You are here

Incoming Grand Canyon Superintendent Brings Deep Background To Challenging Job

Share

Grand Canyon's incoming superintendent comes from outside the National Park Service, which might be just what the park needs, according to one observer/Rebecca Latson file

Growing up just south of the Canadian border on Lake Champlain in upstate New York, Ed Keable spent much of his youth "playing in the great outdoors, oftentimes barefoot." 

"And I think that’s really where I began my love for the great outdoors, as a child,” said Keable, who will move to one of the grandest outdoor settings in the world when he heads to Grand Canyon National Park next month to take over as the park's superintendent.

But as beautiful as that setting is, whether you view it from the South or North rims or while floating the Colorado River through the park's gut, Keable's life likely won't be as blissful as the one he enjoyed on Lake Champlain so many decades ago. At least not immediately.

Ed Keable in Yosemite National Park/Courtesy of Ed Keable

Edward Keable in Yosemite National Park/Courtesy of Ed Keable

A top Interior Department attorney for the past 17 years, Keable comes to a position the National Park Service has been unable to permanently fill since Christine Lehnertz left a year ago after baseless allegations spurred an investigation into her management of the park.

Outwardly, Keable seems an unlikely choice for the job as he has no on-the-ground experience with the Park Service. Indeed, the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks attacked his appointment, saying the lawyer "is not qualified to manage and lead a complicated park such as the Grand Canyon. While Mr. Keable may possess the ‘passion’ and ‘leadership skills’ that Acting Director (David) Vela referenced in his statement, it does not mean that Mr. Keable has the knowledge, skills, and ability to be superintendent of Grand Canyon National Park, one of the most high-profile, complex, and heavily visited national park operations in the System."

But the 1.2-million-acre Grand Canyon is not just any park in the National Park System.

It is one of the crown jewels, one with many facets that just might require an atypical superintendent. There are:

  • ~ 350 employees.
  • Nearly two dozen concession operations that gross roughly $200 million annually.
  • A residential community that includes a K-12 school system with roughly 300 students.
  • More than 1,200 buildings.
  • 254 miles of roads.
  • 23 miles of the decrepit, leaky Trans-canyon Pipeline that requires $100 million -- or about five times the park's annual appropriation -- for replacement.
  • Four sewage treatment facilities.
  • More than 1,000 lodging rooms.
  • An annual base appropriation of more than $21 million.
  • Campgrounds with more than 450 sites.
  • More than 200,000 river "user days" per year.
  • Eight National Historic Landmarks.
  • 39 sites on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • Museums, dump stations, theaters. 

Among the hot button issues awaiting Keable are:

  • The park's longstanding problem with sexual harassment.
  • Efforts to develop a major resort just outside the park on the South Rim. Opponents to the project being pushed by an Italian developer have said it could see more than 2,000 housing units and several million square feet of commercial space reach to within a half-mile or so of the park, and could impact groundwater flows that feed the canyon's springs and hanging gardens. The town of Tusayan, Arizona, on the South Rim just outside the park retained the Denver-based law firm of Brownstein Hyatt Farbr Schreck, LLP, of which Interior Secretary David Bernhardt -- Keable's boss -- was a former shareholder, to see the project succeed. Since the firm was retained, on the same August day Bernhardt was sworn in as deputy Interior secretary, it has been paid more than $500,000 to lobby the Interior Department on the project.
  • Lobbying to see uranium mining return to lands nearby the park.
  • Thorny Colorado River water issues that are growing more and more complex with climate change.
  • Managing thousands of air tour operations each year.

While Keable might not bring any management experience stemming from working in a park, he has extensive knowledge of the legal world in which superintendents must operate.

"I’ve been providing legal services to seven secretaries of the Interior, both Democrats and Republicans, and many senior leaders of the Park Service, for 23 years as a career civil servant, and I’ve done that on a wide variety of issues," Keable said during his first interview not just as incoming superintendent to the Grand Canyon but in the past 30 years. “I know the Park Service very well. I also have expertise in many issues, in many management areas, that will help me succeed as the superintendent of the Grand Canyon."

