Editor's note: This updates the caption of the downed Joshua tree to reflect that park officials later concluded the tree had been cut down prior to the government shutdown.
Illegal roads, cut down Joshua trees, and damaged federal property, along with the need to clean up garbage, prompted Joshua Tree National Park Superintendent David Smith to announce Tuesday that the park would close indefinitely on Thursday to address those impacts incurred during the ongoing partial government shutdown.
“The park will be closed until I can ensure that resources inside the park are protected," Smith said during a short phone call. "We’re hoping that the shutdown will be over soon."
While the closure will take effect 8 a.m. Thursday, the superintendent could not say how long it would last. Acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt has directed the National Park Service to use fee revenues brought in under the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act to pay for cleanup and additional law enforcement personnel. Smith said that while his park normally takes in about $9 million a year, most of that has been committed to projects. Staff was working to see how much in unobligated funds remained.
Joshua Tree is a geologic showcase that is a climber's gymnasium, one that offers two different desert settings. Straddling the geographic divide that splits the Mojave Desert from an element of the Sonoran Desert, the park located about two hours east of Los Angeles in Southern California is both a day tripper's paradise and an adventurer's escape. The cooler winter months are the busiest in the park, which has made the task of preventing damage with a handful of rangers during the ongoing shutdown extremely difficult.
Last week park staff closed its campgrounds to overnight use because of sanitation problems, but many visitors ignored that closure. With just eight law enforcement rangers working during the partial government shutdown it was impossible to cover all areas of the park, which is about the size of Delaware.
"There are about a dozen instances of extensive vehicle traffic off roads and in some cases into wilderness," Smith replied when asked about the damage in the park. "We have two new roads that were created inside the park. We had destruction of government property with the cutting of chains and locks for people to access campgrounds. We’ve never seen this level of out-of-bounds camping. Every day use area was occupied every evening.
"Joshua trees were actually cut down in order to make new roads.”
Since the National Park Service was told to keep as many units of the National Park System open as possible during the partial government shutdown, but only with essential personnel, many have struggled with skeleton contingents of law enforcement rangers. With no maintenance crews to collect trash or maintain restrooms, and no budget to pay for outside help, many parks have been blighted by litter and human waste. There have been reports of illegal off-road travel, metal detecting on battlefields in the park system, and damage to resources.
Following Bernhardt's directive to use fee revenues, park staff across the country was busy seeing how much was available.
The new roads at Joshua Tree didn't run for miles, but rather jogged around gates to gain access in many cases, according to the superintendent.
“It’s short spurts for people to get around gates for the most part. They would just go out into the country, and then once 20 or 30 cars would go over it you would essentially have a new road created in pristine desert,” he said.
One place that saw traffic was around Joshua Tree's Live Oak area, which is not far from the north entrance to the park.
“We had some pretty extensive four-wheel driving around the entire area to access probably our most significant tree in the park," Smith said. "We have this hybrid live oak tree that is deciduous. It is one of our kind of iconic trees inside the park. People were driving to it and camping under it. Through the virgin desert to get to this location. That would probably be a quarter-mile or so around the rock formation that is there.”
The superintendent said there also were instances of graffiti in the park this past week. Park officials were identifying additional staff and resources needed to address immediate maintenance and sanitation issues.
Monitoring a park the size of Joshua Tree, which covers 1,235 square miles and has about 20 different entrances due to dirt roads that ring the park, is extremely difficult with just eight law enforcement rangers. Were it not for the shutdown, there would have been more than 100 other "sets of eyes" to help keep an eye on visitor behavior, the superintendent said.
"We have 120 employees in the park, plus 30 associates that work for Great Basin Institute, the majority of whom are in the park every day," he said. "Those are the folks that are in the campgrounds and in the day-use areas and doing science. So you’ve got 100 sets of eyes in the park every day with folks contacting visitors."
Law enforcement rangers were to continue to patrol the park and enforce the closure until park staff completes the necessary cleanup and park protection measures.
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Comments
The National Park Service release says that it's multiple trees that have been vandalized. I'm sure it's not the first time, but I doubt it's a coincidence that it's happening at this period.
Vandalism has been common throughout the parks for decades. You have absolutely no evidence that this is anything other than a random, common event totally unrelated to the shut down. But if you don't like the shut down. Get your Democrats to fund the government.
It's extremely rare to have this level of vandalism in less than three weeks. It didn't occur to you that with a lack of personnel to patrol the parks, that there are enough people who think they can get away with it? And this is happening in what's normally low visitation season.
This administration is ordering that national parks be open to "prove" that they can somehow operate without normal levels of federal workers ("starve the beast"), and as a favor to the concessionaires. It's not working. I don't like the idea of shutting them down, but at this point I don't see a better option than that.
Democrats passed the bill the that Senate passed 100-0. The one that Mitchell is blocking from coming to the floor. You do know that "the wall" was supposed to be nothing more than a memory trick for immigration?
https://theweek.com/speedreads/816042/trumps-wall-fixation-reportedly-be...
The shutdown happened while the GOP had Congress. Why didn't they pass it Sparky?
Day after day this country is looking more like that movie Idiocracy. It's a slow boil.
I've never seen a Joshua tree, but I've been cutting down trees for 40 years for firewood and that tree looks alive to me.
Not to mention, anyone who's ever been camping *anywhere* should be well aware that it's never OK to cut down dead trees for firewood on land you don't own unless you have express permission to do so. And if you're in a national park, that means you NEVER cut down any tree no matter how dead and dry it is.
It would be illegal to cut down a Joshua Trre in Joshua Tree National Park.