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Statement for the Record for the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, 
and Related Agencies, Committee on Appropriations, House of 
Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT: 

Wednesday, April 5, 2006: 

National Park Service: 

Major Operations Funding Trends and How Selected Park Units Responded 
to Those Trends for Fiscal Years 2001 through 2005: 

Statement for the Record Robin M. Nazzaro, Director, Natural Resources 
and Environment: 

GAO-06-631T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-631T, a statement for the record to the 
Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies; Committee 
on Appropriations; U.S. House of Representatives: 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

In recent years, some reports prepared by advocacy groups have raised 
issues concerning the adequacy of the Park Service’s financial 
resources needed to effectively operate the park units. 

This statement addresses (1) funding trends for park service operations 
and visitor fees for fiscal years 2001-2005; (2) specific funding 
trends for 12 selected high-visitation park units and how, if at all, 
the funding trends have affected operations; and (3) recent management 
initiatives the Park Service has undertaken to address fiscal 
performance and accountability of park units. This statement is based 
on GAO’s March 2006 report, National Park Service: Major Operations 
Funding Trends and How Selected Park Units Responded to Those Trends 
for Fiscal Years 2001 through 2005, GAO-06-431 (Washington, D.C.: March 
31, 2006). 

What GAO Found: 

Overall, amounts appropriated to the National Park Service (Park 
Service) in the Operation of the National Park System account increased 
from 2001 to 2005. In inflation-adjusted terms, amounts allocated by 
the Park Service to park units from this appropriation for daily 
operations declined while project-related allocations increased. 
Project-related allocations increased primarily in (1) Cyclic 
Maintenance and Repair and Rehabilitation programs to reflect an 
emphasis on reducing the estimated $5 billion maintenance backlog and 
(2) the inventory and monitoring program to protect natural resources 
through the Natural Resource Challenge initiative. Also, on an average 
annual basis, visitor fees collected increased about 1 percent—a 2 
percent decline when adjusted for inflation. 

All park units we visited received project-related allocations, but 
most of the park units experienced declines in inflation-adjusted terms 
in their allocations for daily operations. Each of the 12 park units 
reported their daily operations allocations were not sufficient to 
address increases in operating costs, such as salaries, and new Park 
Service requirements. In response, officials reported that they either 
eliminated or reduced some services or relied on other authorized 
sources to pay operating expenses that have historically been paid with 
allocations for daily operations. Also, implementing important Park 
Service policies—without additional allocations—has placed additional 
demands on the park units and reduced their flexibility. For example, 
the Park Service has directed its park units to spend most of their 
visitor fees on deferred maintenance projects. While the Park Service 
may use visitor fees to pay salaries for permanent staff who administer 
projects funded with these fees, it has a policy prohibiting such use. 
To alleviate the pressure on daily operations allocations, we believe 
it would be appropriate to use visitor fees to pay the salaries of 
employees working on visitor fee funded projects. Interior believes 
that, while employment levels at individual park units may have 
fluctuated for many reasons, employment servicewide was stable, 
including both seasonal and permanent employees. 

GAO identified three initiatives—Business Plan, Core Operations 
Analysis, and Park Scorecard—to address park units’ fiscal performance 
and operational condition. Of the park units with a business plan we 
visited, officials stated that the plan, among other things, have 
helped them better identify future budget needs. Due to its early 
development stage, only a few park units have participated in the Core 
Operations Analysis; for those we visited who have, officials said that 
they are better able to determine where operational efficiencies might 
accrue. Park Service headquarters used the Scorecard to validate and 
approve increases in funding for daily operations for fiscal year 2005. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Department of the Interior allow park units to 
use visitor fee revenues to pay the costs of permanent employees 
administering projects funded by visitor fees. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-631T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Robin Nazzaro at (202) 
512-3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

We are pleased to provide for the record a summary of our report on 
issues surrounding the principle sources of funding for the operations 
of the National Park Service (Park Service) from fiscal years 2001 
through 2005, and how the selected park units we visited responded to 
their allocations of such funds. Congress provides funding for the Park 
Service through a number of appropriations accounts; the largest is the 
Operation of the National Park System (ONPS), which funds the 
management, operations, and maintenance of park areas and facilities 
and the general administration of the Park Service.[Footnote 1] 
Congress has made additional funding available by permitting the Park 
Service to charge and retain recreation fees, referred to in this 
report as "visitor fees." The Park Service also has, among other 
sources, authority to charge and retain concessions fees and to accept 
donations and voluntary services. As with any federal program, the Park 
Service is expected to manage within whatever level of funding is 
provided and to allocate resources to its park units in a way that is 
both efficient and effective in delivering services. 