One of his roles working in Interior's Solicitor's Office was to coordinate with Interior's Office of Inspector General on its investigations, including the one into the contrived allegations that Lehnertz during her short career as Grand Canyon's superintendent fostered a hostile atmosphere among the staff and spent recklessly on renovations to employee housing. Not only did the OIG staff clear her of all allegations, but its report created a portrait of one of her accusers as determined not to follow her directives and even impede them. 

The individual who brought the allegations is believed to still be on the park's management team that Keable will inherit.

Asked about the Lehnertz matter, Keable acknowledged his familiarity with the investigation but wouldn't comment directly on its implications.

“I’m not going into the park with any preconceived notions about any particular issues. I am going, as is my nature as a leader and a manager, to be fair with everybody. And I’m not going to comment on any particular individual or any particular issue,” he said.

What Keable would say was that his career has prepared him for the tasks he'll confront at the park.

"I certainly will bring a perspective that’s not Park Service-centric. I bring a really good management and leadership perspective," he said during a phone call. "I served in the United States Army for seven years and I learned a number of leadership principles in the Army, and a number of management principles as an executive in the Solicitor’s Office, and I marry those two issues.

"Leadership is not the same thing as management. In order to be successful in a key position like the superintendent of Grand Canyon, you have to be able to understand what leadership is and what management is, and the difference between them, and be prepared to both be an effective leader and an effective manager. So I think with my background I’m able to do that,” he said.

Those who have worked with Keable over the years consider him well-suited for the position, particularly when it comes to the personnel issues that have festered in the park for some time. Bringing in an outsider to address those issues might just be the approach needed, one told the Traveler.

Former Park Service Director Jon Jarvis spoke highly of Keable, saying the lawyer "is smart and capable and a career public servant with experience in the legal aspects of public lands."

"It is an odd choice for the superintendent of Grand Canyon," Jarvis allowed, "but if Ed has a good operational deputy and a strong NPS management team in the park, he should do fine."

Cam Sholly, Yellowstone's superintendent whose past NPS duties included chief ranger for the agency as well as director of its Midwest Region, has a long working relationship with Keable.

"He’s a very competent, pragmatic, and thoughtful person who I think can succeed at Grand Canyon," Sholly wrote the Traveler in an email. "He has helped us work through some very complex issues over the years in this agency. He’s good at problem solving and using the people around him to inform his decisions. Insofar as the team there provides that support, I think he’ll do very well."

Sholly also thought it was unproductive to be "ripping Ed right out of the gate," and pointed out that "I don’t think there were people necessarily banging down the door for this job. These jobs are tough and many times thankless. I commend Ed for being willing to go in and try to make a difference."

Keable's legal experience spans many of the areas he'll have to grapple with in Grand Canyon. His work for Interior has involved contracting, budgeting, law enforcement, emergency management, facilities management, information managagement.

Plus, personnel law.

"I issued the personnel bulletin, 1801, on eliminating harassing behavior at the department," the lawyer said. "Since then, I’ve provided extensive legal advice to the department and the Park Service on how to eliminate harassing conduct."

Specific to the park's struggle with harassment, Keable said that he looks "forward to working with the Grand Canyon staff to learn what steps they’ve taken at the park to address this issue, and to assess what might need to be done still, and to working with them to address those issues."

Overall, he's looked forward to getting to the park and working to move it forward.

“I am confident that, especially with the talented employees of the park, the leadership team at the park, I will be able to work with them to leverage their expertise and my experience and form a really good management team at the park,” said Keable.

National Parks Traveler, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit media organization, depends on is readers and listeners for support. Please consider a donation today.

A copy of National Parks Traveler's financial statements may be obtained by sending a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: National Parks Traveler, P.O. Box 980452, Park City, Utah 84098. National Parks Traveler was formed in the state of Utah for the purpose of informing and educating about national parks and protected areas.

