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Draft Recommendations Call For Making National Park Campgrounds More Accommodating

Published Date

October 13, 2019
Fruita Campground, Capitol Reef National Park/Kurt Repanshek file

How many amenities should national park campgrounds offer? Fruita Campground, Capitol Reef National Park/Kurt Repanshek file

How do you like your national park campground? Wish there was WiFi so you could stay abreast of news or sports? Want a food truck to show up so you didn't have to cook over a camp stove? Is there a need for hot and cold water showers in each and every campground in the National Park System? 

A two-page list (attached below) of recommended improvements to park campgrounds calls for some of those changes, though it remains to be seen how fully Interior Secretary David Bernhardt embraces the suggestions.

Drafted by Interior's Subcommittee on Recreation Enhancement Through Reorganization, the document also suggests that holders of the National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Senior Pass, an $80 lifetime pass those 62 and older can buy and which provides a 50 percent discount on campground fees, face some blackout dates during busy seasons that would prevent them from that discount. It also recommends that perhaps national park campgrounds should offer cabins for nightly rental, and maybe a tent rental pool as well.

While many campgrounds suffer from deferred maintenance, the draft suggests that concessionaires be encouraged to tackle some of the needs by ensuring they would be repaid by subsequent concessionaires if they ever lost, or surrendered, the campground management contract.

"We're looking at a couple things," said Derrick Crandall, the former president of the American Recreation Coalition who now holds the same title at Outdoor Solutions USA, when asked about the impetus behind the draft plan. "No. 1, we actually have fewer campsites now than we had 30 years ago. And a lot of the reason for that is not by plan, it's because water treatment plants and other kinds of infrastructure have deteriorated and we've seen (campground) closures.

"It is absolutely true that most Park Service campgrounds are ill-prepared to deal with the larger RVs. I don't think that we should be building all of our campgrounds to accommodate 42-foot diesel pushers that are towing a car," he continued during a phone call Friday. "I'm not an advocate for that. I think we need some capacity. I'm more concerned about the fact that we see demand in many national parks for group camping. Where we have extended families to accommodate people who just camp differently than we camp.

"In some cases I think we can do that, so whether it's for a scout troop or whether it's a family reunion of largely Latino and others who are seeking that, I think we need to figure out a way to be able to understand what the current demand is and to have a system in place that tries to accommodate some of this demand."

The increasing length of RVs, with secondary vehicles in tow, have some calling for larger campsites in national park campgrounds/NPS

There are many campgrounds across the National Park System that already are operated by private companies, as opposed to Park Service staff. And the Trump administration doesn't seem averse to expanding that practice. President Trump's first Interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, told a gathering of the Recreation Vehicle Industry Association back in 2017 that, "As the secretary, I don't want to be in the business of running campgrounds. My folks will never be as good as you are."

Going a step further, Zinke added that, "We'll be looking at where our employees should be spending their time. ... Yes, cleaning the bathrooms. But actually running services, that's something we should be pushing to somebody who's updated and knows the market better."

The subcommittee's recommendations don't call for a wholesale turnover of park campgrounds to private operators. But it does propose a pilot program of five to 10 campgrounds in the system for "modernization, enhancement or even new construction, especially in park units with low levels of visitor services that now limit public use. The incentive would be an allocation of funds equal to current deferred maintenance, but available for discretionary use to improve the campground and associated infrastructure."

The plan was knocked down by Sierra Club officials, who said it would be another step toward pricing some Americans out of the National Park System.

"Turning our national parks into profit centers for a select few vendors would rob our public lands of just what makes them special. Hiking fees and limiting discounts for seniors will shut out working families and elders on fixed incomes," said Joel Pannell, associate director of Sierra Club Outdoors for All. "We will not allow the embattled Trump administration to turn our national parks into playgrounds for the wealthy and privileged, or permit companies that financially support the Trump campaign to profit from privatization of our public lands. Park lovers and outdoor advocates across the nation will rise up in resistance.”