The Park Service has chosen to allocate funds to its park units in two 
categories--for daily operations, and another for specific, non- 
recurring projects. Park managers use allocations for daily operations 
to pay for visitor and resource protection, interpretation and 
education, and facilities operations, among other things. About 80 
percent or more of the park units' daily operations allocations pay for 
salaries and benefits for staff to carry out these mission components, 
while the remainder is used for overhead expenses such as utilities, 
supplies, and training. The project-related portion provides funds for 
non-recurring projects such as replacing roofs on park facilities or 
rehabilitating campgrounds. Park managers generally use these project 
allocations to pay temporary employees or contractors to complete these 
projects. 

In recent years, concerns over the deteriorating condition of the 
national parks have received increasing attention. Some reports 
prepared by advocacy groups cite a lack of sufficient staff and 
financial resources necessary to effectively operate the park units. 
They report dwindling visitor services, crumbling buildings, and 
threatened resources at many park units including the Everglades, 
Gettysburg, Great Smoky Mountains, Olympic, Yellowstone, and others. 
Some of these reports argue that the purchasing power of the park 
units' funding has been weakened due to inflation and required employee 
pay and benefit increases that were not accounted for in their daily 
operations funding. However, the Department of the Interior stated that 
the Park Service's operating funds have increased significantly from 
1980 through 2005, particularly when compared to other domestic federal 
agencies. 

This statement, which is based on our recent report on the operating 
condition of the national parks,[Footnote 2] addresses (1) funding 
trends for Park Service operations and visitor fees for fiscal years 
2001 through 2005; (2) specific funding trends for several high- 
visitation park units and how, if at all, these funding trends have 
affected operations, including the park units' ability to provide 
services for fiscal years 2001 through 2005; and (3) recent management 
initiatives the Park Service has undertaken to address the fiscal 
performance and accountability of park units. 

To identify funding trends for Park Service operations and visitor fees 
from fiscal years 2001 through 2005, we obtained and analyzed 
appropriations legislation, data on the Park Service's allocation of 
funds from the ONPS account, and data on visitor fees.[Footnote 3] To 
determine funding trends for selected individual park units and how 
these trends affected the park units' ability to provide services to 
visitors, we selected 12 park units based on visitation, regional 
diversity, and preliminary data on allocations for daily operations. We 
visited the 12 park units, gathered and analyzed funding and cost data, 
and interviewed park officials to determine allocation trends and their 
impact on operations (including visitor services). To identify recent 
management initiatives the Park Service has under way to address fiscal 
performance and accountability for fiscal years 2001 to 2005, we 
gathered and reviewed documentation on several management initiatives 
and interviewed Park Service headquarters, regional office, and 
individual park unit officials. A more detailed description of our 
scope and methodology is contained in the report on which this 
statement is based. We performed our work from January 2005 to March 
2006 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. 

In summary we found that: 

* Overall, amounts appropriated to the Park Service in the ONPS account 
increased from fiscal years 2001 through 2005. The amounts appropriated 
rose from about $1.4 billion in fiscal year 2001 to almost $1.7 billion 
in fiscal year 2005--an average annual increase of about 5 percent, or 
about 1 percent when adjusted for inflation. The Park Service makes 
this appropriation available to park units by allocating amounts for 
daily operations and for projects. In inflation-adjusted terms, the 
Park Service's allocation for daily operations declined slightly while 
the project-related allocations increased. The amount the Park Service 
allocated to park units for daily operations increased from about $903 
million in fiscal year 2001 to almost $1.03 billion in fiscal year 
2005--an average annual increase of about 3 percent per year, but a 
slight decline of 0.3 percent per year when adjusted for inflation. In 
allocating resources to park units, the Park Service increased 
allocations for project-related activities at a higher rate than for 
daily operations. Project-related allocations increased overall in both 
nominal and inflation-adjusted dollars. Total project-related 
allocations rose from $478 million in 2001 to $641 million in 2005, an 
average annual increase of about 8 percent per year, or about 4 percent 
per year in inflation-adjusted dollars. In addition to this funding, 
the Park Service collected a total of about $717 million in visitor 
fees from fiscal years 2001 through 2005--or about $670 million when 
adjusted for inflation. 