Residents of the following states may obtain a copy of our financial and additional information as stated below:

  • Florida: A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION FOR NATIONAL PARKS TRAVELER, (REGISTRATION NO. CH 51659), MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING 800-435-7352 OR VISITING THEIR WEBSITE WWW.FRESHFROMFLORIDA.COM. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE.
  • Georgia: A full and fair description of the programs and financial statement summary of National Parks Traveler is available upon request at the office and phone number indicated above.
  • Maryland: Documents and information submitted under the Maryland Solicitations Act are also available, for the cost of postage and copies, from the Secretary of State, State House, Annapolis, MD 21401 (410-974-5534).
  • North Carolina: Financial information about this organization and a copy of its license are available from the State Solicitation Licensing Branch at 888-830-4989 or 919-807-2214. The license is not an endorsement by the State.
  • Pennsylvania: The official registration and financial information of National Parks Traveler may be obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of State by calling 800-732-0999. Registration does not imply endorsement.
  • Virginia: Financial statements are available from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, 102 Governor Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219.
  • Washington: National Parks Traveler is registered with Washington State’s Charities Program as required by law and additional information is available by calling 800-332-4483 or visiting www.sos.wa.gov/charities, or on file at Charities Division, Office of the Secretary of State, State of Washington, Olympia, WA 98504.
Featured Article

Comments

Nice reporting Kurt.  Looks like some may have been premature in their judgement.  Amazing what doing a little research can unveil.

 


Looks like this appointment was orchistrated by Stilo. How's that kind of conflict of interest acceptable? Regulatory capture at its worst.


So many issues!

The Park boundary with the First nations is all over the place. The park claims management to the old high waterline along the Hualapai Nation border that should be at the water's edge, a takings from the tripe. The park ignores the congressionally identified boundary above Beaver Falls with the Havasupai and allows the tribe to charge park visitors who want to visit the falls, a taking from the park. And, with the Navajo, claims the boundary is on the top of the Marble Canyon cliffs, a takings from the Navajo where the boundary should be, like the Havasupai, at the water's edge. 

The Navajo Nation just recieved a permit from the Army Corp to build a dock on the river at lower Lees Ferry.

The acting Super has banned all do-it-yourself river runners not doing exchanges at Phantom Ranch from camping anywhere between Hance Rapid and Pipe Creek, creating a major safety hazard.

The do-it-yourself lottery is designed such that if a permit holder dies just weeks befor their trip id to launch, the trip is cancelled if there was no identified alternate trip leader. But to identify an alternate leader decreases chances at winning a permit.

The river concessionaires have been able to drag out their contracts being renewed, thus dragging pushing out for more years any chance at revisiting the colorado river managemt plan, an outdated artifact carrying along inequities in access started in the mid 1950's.

The backcountry management plan sits in limbo while wilderness legislatuion for the park's backcountry languisghes like fossilized sloth dung in Rampart Cave.

Those are just a few of the issues awaiting Superintendent Keable. I am optomistic a smart lawyer might just be the right fit to move a lot of these issues forward. The next 100 years of park management awaits us "in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."


Gosh, you guys are really just flat urinating in your trousers to get Keable in place and the deed done before next January aren't you?  You still haven't answered any of the questions that have been bothering me; but, you have gotten around to sugarcoating the situation and claiming some sort of magical "leadership" is what Mr. Keable offers, due to his background as an assistant solicitor.  Yes, "leadership" really is the rightwing's "go to" buzzword and the crowd does eat it up.  You may not be able to honestly explain why your guy, at this park, at this time; but, you are baffling the crowd with an emphatic assertion of leadership.  You finally got Cam Sholly weighing in, which he did after checking with the concessionaires, and you even got Jon Jarvis to put in a good word.  That's impressive.  Even Alfred stooped to show up and wave his hands around the subject and confuse the issue sufficiently to put a good solid, high conductivity, case ground into the discussion.

But, what in the world could suddenly get all of you, including our token overslicked realtor, this consistently riled up, fired up, hot and bothered, and double-talking in unison?  Well, a guy using the moniker "Park Dude" on another thread about this appointment, offered his take.  He wrote, "This is corruption, pure and simple.  Coconino county voters rejected Stilo development again and again.  Stilo lobbied Arizona to incorporate Tusayan even though it had less than 600 residents. Arizona law requires mininimum 1500 population to incorporate.  Stilo lobbied to get an exception.  Now you have a 'city' where more than half of city counsil is paid by Stilo.  This appointment is yet another move by Stilo to take over public office.  This has Stilo written all over it.  Very sad that American democracy degraded so much that an Italian company can handpick public officials by paying few bucks."

That's actually kind of what I thought.


"I issued the personnel bulletin, 1801, on eliminating harassing behavior at the department," the lawyer said. "Since then, I've provided extensive legal advice to the department and the Park Service on how to eliminate harassing conduct."

