Three days after most of the federal workforce was furloughed, a 14-year-old girl fell 700 feet to her death at the Horseshoe Bend Overlook, part of the Glen Canyon Recreation Area in Arizona. The following day, Christmas, a man died at Yosemite National Park in California after suffering a head injury from a fall. On Dec. 27, a woman was killed by a falling tree at Great Smoky Mountains National Park on the border of North Carolina and Tennessee.

The deaths follow a decision by Republican President Donald Trump’s administration officials to leave the scenic - but sometimes deadly - parks open even as the Interior Department has halted most of its operations. During previous extended shutdowns, the National Park Service barred access to many of its sites across the country.

National Park Service spokesman Jeremy Barnum said an average of six people die each week in the park system. That includes “accidents like drownings, falls and motor vehicle crashes and medical related incidents such as heart attacks.”

"Throughout the year, the National Park System offers a wide range of visitor experiences in unique landscapes with potential hazards that may exist at parks across the nation," Barnum said. "Visitors can reduce their risk of injury if they plan ahead and prepare properly, select the most appropriate activity that matches their skill set and experience, seek information before they arrive at the park about hazards and environmental conditions, follow rules and regulations and use sound judgement while recreating."

In 1995 during Democratic President Bill Clinton’s administration and again 2013 during Democratic Barack Obama administration, the government decided to close the parks altogether. Officials concluded that keeping them open would jeopardize public safety and the parks' integrity, but the closures also became a political cudgel for Democrats because they exemplified one of the most popular aspects of federal operations that had ground to a halt.

In January 2018, White House budget director Mick Mulvaney and then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke made the decision to keep national park sites as accessible as possible in the event of a shutdown. Trump officials forged ahead with the plan, but that shutdown only lasted for three days.

The current shutdown began Dec. 21. It enters the third week on Saturday (Jan. 5).

Several former Park Service officials, along with the system’s advocates, said in interviews that activities such as viewing animals and hiking outdoors can carry a greater risk when fewer employees are around.

Diane Regas, president and chief executive of the Trust for Public Land, said the group has sent a letter asking Trump to close all national parks. She said administration officials might have underestimated the broad scope of what it takes to maintain these sites.

"I think we all know that not having bathrooms is a nuisance. What I think people forget is, not having adequate sewage treatment can be dangerous," Regas said. "When you bring people together, running these parks is like running a small city.

"We are taking risks with some of our most treasured natural resources without knowing that we're doing our best to protect people, that we're doing our best to protect park resources," she said. "When it comes to our national parks, I just don't believe that's acceptable."

The Park Service estimates that as many as 16,000 of its 19,000-person workforce is furloughed during the shutdown. Officials said services such as cleanup and maintenance vary from park to park, due to agreements with concessions and surrounding municipalities that are donating services, such as trash collection and road clearing.

Still, about half a dozen rangers are currently available to patrol Yosemite National Park, for example, which is about the size of Rhode Island. Officials said skeleton crews are working to close off hazardous areas covered in snow and ice.

On Christmas Eve, a 14-year-old girl raced from the lot where her parents parked to see the Horseshoe Bend Overlook, a dramatic cliff that looks out to a peninsula of jagged rock. After a long search, her parents reported her missing about 5 p.m., triggering an emergency response, according to the Coconino County Sheriff’s Office. She was discovered near the cliff near dark; authorities waited until the next morning to retrieve her body.

National Park Service officials said rangers responding to an emergency call found the Yosemite victim with a head wound, presumably from a short fall. They did not confirm social media chatter from other visitors that he ran after a dog that he illegally brought into the park. The man, who was not identified, died of his injuries.

A spokesman for the Pacific West Region of the Park Service said the public wasn't notified of the Yosemite death because of the shutdown and that it is also delaying an investigation into its causes. "We aren't releasing more details because the incident remains under investigation, said Andrew Muñoz, acting chief of public and congressional affairs for the region.

In the Smoky Mountains, 42-year-old Laila Jiwani was killed by a falling tree on Porter Creek Trail. One of Jiwani’s two children, a 6-year-old, was airlifted to a hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening, according to a Park Service spokesman.

Frank Dean, president and chief executive of the Yosemite Conservancy, said the park’s staff is doing its best under challenging circumstances. “This is the first time in a long-term shutdown where the parks have remained open,” said Dean, who served as a park ranger and assistant to the superintendent in Yosemite before going on to become superintendent for the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. “What we’re finding now is it’s not really working, because you’ve got understaffing. As this thing drags on, you’ve got free access and no guidance.”

Daniel Wenk, Yellowstone National Park’s superintendent until retiring in September, said that not having a robust staff presence could impede the agency’s response to an emergency. “A casual cross-country skier would want to go to Tower Falls” in Yellowstone, Wenk said. “If they suffer a heart attack - every year you have that - we wouldn’t be able to quickly respond. You might be dramatically delayed.

"It’s correct: People die in national parks all the time. If you can attribute [the shutdown] to people not being able to get to them for an hour and a half, that’s another story.”

While a handful of major parks have remained open during past shutdowns, many agency staffers had not anticipated that the current budget impasse would persist this long. Now some superintendents are closing areas of their parks, having determined that they cannot adequately protect either the habitat, wildlife or visitors.

Mount Rainier’s National Park Inn has been cleaning toilets and collecting trash at its own expense, but will stop doing that Sunday after breakfast. After that point, said Melinda Simpson, operations manager at the concessionaire Rainier Guest Services, the National Park Service “will be then closing the park and locking the gates.”

“We couldn’t continue to operate under these conditions, and really wish we could. It’s very disappointing,” she said, adding that the operation’s 45 employees would have to go without pay while it was shut down. “We are just waiting and looking forward to welcoming the guests when they open up the park again.”

Kristen Brengel, vice president of government affairs for the National Parks Conservation Association, said superintendents need the freedom to shutter parks if they determine it is no longer sustainable to keep them accessible. “The political pressure to keep the parks open is overriding some of these judgment calls,” she said. “We need a release valve here for the Park Service, so they can do the right thing.”

In addition to restrooms not being maintained and visitors not being properly warned and guided by staff, crews cannot work to prepare parks for the summer season and fix roads. Vehicle accidents ranked second after drowning as a cause of death in parks in 2007, according to the last comprehensive tally released to the public.

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(c) 2018, The Washington Post - Story by Darryl Fears and Juliet Eilperin