* All of the 12 high-visitation park units that we visited received 
project-related allocations between fiscal years 2001 through 2005, but 
for most park units their allocations for daily operations declined in 
inflation-adjusted terms. Allocations of project-related funds at the 
12 high-visitation park units we visited varied from year to year. 
Although allocations for daily operations increased in nominal terms 
from 2001 through 2005 at all 12 parks we visited, 8 of the 12 
experienced a decline in inflation-adjusted allocations and 4 
experienced an increase in inflation-adjusted allocations. Park 
managers at all 12 park units we visited reported their allocations 
were not sufficient to address increases in operating costs, such as 
salary and benefit increases and rising utility costs; and new Park 
Service requirements directed at reducing its deferred maintenance 
needs, implementing its asset management strategy, and maintaining law 
enforcement levels. Officials also stated that these factors reduced 
their management flexibility. For example, the Park Service set a goal 
to spend the majority of its visitor fees on deferred maintenance 
projects. While the Park Service may use visitor fees to pay salaries 
for permanent staff that administer projects funded with these fees, it 
has a policy prohibiting such use. Instead, these salaries are paid 
using allocations for daily operations, which reduces the amount of the 
allocation available for visitor services and other activities, and 
limits the park units' ability to maintain these services and 
activities. To alleviate the pressure on daily operations allocations, 
we believe it would be appropriate to use visitor fees to pay the 
salaries of employees working on visitor fee-funded projects. 

* In response to daily operations allocation trends, increased costs, 
and new policy requirements, parks reported that they either eliminated 
or reduced some services; they also relied on other authorized funding 
sources and volunteers to pay for activities that have historically 
been paid for from the allocations for daily operations. Because 
allocations for daily operations did not increase commensurately with 
rising costs, officials at the park units we visited stated that they 
absorbed these additional costs by reducing spending on personnel and 
other expenditures. Park officials also told us that they reduced 
services including, reducing visitor center hours, educational 
programs, basic custodial duties, and law enforcement operations, such 
as back-country patrolling. Officials at the park units also stated 
that they increasingly relied on volunteers and nonprofit partner 
organizations to provide services that were traditionally offered by 
park rangers, including providing information and educational programs 
to visitors. In commenting on a draft of our report, the Department of 
the Interior said that the report creates a misleading impression 
concerning the state of park operations, claiming that (1) record high 
levels of funds are being invested to staff and improve parks and (2) 
the report does not examine the results achieved with these inputs. The 
department also believes that while employment levels at individual 
park units may have fluctuated for many reasons, employment servicewide 
was stable, including both seasonal and permanent employees. We 
believe, however, that the report provides a detailed analysis of the 
major funding trends affecting Park Service operations, including those 
at the 12 park units we visited, as well as the department's 
initiatives and efforts to achieve results. 

* We identified three management initiatives that the Park Service has 
undertaken to address fiscal performance and accountability and to 
better manage within available resources: the Business Plan Initiative 
(BPI), the Core Operations Analysis (COA), and the Park Scorecard. 
These initiatives are in varying stages of development and 
implementation. For the most part, it is too soon to assess the 
effectiveness of these initiatives. 

Background: 

The Park Service is the caretaker of many of the nation's most precious 
natural and cultural resources. Today, more than 130 years after the 
first national park was created, the National Park System has grown to 
include 390 units covering over 84 million acres. These units include a 
diverse mix of sites--now in more than 20 different 
categories.[Footnote 4] The Park Service's mission is to preserve 
unimpaired the natural and cultural resources of the National Park 
System for the enjoyment of this and future generations. Its objectives 
include providing for the use of the park units by supplying 
appropriate visitor services and infrastructure (e.g., roads and 
facilities) to support these services. In addition, the Park Service 
protects its natural and cultural resources (e.g., preserving wildlife 
habitat and Native American sites) so that they will be unimpaired for 
the enjoyment of future generations. 

