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In the Wake of Historic Flooding, Yellowstone Will Rebuild
Engineers will account for climate change as they design replacement highways along the rivers in and to Yellowstone National Park, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said Friday after touring the flood-damaged reserve.
Haaland, on her fourth visit to the first national park, made her remarks overlooking Old Faithful with Superintendent Cam Sholly. He said temporary roads serving two northern entrances to Yellowstone through Gardiner and Cooke City, Montana would be constructed and paved by the fall.
Their permanent replacement could take three to five years to complete, Sholly said, declining to estimate the cost of what some have said could be a billion-dollar undertaking.
โBut you can imagine itโs going to be expensive,โ he said.
The Biden administration is committed to making reconstruction enduring and resilient, Haaland said. โWe had a chance to actually see one of the roads that have completely caved in โ firsthand,โ she said. โItโs pretty evident that the river just has a mind of its own.
โThe Department of the Interior is working very hard to address the climate crisis, because that isnโt going away,โ Haaland said. โSo, adaptation is definitely one of those โฆ things that Cam and the team will take into consideration as youโre looking at ways to rebuild.โ
Engineers are looking at realigning roads that the rivers ripped asunder, Sholly said, โso we donโt have another flood in two years that takes out some other sections.
โAny investment that we make, has to be looked at through the lens of whatโs in the future, whether itโs sea level rise, whether itโs what we just experienced here, whether itโs devastating fires that weโre seeing,โ he said.
Yellowstone evacuated visitors June 13 after rain and snowmelt drove rivers out of their banks, damaging roads along the Gardner and Lamar Rivers and Slough Creek.
โCamโs teamโs preemptive road closures โ even before the flooding began โ I feel very strongly saved some lives,โ Haaland said.
Highways are key to the general Yellowstone experience, with 97% of visitors never getting more than a half a mile from them, Sholly said.
Park officials opened the southern part of Yellowstone June 22 with visitor limits. They suspended those restrictions when they opened the parkโs northern loop July 2. With two of five entrances โ from Gardiner and Cooke City โ mostly closed, visitation is down 30%-40% from pre-pandemic levels, Sholly said.
โTheyโre getting busier,โ Sholly said of businesses inside and around the park. โI donโt know if it will get to normal.โ
Thereโs usually a lag between when Yellowstone announces a reopening and visitors return in substantial numbers, he said, so tourism could improve.
A park entry reservation system wonโt be ready for use this summer season, he said, but limits could be imposed.
Park roads are 93% open, and Yellowstone has $60 million in emergency funds to re-establish the temporary corridors between the two Montana communities and Mammoth this fall.
โWeโre going to do just that before winter,โ Sholly said, with two lanes to Gardiner โpaved sometime around October, maybe sooner.โ
The park was able to assess damages โonly in the last few weeks,โ he said.
โIf you look at the total amount of actual pavement โ it is less than a couple of miles,โ that was wiped out, he said. But rivers inflicted the damage โin some of the most critical and hard-to-rebuild areas.โ
Officials expect to award contracts this week to begin temporary fixes at four or five areas on the northeast corridor to Cooke City. Funding for the permanent restoration will go through the congressional appropriation process, Sholly said.
Yellowstone spans 2.2 million acres and roads cover 1,750 of them, Sholly said. Travelers are welcome to come to Yellowstone without their vehicles, he said.
โWeโre allowing visitors to come into the park although they canโt drive, they can bike, hike, they can fish both from Gardiner and from Cooke City,โ he said.
Haaland said she experienced the parkโs lure the first time she saw Old Faithful erupt.
โI cried through the entire thing, because thatโs what nature does sometimes,โ she said. โIt humbles us and makes us realize how important special places are.โ
This article first appeared at Wyofile and is republished here with permission.