National Park Case Studies

  1. The Average Park
  2. Blue Ridge Parkway
  3. Cabrillo Monument
  4. Charles Pinckney Historic Site
  5. City of Rocks Reserve
  6. Death Valley Park
  7. El Malpais Monument
  8. Eugene O'Neill Historic Site
  9. Everglades
  10. Frederick Law Olmsted
  11. Gateway
  12. Glacier
  13. Golden Spike Historical Site
  14. Grand Canyon
  15. Grant-Kohrs Ranch
  16. Great Basin Park
  17. Great Smoky Mountains
  18. Kaloko-Honokohau Historical Park
  19. Klondike Gold Rush
  20. Lassen Volcanic Park
  21. Montezuma Castle and Tuzigoot
  22. Mount Rainier
  23. Natchez Trace Parkway
  24. Olympic
  25. The Presidio
  26. Redwood
  27. Rocky Mountain
  28. Sequoia-Kings Canyon
  29. Shenandoah
  30. Steamtown Historic Site
  31. Yellowstone
  32. Yosemite

The Average Park

There is no typical national park, but an average park can be calculated from data for all the parks. Here is what such an average park looks like.

What

The average park is about 200,000 acres in size. This ranges from 0 to more than 8 million for Wrangell-St. Elias Park (13 million including the Wrangell-St. Elias Preserve). The average park also contains about 10,000 acres of non-federal land, ranging from 0 to more than 500,000 (again, Wrangell-St. Elias). Some of this land is state or local government, but the Park Service's long-term goal is to acquire much of the private land within the parks.

History

The average park is 45 years old, but has been under Park Service management for only 40 years. The average park has gone through several changes in status--such as from a monument to a park, by adding to or subtracting from the park's acres, or by changing the agency that manages the park.

Improvements

The average park has about $10 million worth of improvements in it consisting of a visitors center, employee housing, roads, parking lots, and trails. The Park Service estimates that the average park needs new and rehabilitated improvements costing $7.5 million.

Visitation

The average park receives about 700,000 visitors a year, ranging from under 500 on the Rio Grande River to 18 million on the Blue Ridge Parkway. The average visitor spends 5 hours in the average park, ranging from around 15 minutes at the Thaddeus Kosciuszko Memorial to more than three days at Gates of the Arctic Park.

Receipts

The average park collects about $180,000 per year in visitors fees. Actually, about two-thirds of the parks are free; of those that collect, the average park receives well over $330,000 per year. The Grand Canyon collects the most: over $10.5 million, nearly twice either Yosemite or Yellowstone-Grand Teton. In 1993, the smallest amount--$9--was collected by Moores Creek Battlefield Park.

Drive-through parks charge a fee per car; walk-in parks often charge per person. Children under 16 are usually free; senior citizens used to be free but beginning this year they must purchase a $10 pass, which is good for their lifetime. For $25, anyone can buy an annual Golden Eagle pass that gets them into all parks for free.

Budget

The average park spends about $1.7 million per year, ranging from a minimum of about $100,000 at Hovenweep Monument to a maximum of $18 million at Yellowstone. (In 1994, the maximum will be the Presidio at $25 million.) The average park also has the full-time equivalency of about 40 employees, ranging from 1 or 2 on up to about 500 (Yosemite). (In these case studies, references to "employees" always means "full-time equivalants.")

Assessment

At 50 cents per visitor hour, the average park could bring in nearly $1.9 million per year. This slightly exceeds the average park's costs. However, if parks were funded out of their net, rather than gross, income, the average park would have to increase charges to $1 per hour, reduce its costs by nearly half, or (most likely) some combination.

In general, parks created before 1940 have no problem meeting Park Service criteria for park or in paying their way out of increased user fees. Parks created between 1940 and 1960 are marginal, while parks created after 1960 are in trouble on both counts.

Average, Highest, and Lowest Budgets and Employment

           	Average     	High         	Where                	Low       	Where
Budget     	$1,700,000  	$18,000,000  	Yellowstone          	$100,000  	Hovenweep
$ per visit	2.11        	433          	Gates of the Arctic  	0.17      	Muir Woods
$ per hour 	0.40        	162          	Olmsted              	.08       	Blue Ridge
$ per acre 	6.92        	624,000      	Olmsted              	0.11      	Gates of the Arctic
Employees  	40          	500          	Yosemite             	1         	Little River Canyon
$/FTE      	$40,000     	$24,000      	Scotts Bluff         	$201,000  	City of Rocks
Average, high, and low budgets per visitor, per visitor hour, per acre, and per employee. Note that Gates of the Arctic has the highest cost per visitor but the lowest per acre. On a visitorhour basis, its cost is below average at about $5. The parks to worry about are the ones that are high by all measures, particularly visitor hour. The Frederick Law Olmsted is one of several historic sites that performs poorly by these measures. Others that cost more than $100 per visitor hour and well above average both per acre and per employee include the Ulysses Grant, Thomas Stone, and Thaddeus Kosciuszko sites as well as the Monocacy Battlefield.

The Most and Least Hours Spent Per Visitor

Rank	Park                   	Hours/Visit
1	Gates of the Arctic    	79.65
2	Isle Royale            	65.24
3	Glen Canyon            	35.99
4	Big Bend               	32.04
5	Yosemite               	27.37
6	Dry Tortugas           	22.25
7	Yellowstone            	22.21
8	Cumberland Island      	21.71
9	Sequoia                	21.39
10	Aniakchak              	19.90
289	Puukohola Heiau        	0.50
290	Jimmy Carter           	0.49
291	Castillo de San Marcos 	0.48
292	Sitka                  	0.48
293	Salem Maritime         	0.40
294	Christiansted          	0.36
295	Monocacy               	0.29
296	Thaddeus Kosciuszko    	0.27
297	Boston African-American	0.21
298	Biscayne               	0.12

The Greatest and Least Operating Cost Per Visitor

Rank	Park                   	$/visit
1	Muir Woods             	0.17
2	Fort Point             	0.20
3	John D. Rockefeller Jr.	0.24
4	Castle Clinton         	0.36
5	Blue Ridge Parkway     	0.48
6	Cedar Breaks           	0.51
7	Chattahoochee River    	0.53
8	Mount Rushmore         	0.55
9	Ford's Theatre         	0.56
10	Golden Gate            	0.57
290	Lake Clark             	71.78
291	Cape Krusenstern       	90.13
292	Isle Royale            	93.00
293	Aniakchak              	98.28
294	Weir Farm              	108.03
295	Saint Paul's Church    	161.11
296	Ulysses S. Grant       	185.83
297	Yukon-Charley Rivers   	307.27
298	Frederick Law Olmsted  	324.32
299	Gates of the Arctic    	432.58