The Park Service receives its main source of funds to operate park 
units through appropriations in the ONPS account. The Park Service 
chooses to allocate funds to its park units in two categories--one for 
daily operations, and another for specific, non-recurring projects. 
Daily operations allocations for individual park units are built on 
park units' allocation for the prior year. Park units receive an 
increased allocation for required pay increases and may request 
specific increases for new or higher levels of ongoing operating 
responsibilities, such as adding additional law enforcement rangers for 
increased homeland security protection. As is true for other government 
operations, the cost of operating park units will increase each year 
due to required pay increases, the rising costs of benefits for federal 
employees, and rising overhead expenses such as utilities. The Park 
Service may provide additional allocations for daily operations to 
cover all or part of these cost increases. If the continuation of 
operations at the previous year's level would require more funds than 
are available, park units must adjust either by identifying 
efficiencies within the park unit, use other authorized funding sources 
such as fees or donations to fund the activity, or reduce services. 
Upon receiving their allocations for daily operations each year, park 
unit managers exercise a great deal of discretion in setting 
operational priorities. Generally, 80 percent or more of each park 
unit's allocation for daily operations is used to pay the salaries and 
benefits of permanent employees (personnel costs). Park units use the 
remainder of their allocations for daily operations for overhead 
expenses such as utilities, supplies, and training, among other things. 

In addition to daily operations funding, the Park Service also 
allocates project-related funding to park units for specific purposes 
to support its mission. For example, activities completed with Cyclic 
Maintenance and Repair and Rehabilitation funds include re-roofing or 
re-painting buildings, overhauling engines, refinishing hardwood 
floors, replacing sewer lines, repairing building foundations, and 
rehabilitating campgrounds and trails. Park units compete for project 
allocations by submitting requests to their respective regional office 
and headquarters. Regional and headquarters officials determine which 
projects to fund. While an individual park unit may receive funding for 
several projects in one year, it may receive none the next. 

Park units are authorized to collect revenue from outside sources such 
as visitor fees and donations--although how they are used may be 
limited to specific purposes. Since 1996, the Congress has provided the 
park units with authority to collect fees from visitors and retain 
these funds for use on projects to enhance recreation and visitor 
enjoyment, among other things.[Footnote 5] Since 2002, the Park Service 
has required park units to spend the majority of their visitor fees on 
deferred maintenance projects, such as road or building repair. The 
Park Service also receives revenue from concessionaires under contract 
to perform services at park units--such as operating a lodge--and cash 
or non-monetary donations from non-profit organizations or individuals. 
These funds may vary from year to year and, in the case of donations, 
may be accompanied by stipulations on how the funds may be used. 

Appropriations for the Operation of the National Park System Account 
Increased Overall from Fiscal Year 2001 to 2005; When Adjusted for 
Inflation, the Total Allocation for Daily Operations Declined Overall 
and the Total Allocation for Projects Increased Overall: 

Overall appropriations for the ONPS account--including the amounts the 
Park Service allocated for daily operations and projects--rose in both 
nominal and inflation-adjusted dollars overall from fiscal year 2001 
through 2005. Appropriations increased in nominal terms from about $1.4 
billion in fiscal year 2001 to almost $1.7 billion in fiscal year 2005, 
an average annual increase of about 4.9 percent (i.e., about $68 
million per year). After adjusting these amounts for inflation, the 
average annual increase was about 1.3 percent or almost $18 million per 
year. By contrast, the Park Service's overall budget authority 
increased to about $2.7 billion in 2005 from about $2.6 billion in 
2001, an average increase of about 1 percent per year. In inflation 
adjusted dollars, the total budget authority fell by an average of 
about 2.5 percent per year. Figure 1 shows the appropriations for the 
ONPS account from fiscal years 2001 through 2005. 

Figure 1: Appropriations for the ONPS Account from Fiscal Years 2001 
through 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: Totals for ONPS do not include Park Service spending authority 
for offsetting collections, in nominal terms, of $17 million in fiscal 
year 2001, $18 million in fiscal year 2002, $17 million in fiscal year 
2003, $21 million in fiscal year 2004, and $21 million in fiscal year 
2005. These offsetting collections are reimbursements from other 
federal or state entities that are credited to this account. Visitor 
fee revenues are deposited in a separate account. 

