown,' Harding said. 'That means people will have to be transported there, which means moving away from where they are currently staying, from the people they know and the places where they are currently getting services.' D.C. Council member Brianne K. Nadeau (D-Ward 1) said she was deeply concerned about federal encampment clearings. 'When this kind of dramatic action is taken, it erodes the trust we have built with folks living outside and diminishes our ability to bring them into permanent housing and get them stabilized,' she said. Advertisement The National Park Service and Park Police did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The clearings come as the presence of federal law enforcement has become more visible in portions of the District. Trump declared an emergency in D.C. earlier this week and put the city's police department under federal control. A person geld a sign as Department of Homeland Security Investigations agents joined Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers as they conducted traffic checks at a checkpoint along 14th Street in northwest Washington, on Wednesday. Jose Luis Magana/Associated Press The actions have sparked mixed reactions among residents, with some outraged by Trump's decision and some offering varying levels of support. In Northwest Washington, a checkpoint with local and federal law enforcement officers on Wednesday evening On Thursday, a group of 17 former elected officials from the District circulated a joint statement warning that Trump's 'strongman tactics' were dangerous for the city and the nation. 'There is no emergency that warrants this action,' they wrote, adding that the president and Congress can further cut crime by appointing judges to fill critical vacancies. D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D), who has decried Trump's actions as 'an authoritarian push,' has also sought to work constructively with federal authorities. The mayor said on social media that she was temporarily out of the District on Thursday to pick up her daughter from camp but had remained in constant contact with key officials. The federal presence has been aggressive at times, including with immigration enforcement. The National Guard, meanwhile, has had a somewhat relaxed posture. 'Their initial mission is to provide a visible presence in key public areas, serving as a visible crime deterrent,' the Army said on social media. 'While they will not conduct arrests, they have the authority to temporarily detain individuals to prevent imminent harm, ensuring that custody is promptly transferred to law enforcement authorities.' Advertisement The Pentagon's Wilson said the troops also will carry out 'area beautification' without offering elaboration. Area beautification is military parlance for trash collection, landscaping and other tidying up on military installations. Though they are not armed, the troops are wearing body armor. Some have been seen around the city wearing soft caps instead of helmets as they take selfies with passersby. Weapons are stored miles away at their armory, ready if needed, the Army said. On Wednesday, Trump said the administration intends to ask for an extension of the emergency declaration beyond 30 days. Such a move would require congressional approval. At the same time, some federal officials indicated that they continue to operate on a time frame of about a month. Members of the National Guard patrolled near Union Station on Thursday. Kevin Dietsch/Getty National Guard troops are on orders lasting for 30 days, a defense official told reporters on the condition of anonymity to provide details that have not yet been discussed publicly. Maegan Vazquez, Dylan Wells, Olivia George, Meagan Flynn, Brittany Shammas and Michael Birnbaum contributed to this report.

Newsom's Latest Statewide Campaign Is About Redistricting. And Donald Trump.
Newsom's Latest Statewide Campaign Is About Redistricting. And Donald Trump.

New York Times

time2 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Newsom's Latest Statewide Campaign Is About Redistricting. And Donald Trump.

Californians may have thought they were done voting on Gavin Newsom. He's been elected twice as governor, defeated a recall seeking to oust him from office, and is barred by term limits from running again. But the state's voters will soon weigh in once more on Mr. Newsom's fate. This time, it will be in the form of a ballot measure the governor is pitching as a way to go after President Trump. Mr. Newsom on Thursday kicked off his campaign for a proposition asking California voters to approve a new congressional map, an extraordinary move meant to help Democrats win more seats in the U.S. House of Representatives to counter Mr. Trump's request that Texas gerrymander five more seats for Republicans. The governor gathered Democratic lawmakers and union leaders waving 'Defend Democracy' signs in a Los Angeles auditorium for a show of solidarity, marked by the hopeful buzz of a campaign rally. The event was held a day before California lawmakers aimed to make the map public. 'On Nov. 4 in California, you have the power to stand up to Trump,' Mr. Newsom told the crowd. 'You have the power to declare that you support a system that is not rigged.' The governor has dubbed his measure the Election Rigging Response Act. The phrase was emblazoned on red, white and blue signs throughout the auditorium. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store