As the summer reduction in the US National Park and the forest gets closer, it causes anger.

Max Mata

BBC News

reportSeattle, Washington
grey placeholderVisitors in Getty Images Bright Sportswear are facing the railings at the edge of the canyon wearing a Grand Canyon Tour Guide, Park Rangers and Olive uniforms. Beyond the railing, there is a Sepia color canyonGetty image

The steep cuts for staff of the Trump administration’s national park, forest and wild biological habitats caused more and more backlash as the public approach and preservation efforts of these remote wild landscapes disappeared.

Seeing the longer park entrance line, the time was reduced in the visitorship center, the trail was closed and the visitors watching the dirty public facilities, and the workers who were worried about the future as well as the workers who were worried about the future when the job disappeared were already felt.

Every season, Kate White and her team usually carry out 600 pounds (270kg) of trash that takes out the back of the magic, a sensitive alpine wilderness in Washington, who welcomes more than 100,000 visitors every year.

Employees who are remotely and often covered with snow and ice say that they must maintain the backcountry toilets that need to be serviced with the helicopter, and White can be overflowing without proper maintenance.

“I’m not sure what the plan is,” she says.

“Perhaps it probably harms the ecosystem and visitors in the field.”

But one of the most important parts in her job is to keep people safely and if the worst occurs, it must be there.

As a national forest wilderness ranger for more than nine years, she saw her tragedy about tragedy when hikers and campers faced severe weather and secluded terrain. She comforted people facing life -threatening injuries and restored the dead bodies of dead hikers while they were steep and often out of ice.

“If something happens, we are usually the first time in the field,” she says.

On a typical Saturday in summer, she will talk to an average of 1,000 visitors. Her and her team published a report on the trail conditions, helped hikers who wore sandals or had enough water, and guided them in a more easier and safe path.

The job is now gone.

She is worried about what the cuts of the future of public safety mean, and how people experience American parks and forests, especially before the busy spring and summer, where millions of people can visit.

grey placeholderBBC News/ Max Matza Washington's famous Aasgard Pass is a snowy mountain pass with lakes on the floor. BBC News/ MAX MATZA

Several people died of hiking Aasgard Pass (on the left) from the Washington peaks known as magic.

The mass end of February 14 led to about 1,000 workers for 5%of the national park service employees.

The cut hit the US Forest Service, which made it more difficult to maintain thousands of mmes of hiking trails. About 3,400 people, including MS White and her team, were fired.

The cuts have been revised up the national park management, which accounts for about 155 million visitors every year, and visits about 155 million visitors each year.

One day after the mass launch, the long queue of the car outside the Canyon National Park was trapped outside the Grand Canyon National Park because of the lack of toll operators who could check in on the gate. Similar car lines are growing in other parks.

Popular trails outside Seattle have been closed indefinitely within a few hours of reductions, and the signs of the trail head are “due to the large -scale termination of the forest service staff,” and “will open the door again when returning to the appropriate employee level.”

grey placeholderPhotographer: Brittany colt, www.brittanycolt.com, @brittanycolt unside upside down the American flag is hanging on the face of the rock.Photo: Brittany Colt, www.britTanycolt.com, @brittanycolt

In Yosemite National Park, the annual “Fire” spectacle was a different kind of exhibition when a group, including employees, protested the recent staff of the Trump administration and walked upside down in the park.

Andria Townsend, a carnivorous animal biologist who supervised eight teams in Yosemite National Park before being fired by an e -mail, told the BBC that it supports the BBC.

“I’m paying much attention to this problem,” she said.

She She says In particular, he is particularly worried about the future of endangered species she is trying to protect.

MS TOWNSEND was attached as an attempt to track and preserve the species by studying, attaching GPS collar to Sierra Nevada Red Fox and the Pacific fishermen related to the Osori.

“They are both terrible,” she has about 50 anglers and 500 red foxes in the wild.

The employees of the sister site who conducts similar research have also been cut.

“I don’t want to be fate and depression, but it’s really hard to say what the future is.”

“The future of preservation is very uncertain.”

grey placeholderGetty Image Sierra Nevada Red Fox is surrounded by eyesGetty image

The former Yosemite employee Andria Townsend worrying would have a cut for the survival of Sierra Nevada Red Fox.

The old couple claire thompson (35 years old) and the 36 -year -old Xander Demetrios I worked for the Forest Service for about 10 years, and recently, I was able to explore the snow -covered cascade mountains by maintaining a trail in the central Washington.

After firing an email, thousands of other staff quoted “performance” issues.

Demetrios explained, “In particular, his work in the backcountry has taken a serious danger to his safety and is associated with rescue people in dangerous situations, including a person who has fallen to the river and a low body.

He and Thompson sometimes carried heavy equipment through rough terrain through the weather weather, cleaning the trail, repairing legs and huge, and not paying more than $ 22 in an hour.

Thompson said, “It was painful and insulting to feel like your work was so devalue, and those who did not at all of the ZERO concepts of what we are doing.” Thompson added.

grey placeholderThe mountain peaks are seen in the background with a smile in the middle of cleaning in the forests of many hills submitted to the BBC Demetrios and Thompson. Demetrios has a beard and wears green sports vests, brown task pants and brown hiking boots to protect the eyeballs. Thompson stands on a rock and is taller with orange tasks, red flannel shirts, baseball hats and hiking backpacks. Submitted to the BBC

Claire Thompson and Xander Demetrios

Following the repulsion, dozens of national park employees were recycled after mass -ending Valentine’s Day. Doug Burgum, who supervises the National Park Service (NPS), has promised to hire more than 5,000 seasonal workers during the coming months.

“Personally, of course, I have a great empathy for people who lose their jobs.” Burgum told Fox News last Friday.

“But I think we must realize that if we actually stop a $ 2 trillion deficit a year, all Americans are getting better.”

The government’s efficiency (DOGE), led by Elon Musk, has saved more than $ 65 billion from a wide range of cuts that struck dozens of federal agencies throughout the government. But it did not have evidence to support the figure. 2024 0.9% of the federal budget.

Watch: ‘Thank you to ELON Musk’ -Maga Republican Party praises Doge Cuts.

Outdoor advocates say that travelers who are currently planning outdoor vacations in the national park should expect numerous problems, including increased garbage, lack of accommodation, and the unusable use of many services they could expect.

John Garder of Washington DC’s National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) said, “If the administration does not cancel this policy, visitors will have to lower their expectations.

Yosemite fired the only lock, and Gay Tesberg fired an employee who handled a reservation for a room for visitors, and the hurricane damage to the Appal Rae Teeth trail would not be repaired in time for the passage to try to complete the 2,200 miles (3,540 km) trails.

According to the NPCA, private projects operated inside and outside the park will lose billions of dollars when visitors get off.

There is growing concern about the absence of parks and forest service personnel to help forest fires during the dry season.

Wildland firefighters, such as Dan Hilden, have been exempted from the Forest Service cut. He said that the role of the ended people is “completely important” in firing safety. Many people fight the fire directly, while others are responsible for the “cleaning” trail.

“I don’t know how we will do so this summer,” Hilden said.

“The situation is getting worse every year as the employee problem progresses. This year will be much worse.”