
A proposal to require reservations at peak times for visitors to Arches National Park could lead to a substantial economic impact to the area, according to an economist/NPS file
If Arches National Park moves forward with a plan to require advance reservations for visitors, it could lead to an initial economic hit of as much as $22 million to the Moab, Utah, area, according to an economic analysis. That dollar figure is far from firm, the economist cautioned, and could be greatly reduced as people get used to whatever traffic management plan the park settles on.
At the same time, however, such a reservation system "may enhance visitor experience and increase the economic value of trips to" the national park, noted Robert Paterson, who works for Industrial Economics, Incorporated, out of Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Arches is one of a handful of national parks -- others include Yellowstone, Zion, Yosemite, Acadia, Grand Canyon, Glacier -- that struggle at times during the year with overcrowding. Zion officials have been working on their own management plan for some time, and it, too, includes provisions for reservations, though they might not be included in the final proposal.
Overcrowding can lead to natural resource impacts. In Zion Canyon, for instance, where there are roughly 13 miles of official trails, visitors going off trail have created another 30 miles of unofficial "social" trails. Complicating the planning process at Zion are concerns over how a visitation cap would impact area businesses.
“I think people realize that there are crowding problems, and would like to see some solutions to that," Superintendent Jeff Bradybaugh told the Traveler in December. "But there’s a great amount of concern that that could have negative economic impacts on the tourism industry. And we certainly are taking that into account and have those concerns as well."
As with their counterparts at Zion, officials at Arches have been trying to figure out how to manage visitors and protect park resources and values for some time. Back in November 2017 they released a draft plan that proposed reservations during peak visitation months. Such a plan is needed, they say, to address vehicle traffic and parking congestion problems that affect visitor access, visitor enjoyment, and resource conditions.
Visitation to Arches National Park doubled in the past 11 years, reaching approximately 1.6 million visitors in 2016. During high-visitation season, March through October, visitors routinely wait in long lines to enter the park and then must search for empty parking spaces at all popular sites. Long lines to enter the park cause congestion at the intersection of U.S. 191 and the park entrance road, which can be a serious traffic hazard.
The reservation proposal is viewed as a way to give visitors certainty of entry, reduce or eliminate long entrance lines, spread visitation more evenly across the day, and improve the visitor experience by ensuring available parking space.
But Paterson pointed to some uncertainties in reaching his conclusions over the economic fallout such a plan would create.
"(R)epresentatives from the International Inbound Travel Association Board have suggested that regardless of whether a system is implemented next year or not, there will likely be a reduction in foreign bus tours booked due to concerns about the system," the economist said in a report sent to the park last summer.
The report was just publicly identified by park officials last month when they announced plans for a public meeting this summer about the progress being made on the management plan. Paterson is expected to be at the meeting.
The economist acknowledged that his work so far could not predict the long-term impact to the area's economy. He predicated his estimate based on other national parks that used various approaches to deal with congestion.
"While they are all qualitatively different circumstances ... they may be similar in an economic sense in that they created uncertainty that in turn affected visitation," he wrote. "Based on these analyses, relevant literature, and professional judgment, it is my opinion that visitation to Arches may be reduced by 5 to 10 percent of what it otherwise would be during the first year that a system is implemented. ... Relying on (National Park Service) estimates of Arches visitor spending, this could result in a reduction in spending of $11 to $22 million relative to what otherwise would be predicted in that first year, which in turn could reduce overall output, employment, wages, and tax receipts through associated multipliers."
With that said, he added that after the first year of the reservation system commercial operators and individual park visitors would adapt to the system and "visitation would revert to what it would otherwise be under the system by year three."
But, reflecting the overall lack of rigorous economic analysis, was Paterson's comment that "(T)here are a number of important caveats and uncertainties associated with these estimates. Foremost is that they are based solely on existing data and information regarding imperfect analogies. In addition, they do not account for the potential to mitigate impacts through additional education and outreach regarding the proposed system."
Comments
I've been to Arches several times, usually towards the end of September or beginning of October, and never have encountered long entrance lines nor lack of parking. Always beautiful but never a crowded feeling, just lucky maybe?
Bill, do you travel overseas? Would you like to be banned from the attractions in other countries? Fact is the contribution from the Federal tax payer is miniscule. I believe the answer is increasing the entrance fees so that those that are using these attractions, citizen or not, will be the ones paying for them.
They advertise aches non stop... Foreigners out number US visitors... Locals who live there shouldn't need a reservation...
Quit advertising arches so much....
If I remember correctly, all the roads in the park are two-lane, so more entrances would just mean more cars trying to merge into traffic.
Jarrod - the Arches (and other Utah parks) ad campaign was a state thing. Not much the NPS can do about that.
This is a great idea! If you can't have a manned station for pass holders, how about a scannable card that allows entry through an express lane?
Kurt,
I COMPLETELY agree with Bill -- anyone who has been to YELLOWSTONE and had their enjoyment of the park disrupted by HIGHWAY BUS AFTER HIGHWAY BUS full of FOREIGN visitors (with NO regard for the park, the wildlife, the geo/physical features) would AGREE with Bill. Its gotten SO BAD that we NO LONGER enjoy going to Yellowstone / Grand Tetons because the high volume of FOREIGN visitors. The American people pay the taxes to support these lands set aside long ago. There needs to be additional support to the Law Enforcement staff at ALL National Parks -- and fiscal / budgetary support so they can be properly maintained. Any LIMITS on visitation should START with stemming the FOREIGN visitors -- they have NO inherent right -- and should in NO way be afforded any kind of equal access afforded any American. With that being said -- I also believe we need to limit the number of individual vehicles admitted to the parks -- ala Zion National Park and the bus system they have. The roads in Yellowstone are narrow and overcrowded with vehicles -- there are limited numbers of "pull outs" which contributes to additional visitation problems. Reservations are NOT the answer -- and will only serve to alienate American / U.S. Citizens -- denying the purpose as stated by President Roosevelt -- for the enjoyment of the people (NOT foreigners). Our parks are NOT "WORLD" parks...and are abused by the FOREIGN visitors I have seen in large numbers. A similar experience has been had at ALL of the National Parks I have visited -- to varying degrees. Kurt -- you need to GO to Yellowstone in July or August -- and witness the current conditions.
Since Americans enjoy traveling to foreign countries in Europe, Asia, South America, Africa, and Australia, I don't think we want to start banning foreign tourists from our amazing destinations. First trade wars, now tourism wars?! Please!