
Great Smoky Mountains National Park is the key driver of tourism in Tennessee and North Carolina, so the two states are coming together to try to find a way around the recent government shutdown that began Wednesday.
Great Smoky Mountains is consistently the most visited national park in the country. In 2024 alone it received more than 12 million recreational visits, and in 2023, it generated more than $2.2 billion for the local economies.
“Sevier County, the cities of Gatlinburg, Sevierville, Pigeon Forge, and Pittman Center, Blount County, Cocke County, the State of Tennessee, the Tennessee Department of Tourist Development, the State of North Carolina, along with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, have been working together since last week on a plan to provide financial support to make the Great Smoky Mountains National Park fully operational during the federal government shutdown that began on Wednesday, October 1,” said a spokesperson for Sevier County.
This is a particularly bad time for parks to be shutting down, as fall colors attract great numbers of visitors hoping to catch a glimpse of the reds, oranges, and yellows. According to the Great Smoky Mountains website, from early to mid-October, fall colors develop above 4,000 feet, while color displays usually peak at mid and lower elevations between mid-October and early November.
“[The shutdown] directly impacts us,” said Gatlinburg Convention and Visitors Bureau President Chad Netherland. “We’re hoping that we can come to some agreement to have parts of the park open. It’s the most beautiful time of year and we’d love to still be able to provide that to our visitors that come to Gatlinburg.”
While the Great Smoky Mountains site notes that many facilities are closed, many roadways remain open, allowing visitors to take in the fall colors.
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