[End of figure] 

The Park Service's total allocation for daily operations for park units 
increased overall in nominal dollars but declined slightly when 
adjusted for inflation from fiscal year 2001 through 2005. As 
illustrated in figure 2, overall allocations for daily operations for 
park units rose from about $903 million in fiscal year 2001 to almost 
$1.03 billion in fiscal year 2005--an average annual increase of about 
$30 million, or about 3 percent. After adjusting for inflation, the 
allocation for daily operations fell slightly from about $903 million 
in 2001 to about $893 million in 2005--an average annual decline of 
about $2.5 million, or 0.3 percent. The fiscal year 2005 appropriation 
for the ONPS account included an additional $37.5 million over the 
amounts proposed by the House and Senate for the ONPS account, to be 
used for daily operations. The conference report accompanying the 
appropriation stated that the additional amount was to be used for (1) 
a service-wide increase of $25 million and (2) $12.5 million for 
visitor services programs at specific park units. 

Figure 2: Overall Allocations for Daily Operations for Park Units from 
Fiscal Years 2001 through 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: Overall allocations for daily operations include amounts for park 
units only, and do not include allocations for the national trail 
system, other field offices, and affiliated areas. 

[End of figure] 

Allocations for projects and other support programs increased overall 
in both nominal and inflation-adjusted dollars.[Footnote 6] These 
allocations rose from about $478 million in 2001 to about $641 million 
in 2005--an average annual increase of about 7.7 percent, or about 
$36.5 million. When adjusted for inflation, the increase was 3.9 
percent, or about $18.7 million per year. Figure 3 shows allocation 
trends of projects and other support programs for the Park Service from 
fiscal years 2001 through 2005. Three programs that include project 
funding for individual park units--Cyclic Maintenance, Repair and 
Rehabilitation, and Inventory and Monitoring--account for over half of 
the increase for the project and support program allocations. As a 
percentage of total project and support program funding, funding for 
these programs rose to 31 percent in 2005 from 23 percent in 2001. For 
example, Cyclic Maintenance program funding increased from $34.5 
million in 2001 to $62.8 million in 2005--an average annual increase of 
16.2 percent in nominal terms or 12.1 percent when adjusted for 
inflation. Increases in the Cyclic Maintenance and Repair and 
Rehabilitation programs reflect an emphasis on the effort for the Park 
Service to reduce its estimated $5 billion maintenance backlog. 
Increases in the Inventory and Monitoring Program reflect an emphasis 
on protecting natural resources primarily through an initiative called 
the Natural Resource Challenge.[Footnote 7] 

Figure 3: Project and Other Support Program Allocations from Fiscal 
Years 2001 through 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Visitor fees are also used to support park units. Overall, the Park 
Service collected about $717 million in visitor fees in addition to 
their annual appropriation for operations from 2001 through 2005, 
increasing from about $140 million to about $147 million in 2005 (an 
average annual increase of about 1 percent); however, in inflation- 
adjusted dollars, the Park Service collected about $670 million in 
visitor fees, falling from about $140 million in 2001 to about $127 
million 2005 (an average annual decline of over 2 percent). Overall, 
the Park Service collected an average of about $143 million per year in 
nominal terms or about $134 million per year when adjusted for 
inflation. Visitor fee revenue depends on several factors, including 
the number of visitors to each park unit, the number of national passes 
purchased, and the amount each park charges for entry and services. 

Allocation Trends for Projects and Daily Operations at 12 High- 
Visitation Park Units Varied, but All 12 Parks Reported Reduced 
Services and an Increasing Reliance on Other Authorized Sources to 
Supplement Daily Operations Allocations: 

All 12 park units we visited received allocations for projects from 
fiscal years 2001 through 2005 that varied among years and among park 
units. Allocations for daily operations for the 12 park units we 
visited also varied. On an average annual basis, each unit experienced 
an increase in daily operations allocations, but most experienced a 
decline in inflation-adjusted terms. Officials at each park believed 
that their daily operations allocations were not sufficient to address 
increases in operating costs and new Park Service management 
requirements. To manage within available funding resources, park unit 
managers also reported that, to varying degrees, they made trade-offs 
among the operational activities--which in some cases resulted in 
reducing services in areas such as education, visitor and resource 
protection, and maintenance activities. Park officials also reported 
that they increasingly relied on volunteers and other authorized 
funding sources to provide operations and services that were previously 
paid with allocations for daily operations from the ONPS account. 