The Greatest and Least Operating Cost Per Visitor Hour

Rank	Park                   	$/hour
1	Blue Ridge Parkway     	0.08
2	Glen Canyon            	0.09
3	Lake Mead              	0.11
4	John D. Rockefeller Jr.	0.12
5	Assateague Island      	0.12
6	Amistad                	0.12
7	Muir Woods             	0.13
8	Great Smoky Mountains  	0.13
9	Chattahoochee River    	0.13
10	Canyon de Chelly       	0.15
290	Weir Farm              	37.40
291	Maggie L. Walker       	42.14
292	William Howard Taft    	42.79
293	Cape Krusenstern       	50.17
294	Saint Paul's Church    	58.24
295	Thomas Stone           	89.54
296	Thaddeus Kosciuszko    	99.04
297	Ulysses S. Grant       	102.48
298	Monocacy               	110.41
299	Frederick Law Olmsted  	162.16

The Greatest and Least Operating Cost Per Acre

Rank	Park              	$/acre
1	Gates of the Arctic    	0.11
2	Wrangell-St. Elias     	0.12
3	Cape Krusenstern       	0.13
4	Bering Land Bridge     	0.20
5	Lake Clark             	0.22
6	Yukon-Charley Rivers   	0.24
7	Aniakchak              	0.25
8	Katmai                 	0.30
9	Glacier Bay            	0.52
10	Kenai Fjords           	0.94
292	Statue of Liberty      	143,483
293	T. Roosevelt Inaugural 	147,000
294	White House            	157,611
295	Longfellow             	181,000
296	Maggie L. Walker       	195,000
297	Independence           	200,333
298	Edgar Allen Poe        	251,000
299	Castle Clinton         	472,000
300	Harry S Truman         	596,000
301	Frederick Law Olmsted  	624,000

Blue Ridge Parkway

What

The parkway follows the crest of the Blue Ridge, or Southern Appalachian, Mountains for 470 miles from Roanoke, Virginia to Asheville, North Carolina. The carefully crafted two-lane road passes several wilderness and other scenic areas and provides a scenic link between Shenandoah and Great Smoky Mountains national parks. In addition to the road, the park includes about 79,000 acres of federal land. Other nearby lands include several national forests.

History

The parkway was first conceived in 1933 as an employment project in the first months of the New Deal. The National Park Service took it over in 1936 and recorded the first tourist traffic on it in 1941.

Improvements

Aside from the road, the parkway includes a number of visitors centers and such non-profit businesses as the Highland Crafts Center, near Asheville.

Visitation, Receipts, and Budgets

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$364	$8,653	17,889	113,212	242
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.02	$0.48	6	$0.00	$0.08
The Parkway reports the largest number of recreation visits and visitor hours of any park. A decline after 1989 probably represents a change in counting techniques. The park budget will be about $9.5 million in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
In contrast to Lassen Park, which was unique when it was created but seems mediocre today, the Blue Ridge Parkway was a classic pork barrel project when it was conceived, yet has grown into an outstanding and valuable resource. At the time the parkway was built, the nation had built many highways in its craftsman style. Today, most of those roads have been torn out and replaced with superhighways. Yet Americans still appreciate a leisurely road that passes through beautiful scenery-- as attested by the park's popularity.

Cabrillo Monument

What

Cabrillo National Monument commemorates Juan Rodriquez Cabrillo, the first European to see the Pacific Coast of California. A statue of Cabrillo stands near a lighthouse that the Park Service has restored to its 1880s condition.

History

Although Cabrillo was sailing for Spain, he is thought to have been from Portugal. In 1913, a group of Portugese-Americans petitioned President Woodrow Wilson for a place where they could erect a statue of Cabrillo. Wilson set aside one-half acre of the Point Loma military base, but the statue was never built. In 1926, another group asked for and received permission to put a statue, and also failed to complete it. A statue was finally erected in 1949.

In order to provide "proper care and management of the historical objects" in the area, President Eisenhower added 80 acres to the monument, including the lighthouse, in 1959. President Ford added more in 1974, bringing its total size to 137 acres. The enlarged area also includes coastal tidepools.

Improvements

The Park Service built a 10,000-square foot visitor center and a separate whale-watching overlook in 1965. In addition to the lighthouse, historic buildings include coastal defense structures from World War II.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$562	$831	1,152	1,633	22
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.49	$0.72	1	$0.34	$0.51
Visitation has declined since a 1987 peak of 1.8 million visits. Entrance fees and large crowds bring in sufficient receipts to cover most of the park's costs. Although Cabrillo's budget is expected to increase only slightly by 1995, a 33 percent increase since 1987 combined with declining visitation translates to a doubling of per-visitor costs, from 35cents to 72cents, in just six years.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       			X
Exceptional value         			X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            		X	
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X		
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       	X		
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
State and national parks contain plenty of lighthouses, statues, tidepools, and coastal defense structures, so there is nothing outstanding or exceptional about Cabrillo. Since no one has any idea whether Cabrillo himself ever stopped near this spot, it probably does not qualify as a monument under a strict interpretation of the Antiquities Act. A relatively small fee hike would be sufficient for the park to pay its way.

Charles Pinckney Historic Site

What

The Charles Pinckney National Historic Site preserves a house built on a farm owned by Pinckney, who fought in the Revolution and help write the Declaration of Independence.

History

As developments encroached on the area in the 1980s, South Carolinians, including the spouses of key members of the state's Congressional delegation, worked to save the last remnants of Pinckney's farm. The house and 21 acres were purchased at a cost of $2.5 millionin 1990, part of which came from private funds. To the Park Service's embarrassment, it turned out that Pinckney never lived in the house. In fact, it was built after he died. "It's still a good example of an early American home," says a park official.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$319	0	0	5
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$--	0	$0	$--
The site is not yet open to visitors. A slight increase in budget brought FTEs to 8 in 1994.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       			X
Exceptional value         			X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            	X	
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X	
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
State and national parks and other historic areas contain plenty of early American homes, so there is nothing outstanding or exceptional about Cabrillo. It is possible that the area could pay its way, but like many other historic buildings it would require heavy local fundraising and volunteer efforts. Making the area a national park merely left that work to Uncle Sam.

City of Rocks Reserve

What

The City of Rocks is an unusual formation of granite carved by nature into memorable shapes. Early pioneers on the California cutoff of the Oregon Trail visited the area, and trail remnants are still visible. The reserve includes 14,400 acres of land, of which 7,000 are federal. Much of the rest was homesteaded and is still used for ranching.

History

Congress created the City of Rocks Reserve in 1988 with the intention of developing the area and then giving it to the State of Idaho for management. The legislation indicated that the private ranches would remain, for the most part, privately owned. Another area in Idaho, Hagerman Fossil Beds, was created at the same time and are managed together.

Improvements

After six years of management, the Park Service has put in almost no improvements beyond the BLM and ranch roads that existed before. However, a 1993 plan proposed some $50 million of improvements, including more than $7 million for a visitors center and parking lot.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$201	84	295	1
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$2.39	3	$0	$0.68
The park actually has a staff of 8.5 full-time equivalents, but most are paid by the state of Idaho. The 1993 Park Service plan suggests that the federal government may continue to pay some salaries of "specialized positions."

