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Friday, February 01, 2013
PEER: Experiencing national parks shouldn't require smartphones
By RV Daily Report @ 1:49 PM :: :: 1 Comments :: Article Rating :: RV Parks, Headline, Top Stories, Management
 

WASHINGTON, DC — The National Park Service (NPS) appears deeply committed to an industry-sponsored initiative that would change the way many visitors experience national parks, according to documents posted today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Plans to significantly expand cellular and Internet “connectivity” inside parks have advanced without public notice, says PEER.

PEER says the National Park Hospitality Association (NPHA), which represents concessionaires who operate lodges, stores and other commercial outlets inside national parks, is leading the effort to dramatically hike visitor access to cell and Internet signals inside parks – signals from the concessionaires. PEER quotes NPHA saying that “in many of America's national parks, prized smartphones are little more than cameras because cell and data service, even at visitor centers and lodges and other developed sites, is poor – or worse.”

PEER says the organization has the ear of park service leadership, which is working with NPHA to –

* Provide Internet access “at all major, developed visitor areas in the national park system” and “basic cell phone service at all major visitor areas in national park units, as well as along most roads and at major sites such as trailheads;”

* “Deliver timely, park-focused information within national parks through smart phones, tablets and computers…to deliver interpretation and other important information to park visitors;” and

* In order be “financially sustainable,” NPHA wants “the opportunity to develop and operate these systems” in which they charge fees for services beyond free “landing pages.” NPHA envisions a capacity “which could reduce the need for handing out printed materials and even facilitate fee collection through electronic devices.”

“This is a disturbing stealth scheme to wire our national park system,” stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting the absence of any analysis of impacts or public input. “Experiencing the natural wonders of our national parks should not require a smartphone.”

According to the news release, NPS Director Jon Jarvis is reviewing an NPHA-drafted system-wide policy promoting connectivity and a joint “strategy session” is slated for February.

“This would be a giant step toward ‘Disney-fying’ park interpretation, replacing rangers with corporate icons as your guides,” Ruch added. “Solitude values of parks will go by the board, as lodges, tents, trailheads and other park locations become just another place to fiddle with electronic devices.”

SOURCE: Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility news release

 

 

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Comments
Liz Bard
# Liz Bard
Wednesday, February 06, 2013 7:17 AM | 74.193.34.12
I can see having cell phone access in order to contact someone about an emergency.- diabetic, heart condition, wild animal attack, report fire, etc.

I do not want to see electronics replacing park rangers. Maybe not have cell phone access to all the parks, but at least a sign to know that this area of the park has access to a cell tower. It would be cheaper than trying to wire the park.

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