Park units use project-related allocations for such things as 
rehabilitating structures, roads, and trails; and inventorying and 
monitoring natural resources. The allocations for projects at the 12 
park units totaled $76.8 million from 2001 through 2005. Allocations 
varied from park to park and year to year because these allocations 
support non-recurring projects for which park units are required to 
compete and obtain approval from Park Service headquarters or regional 
offices. For example, at Grand Canyon National Park, allocations for 
projects between 2001 and 2005 totaled $6.7 million. However, during 
that time, the amount fluctuated from $824,000 in 2001 to $1.9 million 
in 2004 and $914,000 in 2005. Appendix I shows project-related 
allocations and their fluctuations from fiscal years 2001 through 2005 
for the 12 parks we visited. 

All twelve park units experienced an annual average increase, in 
nominal terms, in allocations for daily operations; however, when 
adjusted for inflation, 8 of the 12 parks we visited experienced a 
decline ranging from less than 1 percent to approximately 3 percent. 
For example, Yosemite National Park's daily operations allocations 
increased from $22,583,000 in 2001 to $22,714,000 in 2005, less than an 
average of 1 percent per year. However, when adjusted for inflation, 
the park's allocation for daily operations fell by about 3 percent per 
year. Daily operations allocations at the remaining four parks 
increased after adjusting for inflation, ranging from less than 1 
percent to about 7 percent. For example, Acadia National Park's daily 
operations allocations increased from $4,279,000 in fiscal year 2001 to 
$6,498,000 in fiscal year 2005, an average annual increase of about 11 
percent in nominal terms and about 7 percent when adjusted for 
inflation. Park officials explained that although the daily operations 
allocation substantially increased over this period, most of the 
increase was for new or additional operations. To illustrate, in 2002, 
Acadia acquired the former Schoodic Naval Base. The increases in 
allocations for daily operations were to accommodate this added 
responsibility rather than for maintaining operations that were in 
existence prior to the acquisition. 

Park unit officials reported that required salary increases exceeded 
the allocation for daily operations, and rising utility costs have 
reduced their flexibility in managing daily operations allocations. 
Park Service headquarters officials reported that from 2001 through 
2005, the Park Service paid personnel cost increases enacted by the 
Congress. For example, from fiscal years 2001 through 2005, Congress 
enacted salary increases of about 4 percent per year for federal 
employees.[Footnote 8] Park Service officials reported that the Park 
Service covered these salary increases with appropriations provided in 
the ONPS account. The Park Service allocated amounts to cover about 
half of the required increases, and park units had to reduce spending 
to compensate for the difference. As a consequence of the increases, 
park units had to eliminate or defer spending in order to accommodate 
the increases. Officials at several park units told us that since 2001, 
they have refrained from filling vacant positions or have filled them 
with lower-graded or seasonal employees. For example, in an effort to 
continue to perform activities that directly impact visitors--such as 
cleaning restrooms and answering visitor questions--officials at 
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks stated that they left several 
high-graded positions unfilled in order to hire a lower graded 
workforce to perform these basic operational duties. Officials at most 
park units also told us that when positions were left vacant, the 
responsibilities of the remaining staff generally increased in order to 
fulfill park obligations. 

In addition to increasing personnel costs, officials at many of the 
parks we visited explained that rising utility costs caused parks to 
reduce spending in other areas. For example, at Grand Teton National 
Park, park officials told us that to operate the same number of 
facilities and assets, costs for fuel, electricity, and solid waste 
removal increased from $435,010 in 2003 to $633,201 in 2005--an 
increase of 46 percent, when adjusted for inflation. Officials told us 
that, as a result, their utility budget for fiscal year 2005 was spent 
by June 2005--three months early. In August, the park accepted the 
transfer requests of two division chiefs and used the salaries from 
these vacancies to pay for utility costs for the remaining portion of 
the year. Officials at some parks attributed increased utility costs to 
new construction that was generally not accompanied with a 
corresponding increase to their allocation for daily operations. 