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X	
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X	
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
The City of Rocks is an amazing example of geology and erosion. But it is not particularly unique and is certainly not of national significance. Making it a national reserve instead of just a state park (which is the long-run goal) is just a way to get the federal government to pay for improvements and part of the operations costs. The area cannot pay its way today; it probably could as an Idaho state park, particularly if the state is not saddled with a bunch of expensive buildings to maintain.

Death Valley Park

What

This huge desert contains the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere and remnants of early mining operations.

History

Made a national monument in 1933, Death Valley's two million acres made it by far the largest monument in the system. In 1994, Congress made it a park and added 3.8 million acres that had been managed by the Bureau of Land Management. This makes it by far the largest park in the lower 48 states.

Improvements

The monument contained nine campgrounds and a visitors center. Before it was made a national park, the agency planned to spend $15 million rehabilitating park roads. As a larger park, it will probably plan more visitors centers.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$680	$3,626	998	8,128	94
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.68	$3.62	8	$0.08	$0.44
Perhaps in anticipation of the new park legislation, the Park Service expects a 33 percent budget increase from 1993 to 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X		
Exceptional value         	X		
Superlative opportunities 	X		
High integrity            	X		
Not adequately represented	X		
Sufficient size           	X		
No other agency           		X	
Pay its way (as is)       		X	
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
As a monument, Death Valley easily met Park Service criteria. Low visitation means that the monument would probably have to reduce its budget to fund itself out of user fees.

There is little reason why the BLM could not have managed the new acres; environmentalists advocated their transfer mainly because of a lack of trust of the BLM. A major issue was whether the new acres would be open to off-road vehicles; as a park they are closed. While the BLM could have closed them as well, James Ridenour doubted whether either the Park Service or the BLM could enforce such a closure.


El Malpais Monument

What

El Malpais--Spanish for "the badlands"--is a volcanic area in northwestern New Mexico featuring spatter cones, lava tubes, ice caves, and other volcanic features, as well as archeological evidence of Pueblo Indian habitations. The 114,000-acre monument (102,700 of which are federal) is surrounded by a 262,000-acre "national conservation area" managed by the Bureau of Land Management.

History

The badlands have been grazed by local ranchers and homesteaders for over 100 years. Cattle were a particularly big business until the 1920s, when the depression wiped out many homesteaders. Someone built a sawmill inside what is now the monument and parts of the area were logged.

In an effort to promote tourism, people proposed that the area be added to the National Park System as early as the 1930s. One rancher attempted to turn an ice cave into a tourist attraction and the focus of a dude ranch.

Although it is called a monument, El Malpais was created by Congress in 1987 and is the largest unit of the Park System created since the Alaska parks were designated in 1980. Legislation creating the monument directed that grazing would be phased out by 1998.

Improvements

The monument is crossed by two state highways and contains a few buildings, including the remains of the dude ranch, put in by early settlers. The Park Service wants to spend $21.3 million on visitors centers, roads, and other related facilities. A draft plan estimates that two visitors centers will cost $5.5 million; employee housing will cost nearly $1 million; and new or improved roads will cost more than $9.5 million. If this sounds too expensive, a "minimum requirements" alternative costs only $11.3 million, including the visitors centers and employee housing but few roads.

Visitation, Receipts, and Budgets

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$520	90	375	16
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$5.76	4	$0	$1.38
The park's budget will increase only slightly in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       			X
Exceptional value         			X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            		X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
This seems to be a pure pork park that has little reason to exist except to attract tourists to the area with the magic name, "national monument." Those tourists will be disappointed when they find the scenery in the park to be little different from much of the rest of the arid West.

The Park Service's rationale for making the area a park instead of leaving it with the BLM, which previously managed it, is that the BLM has a "different mission and function," namely to provide for multiple use rather than just recreation. Yet recreation is one of the multiple uses, so this seems contrived.


Eugene O'Neill Historic Site

What

Eugene O'Neill built Tao House in 1937 and lived in it for seven years, writing several of his most famous plays. He also owned 157 acres surrounding the house. The park consists of the house and several nearby buildings plus 13 acres of land.

History

O'Neill sold his house and land to someone who used it as headquarters for a California-style cattle-and-horse ranch. A horse barn was built near the house that featured a dancefloor in the hayloft. A caretaker's house was also built nearby. In 1976, the State of California bought much of the ranch for the East Bay Regional Park District, which manages it as wilderness. The house and 13 acres were given to the Eugene O'Neill Foundation (Tao House), which hoped to manage it for artistic programs.

The foundation was unable to finance the operation, so the Park Service took it over. This happened with the help of George Miller, a member of the House Interior Committee who represented the district, and William Penn Mott, who was soon to be director of the National Park Service and who happened to be on the board of the Eugene O'Neill Foundation. The foundation continued to sponsor artistic activities, including performances and artists-in-residence programs, in the park.

Improvements

The Park Service has done little to the park since it acquired it. In 1988, it proposed to tear down the barn since it obstructed the view once seen by O'Neill. The O'Neill Foundation protested since it wanted the barn for its activities. Strangely, not only did the Park Service not propose to tear down the caretaker's house--also visible from Tao House--but it planned to expand it to more than double its size to provide a visitors center, offices, and housing.

Local residents registered even greater protest to a Park Service proposal to build a new road to the property. The current access road is private and shared by local homeowners. The Park Service can use it for its own vehicles but the public cannot. To date, members of the public who want to visit the site must take a Park Service shuttle bus from the nearby town of Danville.

In 1990, the Park Service backed off from the road proposal but still planned to tear down the barn and add to the caretaker's house. The foundation is still protesting, but the controversy remains minimal because the park isn't likely to get funds anytime soon.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$226	3	7	7
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$75.16	2	$0	$31.04
Limited visitation make this one of the most expensive parks per visitor in the system. The park will gain only slight budget increases in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       			X
Exceptional value         			X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           			X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
This house is no more nationally significant than thousands of other buildings that were home, at one time or another, to various American writers and artists. Management is made infeasible by the difficulty of public access. The park certainly could not pay its way as it is currently configured, and it is doubtful that it ever could except with heavy outside donations.

Everglades

What

The Everglades includes 1.5 million acres of near-tropical forests, prairies, and fresh- and salt-water marshes, nearly all of which is managed as wilderness.

History

The park was established in 1947 with about 1.2 million acres. Several additions were made in the late 1950s and 1960s.

Improvements

The park includes five visitors centers, campgrounds, boatramps, and a lodge. The Everglade ecosystem is threatened by contaminants entering the park from nearby agricultural operations, and the park wants to spend $78 million to create a series of marshes that will strain the impurities before they reach the park. Ultimately, this project may cost $700 million, and the Park Service hopes that farmers--mainly large sugar companies--will pay about half.

Visitation, Receipts, and Budgets

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$724	$8,102	974	5,255	225
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.74	$8.32	5	$0.14	$1.54
Reported visitation peaked in 1991 at 1.3 million people. Since 1990, the number of hours reported per visitor declined from more than 8 to less than 5.5. Nevertheless, the park's budget is expected to exceed $12.5 million in 1995, a 50 percent increase from 1993.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Like other early parks, the Everglades clearly meets all Park Service criteria for a park. However, its expenses per visitor hour are very high for such a large park, and will have to be significantly reduced before it can pay its way from user fees.

