IntroductionZion National Park is known worldwide for its stunning landscapes, including the soaring sandstone canyon walls along the Zion Canyon Scenic Drive, the beauty of the winding Virgin River, and the engineering marvel of the Zion–Mt. Carmel tunnel. Since 2010, the park has witnessed a steep increase in visitation. While it's great more and more people can experience the park, increased visitation also comes with some challenges. Today, visitors are likely to experience long wait times to board shuttles and find parking, crowding on trails and at popular destinations, and harmful impacts of concentrated human use on natural and cultural resources as well as visitor experiences. Increased visitation has also added pressure on park staff and infrastructure, including emergency services, restrooms, septic systems, janitorial services, roads, and trails. The current backlog of deferred infrastructure maintenance for Zion is approximately $69.1 million, which elevates concerns for public health and safety. To help improve visitor access and experiences, protect park resources, promote visitor and staff safety, the National Park Service (NPS) is preparing a Visitor Use Management Plan (draft VUM Plan) that is being analyzed under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) through an environmental assessment (EA). This draft VUM Plan will propose an innovative set of strategies to manage and support visitor recreation. Public involvement in this planning process is important, and the draft VUM plan and EA will be available for public feedback this winter. This website provides information on Zion’s history of visitor use management and strategies NPS is evaluating, as well as additional information important to this planning effort. Visitor Use Management in ActionThe NPS began working on the Zion VUM Plan in 2016. Since then, staff have gathered input from the public and stakeholders, worked with cooperating agencies and tribal partners, and collected data to inform the planning process. More information on previous planning phases is available on the NPS Planning, Environment, and Public Comment website for the plan. More information on key research and monitoring efforts as well as temporary or pilot projects that have been conducted at Zion is presented below. Research and MonitoringZion began investing in visitor use related data collection in 2013. NPS staff continue to collect data and to work with researchers and partners on targeted studies. During initial scoping for the plan, data needs were identified to better understand trends, patterns, and visitor expectations. Since 2016, NPS staff have monitored conditions in the park and gathered important information through: Collecting data on traffic volume, dwell time in parking areas, shuttle boardings and wait times, and vehicle types (passenger, RVs, commercial bus, etc.). This data provides information on when and how visitors travel to and within the park.
Studies for specific trails such as Angels Landing and the Narrows have helped the NPS understand visitor use volumes, patterns, and experiences and to quantify relationships between overall trail use and key destination points along trails.
Monitoring by NPS staff helps estimate volume of hikers on different trails. This data helps staff understand the visitor experience at these destinations.
The NPS learns about visitors by asking about their preferred recreational opportunities, the experiences they seek, and perceptions of the quality of those experiences. Survey respondents can also provide demographic data and input on possible future management actions.
Temporary and Pilot ProgramsRecent events and changes in visitation have led the NPS to temporarily implement or pilot visitor use management strategies throughout the National Park System, including at Zion. Those efforts inform our current work on the draft VUM Plan. Some of the actions Zion has taken include: After pausing the Zion shuttle system due to the global COVID-19 pandemic, Zion resumed shuttle service on July 1, 2020. Shuttles carried a smaller number of passengers per trip to meet COVID-19 public health transportation guidelines. NPS staff worked with Recreation.gov to provide timed tickets for the shuttle to reduce lines, crowding, and congestion and to provide greater access certainty for visitors. The temporary reservation system ended in May 2021 when public health transportation guidelines changed. This shuttle ticket system provided perspective on how to effectively implement a managed access system, specifically one that could involve timed entry.
Staff at Zion are collaborating with NPS staff across the National Park System; including from Arches, Rocky Mountain, and Glacier National Parks to learn about how timed entry and other visitor use management strategies can improve visitor access. Staff will continue to consult with other parks to learn how they succeed at conserving park resources while providing high-quality visitor experiences.
In 2022, the NPS began issuing permits for hikes to Angels Landing. The goal of this pilot program is to reduce trail crowding, address visitors’ concerns about crowding and safety, and make it easier for visitors to plan their visit. The pilot was informed by studies that examined the number of hikers on the trail, their travel patterns, perceptions of conditions along the trail, and preferred experiences. Nearly 400,000 permits to hike to Angels Landing were issued across 2022 and 2023. To learn more, visit the Angels Landing Pilot Permit webpage. Visitors and staff report that the program is successful at reducing crowding and enhancing visitor experience. The NPS will continue evaluating the pilot program’s results to determine whether it should be adopted permanently through this draft VUM Plan.
Strategies the NPS is evaluatingThe NPS has used a variety of strategies to accomplish visitor use management goals across the United States, some of which are described in the table below. The NPS is currently evaluating if and how implementation of these strategies could help Zion address issues and provide visitors improved access. The draft VUM Plan and EA may involve these or other tactics. Seasonality is an important consideration when implementing any of the strategies below. Practices may vary depending on the time of year, particularly between the main season (March through November) to the winter season (December through February). The best system will allow NPS flexibility to respond to changing visitor use patterns and to implement NPS best practices for visitor use management.
