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Improvements, More Staff at Carlsbad Caverns?

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Friday, February 27, 2015   

SANTA FE, N.M. - Carlsbad Caverns and other national parks could get some much-needed maintenance and additional staff if Congress approves a proposed budget under consideration.

Interior Secretary Sally Jewell is asking Congress to increase National Park Service funding by more than $400 million, an increase of more than 10 percent, said John Garder, budget and appropriations director for the National Parks Conservation Association. After years of recession-related budget cuts, Garder said, the parks are in pretty rough shape and need help.

"Improvements to trails, restoring trails that are crumbling, improvements to visitor centers where they have out-of-date programs, leaking roofs, bathrooms that are decaying and other needs," he said.

Garder said some parks have deteriorated to the point of causing dangerous conditions for visitors, and that individual parks need as much as $300 million in "deferred maintenance."

Maintaining and improving the parks also is critical because they are huge economic drivers, Garder said, adding that the numbers from 2013 tell the story.

"In New Mexico, more than 1 1/2 million visitors spent more than $83 million," he said, "and that supported more than 1,000 private-sector jobs."

Countrywide, Garder said, national parks contributed about $27 billion to the U.S. economy in 2013 and supported nearly a quarter of a million jobs.


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