Frederick Law Olmsted

What

"Fairstead" is the home of the city planner and landscape architect who designed Central Park and assisted with Golden Gate and many other city park. The house includes a collection of 150,000 drawings and plans by Olmsted and his son and associates.

History

The house was made a national historic site in 1979.

Improvements

The Park Service has no immediate plans to alter the house.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$1,248	4	8	48
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$324.32	2	$0	$162.16
Limited visitation and a huge staff combine to make this the most expensive park in the system in many ways--per visitor, per visitor hour, and per acre. Part of the expense is due to the fact that the park superintendent also adminsters the Kennedy Birthplace and Longfellow House. Those two sites account for 16 of the reported staff of 48, and perhaps 16 more share their time between all three sites. That leaves Olmsted with about 21 FTEs, mostly people working on preserving the collection of drawings. This would indicate a cost of more than $200 per visitor and $100 per visitor hour--still a near-record for the park system. The parks' staff declined slightly 1994 but its budget increased by nearly 10 percent.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       		X		
Exceptional value         		X	
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X		
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
Frederick Law Olmsted was a big spender when it came to parks, but even he might shudder at the thought of spending $1.3 million per year to maintain a house, one acre, and a collection of documents that together serve an average of less than twelve visitors per day.

Gateway

What

A hodge-podge of parks, marshes, athletic facilities, beaches, and historic structures make up this "urban park" in New York and New Jersey.

History

Gateway Recreation Area consists of a number of state and local parklands and wildlife refuges that were taken over by the Park Service in 1972 in the same legislation that created the Golden Gate Recreation Area.

Improvements

When the Park Service took it over, it immediately built numerous roads across the former wildlife refuges and other parklands. Today it is spending $25 million rehabilitating those roads and another $48 million rehabilitating other park facilities.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,224	$13,615	5,898	23,855	397
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.21	$2.31	4	$0.05	$0.57
Gateway's reported visitation peaked in 1983 at 10.3 million; a 33-percent decline in 1988 may indicate a change in counting techniques.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       		X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Urban national parks seemed like a good idea when the federal government was rich. But an age of budget limitations exposes it as mere park barrel that drains resources away from parks of truly national significance. Although Gateway should have been left in local hands, as a single unit it could probably pay its way out of user fees if it did not have so many roads and other facilities requiring expensive maintenance.


Glacier

What

Spectacular mountains, glacially-carved valleys, and lakes make up this million-acre park.

History

Even more than Yellowstone and Grand Canyon, Glacier is the classic "railroad park," created in 1910 to stimulate passenger traffic on the Great Northern Railway that formed Clacier's southern boundary. The park became a personal hobby of the railway's president, Louis Hill, who built a fabulous chain of hotels, including one in Canada's adjacent Waterton National Park.

Improvements

To reach hotels and several visitors centers, Glacier has a highway through the park and another that terminates within the park. The park wants to spend $12 million to rehabilitate roads and $11 million to rehabilitate chalets, water, and sewage systems.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,331	$6,980	2,142	17,966	202
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.62	$3.26	8	$0.07	$0.39
Visitation in 1992 was a record 2.2 million. The park budget is increasing by
more than 10 percent by 1995. 

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
The park easily meets Park Service criteria and can probably pay its way with minor reductions in budget.

Golden Spike Historical Site

What

In 1869, the first transcontinental railroad was completed when the last rail was fixed into position with a gold spike at Promentory, Utah. This park commemorates that event with a museum and replicas of the locomotives that first touched couplers in 1869.

History

After the turn-of-the-century, the railroad rerouted its line to another location but retained ownership of the land. In 1957, Congress declared the area, still railroad owned, a historic site. In 1965, in anticipation of the centennial, Congress authorized the purchase of 2,200 acres.

Improvements

The park has a small visitors center resembling an early train station. But the stars of the show are the replica locomotives, built for the Park Service at a cost of more than $2 million. For several years after the centennial, Park Service employees in period costumes recreated the laying of the last rail several times a day for visitors. Congress eventually stopped funding this.

Western Park Service officials, envious of Steamtown's huge budgets, are hoping to recreate something similar (at least in budget) at Golden Spike. The Southern Pacific Railroad recently donated its right-of-way between Promentory and Corinne, Utah, to the government. Tracks exist between Corinne and Ogden. The Park Service is studying the feasibility of running tourist trains from Ogden to Golden Spike.

Visitation

The average visitor spends about 1.5 hours at the park.

Receipts

The park collects between $20,000 and $25,000 per year by charging visitors $2.

Budget

The park's budget today is about $550,000 per year to support 14 employees. This works out to more than $10 per visitor and more than $6

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$23	$530	51	127	14
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.44	$10.35	2	$0.18	$4.16
Visitation peaked at 170,000 during the 1969 centennial, then quickly fell to around 50,000 where it has remained ever since.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
Promontory is an outstanding example of American history. However, it provides marginal opportunities for public use since it is well off the beaten track and climate is unfavorable. Moreover, its integrity as a historic area is lacking--everything except the original landscape and some eroded roadbeds had to be recreated. The area might have a tough time paying its way even with a huge reduction in expenses.

Grand Canyon

What

Grand Canyon Park includes nearly 180 miles of the Colorado River from Glen Canyon Dam to the north to the reservoir formed by Hoover Dam in the south.

History

Originally part of Grand Canyon National Forest, the canyon itself was made a national monument in 1908 and--with the support of the Santa Fe Railroad--transferred to the Park Service as a park in 1919. Marble Canyon became a national monument in 1969 and was merged into the park in 1975.

Improvements

The popular south rim road goes through the park passing a visitors center and El Tovar, a hotel built by the Santa Fe Railway. The less-used north rim road terminates in the park at a hotel built by the Union Pacific Railway. The park is spending $23 million to reconstruct the south rim road and more than $50 million on water pipelines and treatment facilities.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$10,504	$11,214	4576	69,898	294
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$2.30	$2.45	15	$0.15	$0.16
Visitation reached record levels in 1992 and again in 1993. The budget will increase only slightly in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           		X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Although one wonders what the Forest Service would have done had it retained the park with a recreation mandate, the area is clearly park-quality. Moreover, it practically pays its way today and could easily do so with an increase in user fees.

Grant-Kohrs Ranch

What

The Kohrs family owned one of the largest ranches in Montana and bought this home from a man named Grant to use as ranch headquarters. In addition to the house and about 1,400 acres of land, the site contains numerous barns, ranch equipment, and other historic artifacts in very good condition.

History

The Grant-Kohrs National Historic Site was created by Congress in 1972.

Improvements

The Park Service has a parking lot and a tiny visitors center.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$8	$636	27	33	20
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$.28	$23.57	1	$0.23	$19.16
Visitation peaked in 1983 at 34,000 people and since then has ranged between 22,000 and 28,000. Fees are charged to see the interior of the house--which is limited to just a few people at a time--otherwise the park is free. The park's 1995 budget is almost 50 percent greater than in 1993.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Grant-Kohrs is an outstanding and well-preserved example of early Western ranching. However, there is no reason (except for the desire for federal subsidies) why it could not be managed by a state or local entity. Since it is located in Deerlodge, a town that already supports a major private museum, the ranch could probably pay its way if it advertised and cut way back on staff.