Next Steps and Future Public InvolvementThe NPS is currently developing the draft VUM Plan and EA and anticipates sharing the draft plan with the public this coming winter. The park will continue to work with tribes and cooperating agencies during plan development. Public engagement is an important part of this decision process. When the NPS solicits public comment, we will propose several different strategies (including an NPS -preferred option) and invite members of the public to share feedback. When the draft VUM Plan and EA is released, information will be shared online and at public meetings to provide opportunities to comment. Public comments will be considered as the NPS refines and finalizes the VUM Plan. To learn more about how the NPS uses planning to conserve park resources and values and the important role of public engagement in planning, please visit: National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov). Depending on the final VUM Plan adopted, NPS will take appropriate next steps to continue communicating with prospective visitors, neighbors, elected officials, tribes, and other stakeholders. A History of VUM in ZionWhat is Visitor Use Management?Visitor use management (VUM) is the term used by land management agencies like the Nation Park Service (NPS) to describe proactively administering the number, type, timing, and distribution of visitors throughout a park. VUM employs a variety of strategies and tools to accomplish the NPS mission to protect landscapes, plants, animals, and human history (which are collectively referred to as resources) and to provide high quality visitor experiences. Visitor use management at Zion is informed by best practices from the Interagency Visitor Use Management Council’s (IVUMC) Visitor Use Management Framework (Visitor Use Management Framework, A Guide to Providing Sustainable Outdoor Recreation, Edition One, July 2016 (nps.gov)). This framework provides clear steps to support effective planning, implementation, and monitoring for visitor use and fulfills legal requirements to identity visitor capacity as specified in the National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978. All parks within the NPS, as well as public lands managed by five other federal agencies, follow this process to inform and guide visitor use management. VUM Success at ZionThe draft VUM Plan will complement and further the strategies and management actions Zion National Park has successfully used to support high quality visitor experiences and to protect resources. The draft VUM Plan will build on the 100+ year history of infrastructure development and maintenance, educational programing, scientific study, and innovative transportation solutions the NPS has used to conserve the resources that make Zion National Park special and to provide visitors opportunities to enjoy them sustainably. Since the park was established by Congress in 1919, the NPS has taken many actions to enhance visitor experiences. Some of these have involved infrastructure development and others have involved changes to how visitors access opportunities in the park. In the last 25 years, some of the improvements include:
Planning ContextPlanning in the NPS informs decisions that provide relevant and timely direction to park management and informs future decision-making for each national park in accord with its stated mission. Planning also provides methods and tools for resolving issues in ways that minimize conflicts and promotes mutually beneficial solutions that articulate how public enjoyment of the parks can be part of a strategy to protect and conserve park resources. The NPS has completed several complementary plans to manage many aspects of Zion National Park, which help conserve Zion by setting priorities for ongoing management actions. The draft VUM Plan builds on the guidance previously established in relevant planning documents by adding more specific guidance on the topics of visitor use and experience. Key existing plans that address visitor use have previously identified the need for visitor use management planning. To learn more about these plans, expand the section below. This plan establishes direction for long-term park management including visitor use. The management zones it established provides important direction for conserving resources and providing visitor opportunities. Park staff have completed many of the actions recommended in this plan and Congress has subsequently designated the Zion Wilderness (2009) and the Virgin River (and several tributaries) as a Wild and Scenic River (2009). The VUM planning effort builds on the guidance related to visitor use and experience that is provided in the General Management Plan by adding more specific guidance for how visitors access the park.
This plan identifies opportunities for a variety of Wilderness recreational activities and experiences while recognizing and protecting the park’s wilderness resource values. The plan provides guidance for the management of more than 124,000 acres of the park designated as Wilderness, 4,000 acres of potential wilderness and 9,000 acres of recommended wilderness areas. The VUM Plan and Wilderness Stewardship Plan will be interconnected, with actions or strategies developed as part of the VUM Plan complementing actions the park has already taken to effectively steward Wilderness and backcountry areas.
The foundation document reiterates the park’s purpose and significance, identifies its fundamental resources and values, notes special mandates and administrative commitments that affect its management, and prioritizes future planning needs – the highest of which was a VUM Plan. This document underlies the development of all planning at Zion National Park, including the VUM Plan.
Approximately 163 miles of the Virgin River and its tributaries are designated as wild and scenic under the Wild and Scenic River Act in 2009. The river plan sets priorities to protect river values including:
The plan includes indicators and standards used to monitor the ways specific visitor uses influence these river values. The river plan guides actions to protect these outstandingly remarkable values (a term used to describe the river in the legislation that established its wild and scenic status). The long-range interpretive plan describes interpretive themes and visitor experience goals. It also identifies opportunities to achieve these goals. Interpretation is driven by a philosophy that charges interpreters to provide audiences with opportunities for meaningful experiences that, in turn, foster stewardship of park resources. The VUM Plan builds on the interpretive plan by adding more specific guidance related to visitor opportunities to appreciate and protect park resources.
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Last updated: July 10, 2024