OH MY GOD. Every single person who screwed up on Yosemite and Yellowstone mega woman filing is still in place. EVERY SINGLE COMPLAINT STILL GOES VIA THE SAME SYSTEM AND TO THE SAME PERSON. EEO, Conflict Resolution, The Union, Human Resources. 

 

STOP LYING. 


Yeah, Rump, Kurt is really out there with those "rightwing(ers)".

 


Congratulations to Kurt for scoring the first interview in thirty years, quite the coup!  Sounds like Keable survived DOI for decades by keeping his mouth shut and producing the desired result.  I think he deserves a chance, but it may actually be that no one in government is good enough to fix too many people and too little water, even if the 'fix' is in..  If organizations can be too big to fail, perhaps they can be too big to succeed? I have zero confidence that Secretary Bernhardt's motives in this are pure, or that he gives a rodent's rump about staff or the NPS mission. 

Urinating in our trousers now, is it? Well, at least we're not wearing diapers. Rump, how is it that everything that happens in the National Park Service turns out to be a conspiracy by Donald Trump, et al.? And you're just making it up. You don't have the "facts" any more than we do. We'll just have to wait and see. Meanwhile, the way things are going on the Covid-19 front, I doubt anyone is going to be building "cities" next to our national parks for a long, long time. Noting all of the new motels that have gone in approaching Zion National Park, for example, most will be lucky to avoid total bankruptcy, even with the government's promised ""loans."

As for Lynne's complaint, which remains legitimate, yes, we want sexaul harrassment in the parks to end. But there again, it is not the only issue facing Grand Canyon--or any park. Note what Tom Martin says about the tribes. Everyone, it seems, has an axe to grind--and no solution other than electing "their" tribe. Remember: All of this stuff has been going on since Grand Canyon National Park was established. For most "friends" and neighbors, profiting from the park has been Job Number One. Would things be any different under a Biden Administration--or a Sanders Administration? Yeah, right. I have another pair of diapers for anyone who believes that. And talk about Mr. Touchy Feely. How many times has Biden had to apologize for HIS behavior on that score?

Rump, you keep barking up the wrong tree. You keep demanding "saints" in government. There aren't any, is history's point. As Holman Jenkins put it the other day in THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, Trump has been the best of presidents--and the worst of presidents--as all of our presidents have been.

The national parks are best protected by a vigilant and committed citizenry. There wouldn't be a tree left standing in Olympic National Park, certainly, without the vigilance of Rosalie Edge. She was a hellcat--and that's what it takes. She took no prisoners when it came to protecting her park. The Park Service hated her for it, as it hates anyone who dares buck the bureaucracy and make life "tough." Superintendents want to be "liked" by their neighbors, and the chamber of commerce usually heads the list.

A tough assignment? No tougher than most, that is, if you believe in giving away the park. To be sure, look at the resumes of those who didn't give away their park--and note how short they are.

We Americans are a materialistic lot. That's our culture; that's our bias. We all share in it, too. You want to save Grand Canyon? Stop going there so much. Stop proving the "Italians" right. There's gold in them thar hills! Why, Rump just stopped and bought a tank of gas. He's staying overnight in the lodge. And yup. He bought ice cream, too. And ordered a martini at dinner.  Madam Superintendent, you just have to let us in on that action! You know what your founder, Stephen T. Mather said: "It's time to put the national parks on a business basis." (Review of Reviews, 1915).

Nothing new under the sun, Rump. Your complaint is merely that Ms. Clinton lost.


Add comment

CAPTCHA

This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

The Essential RVing Guide

The Essential RVing Guide to the National Parks

The National Parks RVing Guide, aka the Essential RVing Guide To The National Parks, is the definitive guide for RVers seeking information on campgrounds in the National Park System where they can park their rigs. It's available for free for both iPhones and Android models.

This app is packed with RVing specific details on more than 250 campgrounds in more than 70 parks.

You'll also find stories about RVing in the parks, some tips if you've just recently turned into an RVer, and some planning suggestions. A bonus that wasn't in the previous eBook or PDF versions of this guide are feeds of Traveler content: you'll find our latest stories as well as our most recent podcasts just a click away.

So whether you have an iPhone or an Android, download this app and start exploring the campgrounds in the National Park System where you can park your rig.