Great Basin Park

What

Great Basin is one of the newest national parks in the U.S. and, except for New Mexico's El Malpais Monument and the California desert parks, the newest large (above 10,000 acres) unit of the park system. The park is supposed to protect examples of Great Basin ecosystems, and includes an ancient bristlecone pine forest.

History

Originally the park was block of the Humboldt National Forest that is separate from the rest of the forest. In 1922, a 640-acre section with limestone caverns was made into the Lehman Caves National Monument. This section was transferred from the Forest Service to the Park Service in 1933. During the 1980s, the Park Service studied various alternative sites for a Great Basin Park. When Congress transferred 76,460 acres from the Forest Service to the Park Service in 1986, it specifically provided that grazing would continue in the park and that the Park Service would not hinder mining on patented claims in and around the park.

Improvements

The forest and monument contained campgrounds, roads, and a small visitors center when it was made a park. A 1992 park plan proposes to spend $42 million on a new visitors center, employee housing, roads, and related services.

Visitation

Although the creation of the park increased the area under Park Service management by 120 times, the park recorded only a 60 to 70 percent increase in visitation--conceivably consisting mostly of people who would have visited the national forest anyway. Currently, about 90,000 per year visit the park, spending an average of 14 hours--meaning most spend the night at one of the campgrounds.

Receipts

The park collects less than $150,000 per year, mostly in campground fees.

Budget

The park spends about $1.4 million per year, which averages $15 per visitor or $1.15 per visitor hour. The park's full-time equivalent staff is 37.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$146	$1,385	92	1,219	37
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$1.58	$15.07	13	$0.12	$1.14
When Lehman Caves Monument became the much-larger Great Basin Park, recorded visitation increased by just 65 percent--mostly people who would have visited the national forest anyway. The park's budget per visitor is one of the highest of all formally designated parks. A slight increase is expected in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            		X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
If including a representative example of every ecosystem is a worthy goal of the Park Service, then Great Basin is a worthy addition to the Park System. However, there is little reason why the area could not have been left in Forest Service hands. Making the area a national park led to only three changes in management: The area was closed to hunting, the area was closed to mining, and management costs skyrocketed. The Forest Service could have done any of those.

Great Smoky Mountains

What

The Smokies are a region in the southern Appalachian Mountains that seem perpetually covered by a bluish haze--moisture, not smoke. Great Smoky Mountains Park includes over half-a-million acres of these mountains and presents many historic buildings and artifacts from early mountain farms.

History

The southern Appalachians were settled in the early nineteenth century. Congress approved a park in the area in 1926 provided someone else would buy the land. In 1928, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., put up $5 million provided it was matched by Tennessee and North Carolina, which they did. The Park Service bought the land from settlers who were allowed to live out their lives on the land. Today, several of the farms and buildings are preserved by the park.

Improvements

In addition to roads, the park includes three visitors centers, a few small lodges, and several "living history" exhibits. The park wants to spend $11 million on a new visitors center and $32.5 million to build a missing link in the Foothills Parkway.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$835	$9,296	9,284	70,407	284
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.09	$1.00	8	$0.01	$0.13
Recorded visitation peaked at 10.2 million visitors in 1987, declining to 8.1 million in 1990, and climbing back to 9.3 million in 1993. Great Smoky collected over $835,000 in 1993 recreation fees without charging an entrance fee. Its budget will be close to $10 million in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            		X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Great Smoky Mountains meets most of the Park Service's tests for a park, although it--like all of the Appalachians--is not a purely natural area. Its high visitation will make it easy for user fees to cover the costs of running the park.

Kaloko-Honokohau Historical Park

What

Kaloko-Honokohau Historical Park was created by Congress in 1978 to preserve an example of Hawaiian native culture. The park includes 1,160 acres of land, of which slightly more than half is federal. Unfortunately, little has been done with the park because of an on-going dispute with Hawaiian natives who once lived in the area.

History

This area on the west coast of the island of Hawaii was the site of thriving native villages for hundreds of years prior to European discovery of the islands. In 1974, a group of Hawaiians proposed that Kaloko-Honokohau be set aside as a "cultural park" in which native Hawaiians would live and practice traditional activities under the eyes of tourists--something like Williamsburg, Virginia.

Rather than create a new type of park, Congress used the term "historical park" when it created the park in 1978. The Park Service interpreted this to mean that it would do archeological work and present static displays, but it would not encourage native Hawaiians to live in the area. The Park Service bought land from natives and leased it back to them for five-year terms.

By 1992, most of the natives had left, but a few remained and decided to claim "aboriginal title" to part of the park. They sued the government for title to the land and physically prevented park employees and visitors from entering "their" part of the park. The situation remains at an impass at least until the lawsuit is settled.

Improvements

The park remains largely undeveloped, but the Park Service has proposed to spend $15 million on a visitors center, offices, roads, and a "replica of a Hawaiian village."

Visitation

About 40,000 people visit the park each year, mostly to walk on the beach. They spend an average of nearly four hours per visit.

Receipts

The park collects less than $500 per year in user fees. This could possibly increase if the ownership dispute is settled in the Park Service's favor.

Budget

Despite the lack of improvements or large numbers of visitors, the Park Service manages to spend about $550,000 per year at the park supporting about a dozen employees. This averages around $15 per visitor or nearly $4 per visitor hour.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$532	44	164	10
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$11.96	4	$0	$3.24
Most park visitors simply walk on the beach. Despite the lack of facilities, the Park Service already spends an extraordinary amount on the park and wants to spend much more. Its 1995 budget is nearly 20 percent greater than in 1993.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 			X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented		X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
This is a clear example of a park being created at the instigation of people whose intentions were very different from those of the Park Service. While Kaloko-Honokohau is a highly significant piece of Hawaiian history, it is not clearly of national significance. Other early Hawaiian settlements may be found in other national parks in Hawaii. Whether the area could ever pay its way depends on the type of facilities built--or not built--in the park.

Klondike Gold Rush

What

The Klondike Gold Rush Historical Park commemorates the 1898 gold rush with a museum in Seattle, restoration of buildings in Skagway, and several thousand acres of land including the Chilkoot Trail.

History

The Klondike was the last great gold rush, in which tens of thousands of people, spurred by a recession, headed for the Yukon Territory. Most Americans passed through Seattle and many went to Skagway or Dyee, Alaska, where they started an arduous hike over snowy mountain passes. Those who made it to the gold fields found that the claims had already been staked, and most returned.

The park was created in 1976 and adjoins a Canadian park that includes the eastern portion of the Chilkoot Trail. Skagway is a destination for hundreds of thousands of cruise ship passengers and other Alaska tourists each summer. Thousands of people hike the Chilkoot Trail each year, which is generally a three- to four-day trip.

