{"id":2452932,"date":"2013-08-14T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-08-14T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/uncategorized\/national-park-system-and-21st-century-camper\/"},"modified":"2022-05-12T07:59:56","modified_gmt":"2022-05-12T13:59:56","slug":"national-park-system-and-21st-century-camper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/outdoor-adventure\/environment\/national-park-system-and-21st-century-camper\/","title":{"rendered":"The National Park System and the 21st-Century Camper"},"content":{"rendered":"
Wallace Stegner said National Parks marked our nation’s best idea. But with a backlog of $11.5 billion in deferred maintenance projects and facing sequester cuts, the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources says the Park Service needs some new good ideas in order to pull itself out of the red. So the Committee convened a hearing on July 25 to discuss the financial straits<\/a> that the National Park Service is trying to navigate. The purpose of the meeting was to brainstorm creative ways the agency might deal with its cashflow problems.<\/p>\n Representing the National Park Hospitality Association, Gerard Gabrys, who is also CEO of Guest Services Inc., a Virginia-based hospitality firm that operates lodging and other services at Mount Rainier National Park, told the committee that the NPHA wants to help the NPS shoulder some of its financial stress.<\/p>\n “Times are changing and we have to do everything we can to get people into our parks, including offering WiFi in developed portions of the parks, provide ample parking\u2014even if visitors must pay for it\u2014provide additional campgrounds and more activities,” he said.<\/p>\n In a pitch for more cell and data service<\/a> posted on its website, the National Park Hospitality Association makes an argument that I find perplexing. It argues that the NPS should enhance cell service and internet access in order to attract atypical Americans visitors as well as international travelers. “Many of these nontraditional visitors will not find poor cell and data service understandable or attractive\u2014and in fact [sic<\/em>] may be an irritant that adversely shapes memories or a park visit,” it says.<\/p>\n Really? Not being able to Instagram a snapshot of a Grand Canyon vista or alpine-glow in Glacier or a rare wolf sighting in Yellowstone is going to adversely shape your memories of a park visit? Seems more likely that a chirping cell phone would adversely impact the memories of other park visitors.<\/p>\n