Officials at most of the parks we visited also told us that their park 
units generally did not receive additional allocations for 
administering new Park Service policies directed at reducing its 
maintenance backlog, implementing a new asset management strategy, or 
maintaining specified levels of law enforcement personnel (referred to 
as its "no-net-loss policy"), which has reduced their flexibility in 
addressing other park priorities. While officials stated that these 
policies were important, implementing them without additional 
allocations reduced their management flexibility. For example, since 
2001, the Park Service has placed a high priority on reducing its 
currently estimated $5 billion maintenance backlog. In response, the 
Park Service, among other things, set a goal to spend the majority of 
its visitor fees on deferred maintenance projects--$75 million in 2002 
increasing to $95 million in 2005.[Footnote 9] Officials at several 
park units report that they have used daily operations allocations to 
absorb the cost of salaries for permanent staff needed to oversee the 
increasing number of visitor fee-funded projects. Park officials 
reported that the additional administrative and supervisory tasks 
associated with these projects add to the workload of an already- 
reduced permanent staff. Furthermore, while the Park Service may use 
visitor fees to pay salaries for permanent staff that manage and 
administer projects funded with visitor fees, it has a policy 
prohibiting such use. Instead, these salaries are paid using 
allocations for daily operations which reduce the amount of the 
allocation available for visitor services and other activities and 
limit the park units' ability to maintain these services and 
activities. 

To address differences between allocations for daily operations and 
expenses, officials at the park units we visited reported that they 
reduced or eliminated some services paid with daily operations 
allocations--including some that directly affected visitors and park 
resources. Park officials at some of the parks we visited told us that 
before reducing services that directly affect the visitor, they first 
reduced spending for training, equipment, travel, and supplies paid 
from daily operations allocations.[Footnote 10] However, most parks 
reported that they did reduce services that directly affect the 
visitor, including reducing visitor center hours, educational programs, 
basic custodial duties, and law enforcement operations, such as back- 
country patrolling. Furthermore, when funds allocated for daily 
operations were not sufficient to pay for activities that were 
previously paid with this source, the park units we visited reported 
that they deferred activities or relied on other authorized funding 
sources such as allocations for projects, visitor fees, donations from 
cooperating associations and friends groups, and concessions fees. From 
2001 to 2005, some parks delayed performing certain preventative 
maintenance activities formerly paid with allocations for daily 
operations until other authorized funding sources, such as project 
funds (including funds for cyclic maintenance, repair and 
rehabilitation, and visitor fees) could be found and approved. 

Rather than eliminating or not performing daily operational activities, 
some parks used volunteers and funding from authorized sources such as 
donations from non-profit partners and concessionaires' fees to 
accomplish activities that were formerly paid with daily operations 
funds. Officials at several park units said that they increasingly 
depend on donations from cooperating associations to pay for training 
and equipment and rely on their staff and volunteers to provide 
information and educational programs to visitors that were 
traditionally offered by park rangers. Funds from these sources can be 
significant, but they are subject to change from year to year. 
Officials at several park units expressed concern about using funding 
from other authorized sources to address needs--not only because the 
funds can vary from year to year, but also because these partners' 
stipulations on how their donations can be used may differ from the 
parks' priorities. As a result, relying on these sources for programs 
that require a long term funding commitment could be problematic. 

The Park Service Has Undertaken Three Management Initiatives to Address 
Fiscal Performance and Accountability of Park Units: 

We identified three management initiatives that the Park Service has 
undertaken to address the fiscal performance and accountability of park 
units and to better manage within their available resources: the 
Business Plan Initiative (BPI), the Core Operations Analysis (COA), and 
the Park Scorecard. Each initiative operates separately and is at 
various stages of development and implementation. Table 2 in appendix 
II summarizes each of the three initiatives and their stages of 
implementation. 

Through the BPI process, park unit staff--with the help of business 
interns from the Student Conservation Association--identify all sources 
and uses of park funds to determine funding levels needed to operate 
and manage park units.[Footnote 11] Using this information, park unit 
managers develop a 5-year business plan to address any gaps between 
available funds and park unit operational and maintenance needs. The 
process used in the BPI involves 6 steps, completed over an 11-week 
period. Park staff and the business interns (1) identify the park 
unit's mission; (2) conduct an inventory of park assets; (3) analyze 
park funding trends; (4) identify sources and uses of park funding; (5) 
analyze park operations and maintenance needs; and (6) develop a 
strategic business plan to address gaps between funds and park needs. 
All 12 of the park units we visited have completed a business 
plan.[Footnote 12] Many officials--both at the unit level and 
headquarters--stated that business plans are, among other things, 
useful in helping them identify future budget needs. Once completed, 
park managers often issue a press release to announce its completion. 
Park managers may also send copies to their legislators, local 
community councils, and park partners (such as cooperating 
associations) to communicate the results. A Park Service official 
stated, however, that the Park Service is still refining these business 
plans to serve as a better tool for justifying funding needs. 