Improvements

The Park Service has spend millions of dollars restoring buildings in Skagway. A visitors center is located in the old train station, and other buildings either contain displays or are leased to local merchants. The park's next move is to spend $1.3 million restoring two historic buildings, one of which will be used as an employee bunkhouse.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$1,131	403	1,616	21
5	263	105	79	8
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$2.80	4	$0	$0.70
0.06	2.51	1	0.05	3.34
The first row in each table above is for the Alaska portion of the park; the second is for the Seattle unit. Reported visitation to the Skagway unit nearly tripled, and visitor hours octupled, in 1993, almost certainly due to a counting change. Park budgets are expected to increase only slightly in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
The fact that the Klondike Gold Rush attracted people from every part of the U.S. probably qualifies this park as nationally significant. Much of the land that makes up the park was previously national forest, but the Forest Service is not equipped to deal with so much historic preservation. With so many people visiting Skagway each summer who are mainly attracted by its colorful history, the Park Service ought to be able to make this park pay. To do so, however, it may need to reduce its lavish restoration budgets.

Lassen Volcanic Park

What

This 106,000-acre park includes many remnants of recent and active vulcanism, including hot springs, fumeroles, mud pots, and sulphur vents.

History

Mt. Lassen, a supposedly "extinct" volcano, began erupting in 1914. Part of it was already a national monument managed by the Forest Service. Congress made it into a national park in 1916.

Improvements

Aside from a major highway through the park, the park includes a visitors center, a museum, campgrounds, and a ski area. The museum and ski area have been the subject of controversies in recent years.

The distinctive museum had been built with native rock by private efforts a few years after the eruptions. The museum and a campground had been located near a major rockslide that had taken place several hundred years ago. In the early 1970s, the Park Service closed the museum--but not the campground--citing that the danger of another rockslide. Friends of the park were upset, accusing the agency of trying to extort more money out of Congress. In the 1980s, the park quietly opened the museum again.

The ski area debate was more contentious. Few ski resorts are located within national park boundaries, and the Sierra Club and other environmental groups wanted to close this one. But the resort and local skiers lobbied hard to expand it. As a compromise, the Park Service decided to leave it open but not expand it. Due to competition from new ski resorts, the ski area shut down in 1993.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$372	$2,401	434	4,746	58
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.86	$5.53	11	$0.08	$0.51
Visitation peaked in 1988 at nearly 500,000. The park's budget remains about the same through 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented		X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Lassen's national significance depends on whether you are judging from 1916 or today. In 1916, volcanos seemed rare enough that any erupting in the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, were immediately placed in national parks. By 1980, people realized that they were much more common than previously suspected, so when Mt. St. Helens went off in a much more spectacular eruption than Lassen, it was only put into a national recreation area and is still managed by the Forest Service. Still, Lassen receives enough interest that it could almost pay its way at $6 per visitor day.

Montezuma Castle and Tuzigoot

What

Montezuma Castle National Monument presents an extremely well-preserved cliff dwelling. Although the Anasazi ruin is roughly 1,000 years old, it is 90 percent intact. Nearby are other ruins known as Montezuma well and Tuzigoot, a separate monument managed by the same superintendent. The Castle is on 840 acres of federal land; Tuzigoot contains 800 acres, only 58 of which are federal.

History

Montezuma Castle was proclaimed a national monument in 1906 and has been in Park Service hands since the agency was created. Tuzigoot was made a monument in 1939; most of its non-federal acres were added in 1979.

Improvements

Both the Castle and Tuzigoot have visitors centers built during Mission 66. The Park Service would like to replace them with more adequate and less intrusive buildings, but so far has not have the funds. At one point, the Park Service presented artifacts and museum displays at the nearby Yavapai-Apache Cultural Center, but lost its lease to the space and the displays are now in storage.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,111	$764	1,056	1,659	21
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.87	$0.72	1	$0.89	$0.74
Together, the Castle and Tuzigoot are the only units of the National Park System that bring in more money than they spend. Visitation has doubled in the last decade and is high because of the monument's proximity to Interstate 17, the main road from Phoenix to the Grand Canyon and other recreation areas. Tuzigoot, which is further from the highway, gets only a tenth of the visitors.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Montezuma Castle was an appropriate choice to be one of the nation's first monuments. Moreover, it can easily pay its way.

Mount Rainier

What

The highest mountain in the Cascade Range forms the center of this 236,000-acre park.

History

Established in 1899, Rainier is doubly a "railroad" park: First because it was the centerpiece, second only to Yellowstone, of Northern Pacific efforts to promote passenger traffic. Second, much of the park was originally part of the Northern Pacific land grant, but the railroad generously traded its alpine acres in the park for low-elevation old-growth forests on an acre-for-acre basis.

Improvements

Two highways cross the park and reach visitors centers, campgrounds, and two inns. The park wants to spend $9 million to rehabilitate a visitors center and replace a lodge and $38 million rehabilitating roads and bridges.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,107	$6,660	1,365	18,981	154
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.81	$4.88	14	$0.06	$0.36
Visitation in 1991 reached a record 1.55 million visitors and 22.5 million hours. The park's budget will increase slightly by 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
The park meets all park criteria and could easily pay its way with only minor changes in its budgeting.

Natchez Trace Parkway

What

The 415-mile parkway connects Nashville, Tennessee with Jackson, Mississippi and is supposed to eventually reach another 30 miles to Natchez, Mississippi.

History

The Natchez Trace (which means trail) was first an Indian trail and later a trade route from the Mississippi River to Nashville. Construction began in 1934 as an employment project and the road was placed in Park Service hands in 1938.

Improvements

The 52,000 federal acres along the road include a visitors center and several campgrounds. The park wants to spend $9 million to reconstruct portions of the existing road and $39 million to extend the parkway south.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$5,906	5,753	23,263	129
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$1.03	4	$0	$0.25
Reported recreation use reached record levels of 14.4 million visitors in 1986. Major declines in 1987 and 1990 may be counting changes. The parkway reports another 7 million nonrecreation users per year. Its budget will increase slightly in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 		X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Unlike the Blue Ridge Parkway, whose uniform design and spectacular scenery make it seem a cohesive whole, the Natchez Trace Parkway seems to be just another highway. With reported nonrecreation visitors outnumbering recreation users by more than 20 percent, there seems little justification for expensive Park Service maintenance.

Olympic

What

The Olympic combines glaciated mountains, old-growth forests, and ocean beaches in its 913,000 federal (and 9,600 non-federal) acres.

History

Originally part of Olympic National Forest, the core of the park was made a monument in1909 and transferred to the Park Service in 1933 and formally made a park in 1938. The Park Service lobbied hard for additions from the national forest that still provoke controversy 40 years later.

