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Tag: Pierce County

  • Mount Rainier introducing timed entry reservations starting in 2024, sign ups start Feb. 21

    Mount Rainier introducing timed entry reservations starting in 2024, sign ups start Feb. 21

    Timed entry reservations are being introduced at Mount Rainier National Park this spring in an effort to cut down on wait times, congestion and to better preserve the park’s ecosystem. 

    Guests are able to reserve spots for the Paradise Corridor starting at 7 a.m. on Feb. 21. The next booking blocks are on April 1 and May 1.

    You can still enter the park without a timed entry reservation– you just need a park pass or need to pay the entry fee.

    Reservations can be made here.

    HOW IT WORKS

    Starting at the end of May, timed entry reservations will be required at the Paradise Corridor and the Sunrise Corridor from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Each corridor will require a separate reservation. 

    “We have a huge influx of people coming out to Mt. Rainier for the first time,” said Mount Rainier National Park spokesperson, Kevin Bacher. “It’s not so much that we have a problem of too many visitors, it’s that we have too many visitors all at once.”

    Bacher explained that the new system is not set in stone. They are trying it out as a pilot program.

    “A lot of this is a test to see what works well for us, but we’ve learned a lot from other national parks that have been through this,” said Bacher.

    Timed entry reservations are good for a single day, per vehicle, and are required in addition to an entrance fee or park pass.

    Reservations at Paradise Corridor are required from May 24 through Sept. 2. Ones at Sunrise start July 3 and run through Sept. 2. You don’t need a timed reservation if you have a service reservation (like staying at park lodging or camping or having a special use wilderness permit).

    “So, the idea of this is trying to spread visitation out throughout the day instead of concentrating it in the middle of the day,” explained Bacher. “There’s a lot of productive time after 3 o’clock. The evenings are beautiful at Mt. Rainier National Park and of course, in summertime, the sun doesn’t set until 9 p.m.”

    A portion of timed entry reservations will be available 90 days or approximately three months in advance in blocks.

    Last spring, a 200+ page draft of a Corridor Draft Management Plan and environmental assessment. One of the proposed plans involved a timed entry reservation system. 

    WHAT DO FORMER PARK RANGERS THINK OF IT?

    Retired Park Ranger Bill Wade offered his two cents on the pivot to reservations. Wade worked at Mount Rainier from 1967 to 1970.

    “I think there’s probably going to be a fair amount of disappointment,” said Wade. “When people either from other countries or even, you know, in this country don’t have access to the ways to make reservations or don’t know about it and they arrive there.”

    This is a first for Mount Rainier National Park, but not a first for the park service. Similar time-based reservation systems are already in the works at other popular parks.

    “The timed entry at Arches– there was a lot of initial negative response from businesses in Moab and the same was true in Rocky Mountain when they did some of that there,” remarked Wade.  

    According to Wade, those gateway community businesses changed their tune once they experienced the benefits of the new program.

    “I think overall it’s been positive,” said Wade. “It does tend to create happier visitors and it doesn’t impact the businesses very much.”

    Wade believes the limitations on Mount Rainier visits could impact other national parks in our region like North Cascades and Olympic.

    “I think that they will see a little bit of spinoff from limitations in Mount Rainier,” predicted Wade. “I’m sure there are places in Olympic that are starting to feel crowded and it might not be very long before they have to institute some limitations as well.”

    Lauren.Donovan@fox.com (Lauren Donovan)

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  • ‘She misses her chair:’ Custom motorized wheelchair badly damaged after theft in Puyallup

    ‘She misses her chair:’ Custom motorized wheelchair badly damaged after theft in Puyallup

    A Puyallup family is working to repair their daughter’s custom motorized wheelchair after it was taken on Feb. 4. 

    According to the Puyallup Police Department (PPD), a Kia Sorento was stolen from a residence in the 2400 block of 17th SW. Inside the vehicle was the victim’s 10-year-old daughter’s electric wheelchair. The Kia was later recovered at the Emerald Queen Casino in Tacoma, but the wheelchair was not located.

    “There were just a few pieces of the wheelchair in the back of the car when we found it,” said the 10-year-old’s dad Brandon Sales.

    Sales told FOX 13 that the wheelchair is his daughter Tirzah’s lifeline. At age 3, she was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy.

    “Wheelchairs are everything,” he said. “Especially for her. It is freedom and independence.”

    Sales said shortly after his vehicle was recovered, the wheelchair showed up. He said someone had dropped it off with police.

    “To have it back is everything,” he said.

    Unfortunately, whoever had the wheelchair damaged it. The family believes it was in the process of being scrapped for money.

    “They bent the frame and the axel,” he said. “That’s not an easy thing to fix. We’re talking about a child’s customized wheelchair. Brand new it costs up to $20,000.”

    Right now, Tirzah has a loaner chair.

    “We’re actually using the wheels of her old chair on the loaner,” said Sales. “As a 10-year-old would, she’s missing her chair deeply. She’s looking for every way to change the color of the rental chair, which is not really an option.”

    To help with repairs, the family has set up a GoFundMe page.

    As for the person who returned the wheelchair, the family told FOX 13 they’re grateful that they had some change of heart.

    “It shows the suspect showed some remorse,” said Sales.

    Puyallup Police said it’s working with another police agency to identify suspects involved in the case. A department spokesperson said they do have a person of interest, but so far, here have been no arrests.



    Dave.Detling@fox.com (Dave Detling)

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