The campground suggestions come at a time when, according to Kampgrounds of America's 2019 North American Camping Report, park visitors younger than Baby Boomers want more amenities with their campfires.

Even though only 5 percent of campers use the presence of on-site recreation as a determinant of campground selection, when asked to rate the importance of on-site recreation and the campground’s proximity to local cultural events and attractions in selecting campgrounds, about 4 in 10 camping households view these as important considerations.

On-site recreation grew in importance across all age groups in 2018. About 40 percent of millennials and Gen Xers listed on-site recreation as an important factor in their camping experience, with 37 percent of Baby Boomers and 34 percent of Mature campers in agreement.

Once they’re at the campground, clean bathrooms has consistently been the most important factor for campers while staying at a campground (averaging nearly 50 percent since 2014). The second tier of factors include allowing pets (up 4 percentage points since 2014 to 23 percent); being kid friendly (21 percent); and offering recreational activities (20 percent). Interestingly, the importance of free WiFi connectivity has dropped 3 percentage points since 2014, with a 2018 rating of 16 percent.

"I do know absolutely that today's campers are more urban in background than they were 20 or 30 years ago, and in many cases are looking for greater support," Crandall said. "They do want WiFi. They do want some food options. What we're saying is we think there is a strategy to deal with providing food in a campground as opposed to telling people that they basically have to go out of a park to a gateway community to find dinner and come back."

Juniper Campground, Theodore Roosevelt National Park/Kurt Repanshek

Are the days when most campers pitched a tent and cooked their own meals passing national parks by?/Kurt Repanshek file

Crandall said park superintendents have told him that "part of the traffic congestion (in parks) is caused by people who need things, whether it's just a camp store kind of operation, just basic camp supplies that people who are novices in the outdoors don't know about because they're not aware that there's going to be a drop in the temperature down to 25 degrees in August in a campground."

The KOA report also claimed a decline in national park campers.

Campers continue to be reliant on public lands for their camping trips. About six in ten camper nights is spent on public lands or in public campgrounds.

While the proportion of camper nights spent at both state and national parks is near 2017 levels, there has been a proportional drop in camper nights in national parks since 2016, suggesting that as campers spend more time camping, they are devoting those additional camper nights to different locations (e.g. public & private land outside of campgrounds).

The overall proportion of camping in national parks and state parks has declined since 2015.

The subcommittee's report alludes to those trends in calling for greater investment in national park campgrounds, through private businesses.

There is also broad consensus that the current national park campground system, largely operated by federal employees, combines inadequate and outmoded visitor infrastructure and a need for both capital and operating subsidies with appropriated funds. Overall capacity has not kept up with growth and changes in camping demand, and the infrastructure that does exist, with few exceptions, fails to meet expectations of the contemporary camping market. National park campgrounds are also the victims of other park infrastructure problems, including roads and water systems. In addition to adverse impacts on visitor experiences, the challenges facing campgrounds make the system an underperforming asset.

... As a serendipity, private sector operation of the campgrounds would generate a dramatic increase in NPS awareness of visitor characteristics and satisfaction. The lessons learned with near-immediate operational changes in national parks can be then replicated for other Interior bureaus, including the Bureau of Land Management, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Reclamation and , cooperatively, on American Indian lands.

The recommendations made by the subcommittee also included a call for a "national charrette" involving experts from the private sector as well as state and national campground operators and relevant federal officials to pull together "a centralized library of information, trends, and best practices" that can be reviewed and used to build an approach to upgrading campgrounds on federal lands.

It also suggests arriving at campground models and the use of "categorial permissions" that would allow construction of utility systems, for example, without the need to go through full-blown NEPA analysis.

Pricing for campsites should be adjusted regularly for inflation and offered options, such as WiFi and RV hookups, the document said, and campground franchise fees -- the percentage of revenues operators agree to return to the Park Service -- should be used for "needed and appropriate NPS services, including education/interpretation, fire, and safety and related."