Improvements

Preservation groups supported the Park Service's efforts to expand the park on the condition that most of the park would remain wilderness. As a result, the park has only a few roads, two visitors centers, no major hotels, and 95 percent is designated wilderness. The Park Service wants to spend $35 million to remove an old dam and restore the stream plus $6.4 million reconstructing roads.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$787	$6,521	2,680	16,830	183
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.29	$2.43	6	$0.05	$0.39
The park hosted a record level of slightly more than 3 million visitors in 1992. The park's 1995 budget will be nearly 15 percent larger than in 1993.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           		X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Park Service management today differs little from the way the Forest Service manages its wilderness/recreation areas, except that the Park Service spends far more money. But in the late 1930s no wilderness act had passed Congress and the Forest Service was soon backing away from its commitments to wilderness, so Park Service management may have been most appropriate. Getting the park to pay its way out of user fees may require some cuts in the budget.

The Presidio

What

The Presidio is a 1,480-acre army post on the edge of San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Half the area remains undeveloped, including 290 acres of woodlands, while the other half contains 50 miles of roads and 870 offices, barracks, and other buildings, of which 510 are deemed "historic."

History

The Presidio has been a military base in San Francisco since 1776--first for Spain, then, since 1822, for Mexico, and finally, since 1850, for the U.S. Army. The base was particularly active during World War II, but has not been needed in the past few years. Congress' 1989 military base closure commission slated it to be shut down by 1995.

When the Golden Gate NRA was created in 1972, the law specified that, if ever the Army left the Presidio, it would transfer the land to the Park Service. Between 1991 and 1993, the Army and Park Service spent $80 million arranging the transfer. On October 1, 1994, the transfer was formally made.

Improvements

The Park Service plan for the area calls for spending nearly $611 million to remove 300 buildings and rehabilitate the other 580. The agency hopes that nearly two-thirds of these costs will be paid by organizations renting the buildings. Rent paid by the tenants is also expected to cover only part of the costs of maintaining the buildings. Tenants will be limited to organizations deemed compatible with the goals of the Park Service.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

Park Service management is too recent for recreation statistics, but recreation fees will be negligible. The Park Service has not published estimates of potential rental income, but admits that current market rates will not cover the costs of maintaining, much less rehabilitating, the buildings.

In addition to construction costs, the Park Service expects to spend $25 million per year to support the 175 employees needed to operate the Presidio. Eventually, it hopes to employ 320 people. The agency brags that this saves taxpayers' money from the $45 million per year the Army was spending to operate it, but the Army wasn't asking for $200 to $600 million in construction funds.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       		X
Exceptional value         		X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
The Presidio is certainly a unique area, but as a public park it has far greater significance for the people of San Francisco than to the nation as a whole. The Park Service refused to consider an alternative of selling the land because, it said, of the area's historic and natural resources. But some the land could have been sold with covenants to protect those resources, while other parts could have been donated to the San Francisco parks department.

In a city where land makes up 80 percent of the cost of a house, the market value of the Presidio's acreage is conservatively estimated to be over $4 billion. Even with protective covenants and half the land turned over to the city parks department, the other half could have been easily sold for several hundred million. This would have saved federal taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars more without significantly reducing the value of the Presidio as open space and a historic site.


Redwood

What

Redwood's 75,000 acres of federal land include some of the tallest trees in the world as well as 40 miles of Pacific coastline. Another 35,000 nonfederal acres are contained within park boundaries.

History

As early as 1918, Stephen Mather agreed with California conservationists that the redwoods deserved protection-but not as a national park. Mather contributed and steered donors to Save-the-Redwoods League, which helped save over a half million acres in California state parks.

In the 1960s, Interior Secreatry Udall and Park Service Director Hartzog decided some redwoods should be in a national park. After long and acrimonious debates, a small park was created in 1968 by buying timber company lands, paid for partly with an exchange of national forest lands.

Ten years later the park was greatly expanded to its present size. The expanded area includes thousands of acres of cutover land. The park is by far the most costly in history, costing well over $1.5 billion for the land alone and hundreds of millions more to pay off woods workers and restore cutover watersheds.

Improvements

The park contains a visitors center and trails and is traversed by highway 101.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$0	$5,194	421	2,817	120
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0	$12.34	7	$0	$1.84
Recorded visitation peaked in 1988 at 677,000, but a 47 percent drop in 1989 is probably due to a change in counting methods. A slight increase in budget is expected in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            			X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           		X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Redwood Park passes many of the Park Service's tests for a park, but is marred by cutting in its upper watersheds and limited size. Supposedly the cutover areas had to be added, at great expense, to protect the standing redwoods in lower parts of the watersheds. Now that the park has been purchased, it could pay its way out of user fees only with significant reductions in budget and staffing.

Rocky Mountain

What

Rocky Mountain's 265,000 acres include spectacular yet highly accessible mountains, lakes, and valleys.

History

Rocky Mountain was declared a national park in 1915, thanks largely to the work of Enos Mills, a cantankerous man who hated the Forest Service.

Improvements

The park is crossed by a major highway, though most people come in and out of the east entrance near Estes Park, as well as campgrounds and visitors centers.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,474	$6,435	2,780	20,184	195
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.53	$2.31	7	$0.07	$0.32
Visitation has remained almost constant for more than a decade. Nevertheless, the park's 1995 budget may be nearly 15 percent greater than in 1993.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           		X
No other agency           		X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
The park's significant ecological problems stem mainly from its limited size. It can pay its way out of user fees after moderate budget cuts.

Sequoia-Kings Canyon

What

Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks are famous mainly for their giant sequoia groves, which include the eight largest trees in the world. The parks also include Mt. Whitney, the highest peak in the lower 48 states, and many other mountains and valleys. The 402,000-acre Sequoia and 462,000-acre Kings Canyon parks are physically adjacent and are managed by one superintendent.

History

The original Sequoia Park consisted of 162,000 acres set aside in 1890. The very next week Congress created the 2,560-acre General Grant Park that eventually became Kings Canyon. In 1926, Sequoia was enlarged to nearly its present size, while Kings Canyon received its name and current size in 1940.

Improvements

A highway accesses the largest sequoia trees, passing visitors centers, campgrounds, and lodges. The Park Service wants to remove concession facilities at Giant Forest at a cost of $3.8 million and to spend another $50 million reconstructing roads.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,990	$8,514	1,703	56,656	252
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$1.17	$3.62	33	$0.04	$0.33
Reported visitation peaked in 1986 at 2.2 million, but a 27 percent decline in
1992 is probably due to a change in counting methods. Many visitors are
double-counted since most people who go to Kings Canyon also go to Sequoia.
Each park claims that visitors average an improbable 33 hours, which means that
people who visit both stay 66 hours.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Anyone looking at the way the Forest Service has butchered--with taxpayer subsidies--its sequoia groves in Sequoia National Forest would have no doubt that the Park Service is the best agency to manage as many sequoia groves as possible. Of course, the Forest Service suffers from its own misincentives. If the visitor statistics are to be trusted, Sequoia and Kings Canyon can pay their way out of user fees with moderate cuts in budgets and staffing.

Shenandoah

What

Shenandoah is at the opposite end of the Blue Ridge Parkway from Great Smoky Mountains Park and is a combination of both. Linear like the parkway, Shenandoah is traversed by Skyline Drive, which meets the Blue Ridge near Waynesboro. But like Great Smoky, Shenandoah is a full park with 196,000 acres of Appalachian hills and forests.

