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Politics & Government

Temporary free entrance will cost, park service says

Michael Doyle - McClatchy Newspapers

August 14, 2009 07:46 PM

WASHINGTON -- The National Park Service will lose up to $6 million and gain modest benefits in return for offering free entrance to Yosemite and other parks this summer, officials now believe.

A temporary fee waiver means visitors to Yosemite, Sequoia, Kings Canyon and other major parks can avoid the usual $20 entrance fee this Saturday or Sunday. Earlier free-entrance weekends boosted visitation at some but not all parks.

"With free entrance, more people are coming," Yosemite National Park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said Friday.

Even without the free entrance, many parks are busier than they were last year.

In July, which included one free weekend, 608,567 visitors came to Yosemite. In July 2008, which did not have a free weekend, Yosemite recorded 559,727 visitors. Similarly, visits to Yosemite in June that included one free weekend reached 501,588, up from 490,270 visitors in June 2008.

"We're definitely seeing some spikes on those free weekends," added Adrienne Freeman, spokeswoman for nearby Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks.

During the Sequoia and Kings Canyon free-entrance weekend in July, visitation jumped 24 percent compared to the similar weekend in July 2008. Overall, Sequoia and Kings Canyon saw 281,450 visitors in July, compared to 265,903 last July.

"Every month of the year, we've been seeing an increase in the number of visitors," Freeman said.

This will be the third and final weekend for the summer fee waiver, billed by the park service as a tourism boost and good-will gesture during hard economic times. President Barack Obama will be showcasing the program this weekend with visits to Yellowstone and Grand Canyon national parks.

Forgoing the entrance fees costs the park service between $750,000 and $1 million a day. For the six days that the fee waiver will have been in effect on weekends in June, July and August, the lost revenue adds up to between $4.5 million and $6 million.

In return, park service officials sought more visitors and concessionaires had hoped to do more business. Agency officials say the park service has accrued some other benefits, including what the study called "significant media interest," but the program hasn't always worked out entirely as planned.

Of the 391 units in the park service, 147 charge entrance fees. Managers in 39 of these parks responded to a survey asking about their experiences during the third weekend of June, when the free-entrance experiment began.

Twenty two of the parks reported more visitors during the June free weekend than the weekends before and after. Five parks including Olympic National Park reported fewer visitors on the free weekend compared to the weekends before and after. Twelve reported the free weekend visitation was higher than only one of the weekends before or after.

"The (free entrance) effect varies widely and can be overshadowed by other factors," the park service analysis states.

Yosemite visitation numbers were not available for individual weekends.

Local weather, gasoline prices and competing recreational opportunities could all influence individual park visits, park service analysts noted. For instance, analysts suggested that visitor interest in Joshua Tree National Park fells in late June after temperatures spiked to nearly 100 degrees.

The larger context also includes an overall increase in visits this year to state and national parks and private campgrounds. Yosemite has seen more local visitors coming from the San Joaquin Valley and surrounding region, Cobb said.

Approximately two-thirds of park concessionaires informally polled nationwide saw no sales increase during the free weekend in June. About one-third of the concessionaires polled "indicated some potentially attributable increase in patronage and/or sales," the study states.

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