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Comments

Our National Parks need more maintenance and more rangers.  Commercial management of campgrounds has not been an improvement.  Crater Lake NP is one example of commercial incompetence. Parks should offer clean bathrooms, showers, dishwashing stations, potable water, dump ststions for campers to minimize environmental impacts. 

Parks do not need 'recreational amenities' beyond hiking trails.  Nature provides the recreation.  Ranger talks provide education.  Quiet campgrounds provide a natural, restorative environment.  

Limit RV size to 25' in most campgrounds and prohibit outside television and music. Restrict generator usage. Provide a separate campground for monster fifth wheelers and motorhomes.  


I think they need to ad a big drive in move screen on the side of Mount Rushmore! 


I go to National Parks to avoid places like KOA. I enjoy primitive camping, where I have to cook my own meals and can't get WiF. That allows an opertunit to prepare meals, converse, and tell stories around a campfire or under the stars. The whole point of going out to nature is to get away from distractions and the rat race. I pay for my annual pass and I expec to be able to use it whenever I want without blackout dates. I'd be willing to bet that seniors with passes would like to use their passes without restrictions also.

Food trucks, flush toilets, and equipment rents... bahaha are you serious? Learn how to plan a menu, go grocery shopping, and how to cook. If pit toilets are too expensive to clean, how are we going to budget for plumbing and maintenanc? People would likely take better care of their own equipment than a NPS "Rent-a-Tent". 

Forty years of camping and recreating in public lands has helped shape me into the person I am today. It has taught me to be self reliant, how to take care of mysel, and created life long friendships. Most important it has taught me the intrinsic value of open spaces, and wild lands. If you can't enjoy the Sequoias, the Grand Canyon, or Old Faithful without WiFi, maybe you don't belong there. 


I can never understand how some people think they have the obligation, much less right, to tell other people how to live their lives.

 


 

Trump's Public Lands Chief Wrote For A Cult Extremist's Magazine
William Perry Pendley authored anti-environmental screeds for Lyndon LaRouche. Now he controls 10% of the U.S. landmass.
Let's get these idiots, from Trump on down, OUT before they ruin everything.


I would be happy with fresh water and a place to dump the blackwater. I do not need wifi, showers, or a food truck! 


I can understand the historical mindset of the NPS to preserve nature by limiting amenities at the NPS campgrounds. However, in my opinion it's way beyond time for the NPS to "get with times" and upgrade for the modern camping enthusiast. I live within a 1 hour drive of the GSM National Park and I have not camped in a GSM NP campground in at least 5 years. Furthermore, unless I take a notion to tent camp, I may never return. Now to be understood, my wife and I are not big rig campers. We are newly empty nesters who enjoy pulling our modest size 19 foot travel trailer to nearby state parks. We prefer the Tennessee state parks because they offer showers, water and electric hook ups, and reliable WI-FI. To me WiFi is a must because I must stay connected for work purposes. We camp about 3 to 4 times per year and we do not find that having WiFi detracts from the nature experience. We still grill outdoors, roast marsh mellows by the campfire, take walks in the woods, flyfish for trout in the streams, tap naps in the hammock, read a good book, etc., etc.Yes I do check emails from work and have the ability to call the office if needed using WiFi calling on my cell. Without WiFi, I would actually be unable to go camping!! I know Cosby campground inside the GSM NP rarely ever fills. It's a shame the NPS does not "modernize at least one of the two loops in that campground by adding new bathhouses with showers, water and 50 amp electric hookups, and WiFi through the campground, not just the check in station. If this was done, they would stay full almost all the time!!! I would be in favor of leaving some NPS campgrounds primitive in order to preserve the nature experience. Examples at the GSM NP are Bigcreek(walk-in sites) and Cataloochee(remote and challenging to bring a big rig in over narrow, mountainous gravel road). If the NPS is listening.....please, please begin the process to make much needed updates as quickly as possible for all to enjoy. I would hate to see a new generation of outdoor enthusiasts never know what it is like to camp in a National Park because of a severe lack of amenities. Thank you.


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