History

As with Great Smoky, Congress authorized Shenandoah Park in1926 provided that someone else bought the land. The state of Virginia paid for half and the rest was paid by numerous individual contributions.

Improvements

In addition to Skyline Drive, the park has campgrounds, visitors centers, and small lodges. The park wants to spend $31 million to reconstruct Skyline Drive.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$1,997	$7,058	1,951	21,545	177
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$1.02	$3.62	11	$0.09	$0.33
Visitation has remained roughly constant for a decade but reached record levels in 1993. The park expects a nearly 20 percent budget increase by 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented		X
Sufficient size           		X
No other agency           		X
Pay its way (as is)       		X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Although the southern Appalachians are "adequately represented" in the park system by Great Smoky Mountains, Shenandoah's popularity is unquestioned. It could easily pay its way out of user fees with moderate budget cuts.

Steamtown Historic Site

What

Steamtown presents the history of early twentieth century railroading with a nearly-complete rail yard, 29 steam locomotives, and nearly 80 passenger cars. The Park Service displays the yard and equipment and operates tourist trains.

History

In the late 1950s, when most railroads were abandoning steam for Diesel locomotion, a New England millionaire named Nelson Blount purchased numerous engines that were to be scrapped. He operated several of them at on rails in Vermont and called it "Steamtown." When he died, the city of Scranton, Pennsylvania, bought the locomotives and moved them to an abandoned railroad yard in Scranton.

The city operated excursions for several years but was unable to develop the financing needed to maintain a tourist line. Fortunately for Scranton, its representative in Congress, Joseph McDade, is one of the most powerful members of the House Appropriations Committee. He succeeded in spending $40 million before he ever received approval from Congress to spend any. Then he asked for and received authority to spend $40 million more. The Park Service took Steamtown over from Scranton in 1988.

McDade's free spending was heavily criticized by rail historians, among others, who felt that Scranton was a poor location and Blount's collection was unrepresentative of U.S. railroading. Most of the locomotives Blount collected were Canadian, and few had ever worked near Scranton. Smithsonian transportation curator John White called Steamtown "a second-rate collection in a third-rate location."

Steamtown raises interesting questions about the role of the Park Service. The steam railroad was certainly a major part of American history. Yet that history is well documented and displayed in numerous museums around the nation. Pennsylvania alone had at least 14 other railroad museums, half of them running steam excursions, when the Park Service took over Steamtown.

Outside of Pennsylvania, at least two major railroad museums call themselves "national transportation museums" and house collections that equal or exceed Steamtown's. The states of Pennsylvania, California, and Nevada have each spent millions building state railroad museums. The Park Service itself built two replica steam locomotives, of an admittedly different vintage and context, for Golden Spike Historic Site.

Nationwide, some 300 steam engines operate regular or intermittent rail excursions. Most rail museums and preservation efforts operate on a shoestring, so some resent the millions being poured into Steamtown--even though they recognize that money saved by not running Steamtown wouldn't be spent on other rail preservation activities.

Improvements

To date, the Park Service has spent well over $60 million on rehabilitating and improving buildings, track, and rolling stock. This is only the beginning: The park's most recent plan calls for spending another $56 million on the railyard alone.

Visitation

Steamtown reported about 100,000 visitors per year after it opened. This increased to 150,000 when it began running longer excursions. However, the number of hours that park officials estimate visitors stay declined from 2 to 1.5.

Receipts

Steamtown does not charge an entrance fee, but does charge for excursions. In 1993 it collected about $140,000 in excursion fees. Because these are counted as "interpretive program fees" rather than entrance fees, they are all retained to pay for excursion operations.

Budget

Steamtown costs about $3 million to operate, and the Park Service asked for more than $4 million in 1995. That supports about 75 employees. However, the high cost is equal to $16 per visitor or more than $10 per visitor hour.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$835	$9,296	9,284	70,407	284
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$0.09	$1.00	8	$0.01	$0.13

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       			X
Exceptional value         			X
Superlative opportunities 		X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented			X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           			X
Pay its way (as is)       			X
Pay its way (reformed)    		X
While not an outstanding example of American steam railroading, Steamtown does offer a good opportunity to display such railroading to the public. However, other organizations were already doing this in numerous places around the country. It is possible that the site could pay its way, but the fact that Scranton failed at it makes it doubtful.

Yellowstone

What

As the world's first national park, Yellowstone's thermal features, abundant wildlife, and crystal waters have become the model for all other national parks.

History

Yellowstone was designated a park in 1872. Its borders overlap the states of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming because those states didn't exist when the park was created. Although the original park was a rectangle, portions of adjacent national forests were added to it in the late 1920s and early 1930s and the park currently covers more than 2.2 million acres.

Improvements

Yellowstone has several hundred miles of roads and several major hotels and visitor centers. The Park Service says that it needs $227 million to rebuild roads, $60 million to rebuild employee housing, and $30 million to rehabilitate the controversial Fishing Bridge resort area.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$3,720	$17,404	2,912	65,168	469
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$1.28	$5.98	22	$0.06	$0.27
Visitation peaked in 1992 at 3.1 million. Due, perhaps, to a counting change, the number of reported hours per visitor declined from around 35 in the 1980s through 1992 to just 24 in 1993.Yellowstone's budget will exceed $18.5 million in 1995.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
America's first national park obviously meets all Park Service criteria for a park. Moreover, it can easily pay its way out of user fees. Of course, funding it out of user fees would probably lead to new priorities; for example, road maintenance would be much more important than employee housing.

Yosemite

What

Yosemite's 761,000 acres contain some of the most spectacular valleys and largest trees in the world.

History

Yosemite Valley and Mariposa sequoia grove was given to the state of California for a park in 1864. Most of the rest of the park was declared a national park in 1890. The state returned its share to the federal government in 1906.

Improvements

The park includes roads and several hotels. The Park Service wants to spend $115 million to remove or redesign facilities in Yosemite Valley, $15 million more to upgrade sewer, water, and electrical systems in various parts of the park, and $41 million more to rebuild park roads.

Visits, Receipts, and Budget

1993 Total in Thousands (except FTEs)
RecFees	Budget	Visits	Hours	FTEs
$5,444	$15,430	3,840	104,269	489
------ Per visit ------	Per Visitor Hour
RecFees	Budget	Hours	RecFees	Budget
$1.42	$4.02	27	$0.05	$0.15
Visitation has risen steadily to nearly four million people in 1993. Yosemite's budget may exceed $17 million in 1995 and its staff will be about 510.

Assessment

Criteria                  	Pass	Doubt	Fail
Outstanding example       	X
Exceptional value         	X
Superlative opportunities 	X
High integrity            	X
Not adequately represented	X
Sufficient size           	X
No other agency           	X
Pay its way (as is)       	X
Pay its way (reformed)    	X
Yosemite is popular partly because it is closer to population centers than, say, Glacier or Wrangell-St. Elias. But it clearly meets Park Service criteria for a park and can easily pay its own way from user fees averaging 50 cents per hour.


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