The COA was developed in 2004 to help park managers evaluate their park 
unit's core mission, identify essential park unit activities and 
associated funding levels, and make fully informed decisions on 
staffing and funding. The COA is part of a broader Park Service-wide 
effort to integrate management tools to improve park efficiency. Park 
Service headquarters, regional officials, and park unit staffs work 
together in a step-by-step process to conduct the analysis. These steps 
include preparing a 5-year budget cost projection (BCP) to establish 
baseline financial information and help project future park needs, 
defining core elements of the park unit's mission, identifying park 
priorities, reviewing and analyzing activities and associated staff 
resources, and identifying efficiencies. Budget staff for each park 
unit first complete a 5-year BCP that uses the current year's funding 
level for daily operations as a baseline, and estimates future levels, 
increases in non-personnel costs, and fixed costs such as salaries and 
benefits. The general target of the analysis is to adjust personal 
services and fixed costs at or below 80 percent of the unit's funding 
levels for daily operations. Three of the twelve park units we visited 
have completed (or are in the process of completing) a COA, and three 
will begin the COA in fiscal year 2006. The remaining six park units we 
visited have yet to be selected. Park unit officials told us that the 
preliminary results have helped them determine where efficiencies in 
operations might accrue. A Park Service regional official told us that 
the core operations process is still in its early development, noting 
that preliminary results are useful but too early to determine results 
to be realized by the park units. 

Park Service headquarters developed the Park Scorecard beginning in 
fiscal year 2004 to serve as an indicator of each park unit's fiscal 
and operational condition, and managerial performance. The scorecard is 
intended to provide an overarching summary of each park unit's 
condition by offering a way to analyze individual park unit needs. It 
also provides Park Service officials with information needed to 
understand how park units compare to one another based on broad 
financial, -organizational, -recreational, -and resource-management 
criteria. Although the Park Scorecard is still under development, the 
Park Service's headquarters budget office used it to validate and 
approve requests for increases in daily operations allocations for the 
highest priorities among park units to be funded out of a total of 
$12.5 million that was provided in 2005 for daily operations directed 
at visitor service programs. The Park Service approved requests for 
funding at 3 out of the 12 parks we visited (Badlands National Park, 
Grand Teton National Park, and Yellowstone National Park). Park Service 
headquarters officials, with the assistance and input of park unit 
managers, plan on refining the Park Scorecard to more accurately 
capture all appropriate park measurements and to identify, evaluate, 
and support future budget increases for park units. The Park Service 
also intends for park managers to use the Park Scorecard to facilitate 
discussions about their needs and priorities. 

In closing, we have found that overall, from 2001 through 2004, the 
Park Service increased allocations for support programs and project 
funding while placing less of an emphasis on funds for daily 
operations. In fiscal year 2005, this trend shifted, and as evidenced 
by our visits to 12 park units, appears to be going in the direction 
needed to help the units overcome some of the difficulties they have 
recently experienced in meeting operational needs. In responding to 
these trends, park unit officials found ways to reduce spending on 
their allocations for daily operations and to identify and use 
authorized sources other than these allocations to minimize some 
impacts on park operations and visitor services. While park units are 
relying more on other sources to perform operations, using such funds 
has its drawbacks because it usually takes parks longer, with more 
effort from park employees to obtain and use these sources. Visitor 
fees have been an important and significant source of funds for park 
units to address high priority needs such as reducing its maintenance 
backlog. However, Park Service policy prohibiting the use of visitor 
fees to pay salaries of permanent employees managing projects may 
reduce the flexibility in managing the use of funding for daily 
operations. While the Park Service is embarking upon three management 
initiatives that they believe will improve park performance and 
accountability, and better manage within available resources, it is too 
early to assess the effectiveness of these initiatives. 

GAO Recommendation and Agency Response: 

To reduce some of the pressure on funding for daily operations, we 
recommended that the Secretary of the Interior direct the Director of 
the Park Service to revise its policy to allow park units to use 
visitor fee revenue to pay the cost of permanent employees 
administering projects funded by visitor fees to the extent authorized 
by law. In commenting on a draft of our report, the department 
generally agreed with the recommendation, but stated that it should 
clearly state that visitor fee revenue (and not other sources) be used 
to fund only a limited number of permanent employees and be 
specifically defined for the sole purpose of executing projects funded 
from fee revenue. We believe our recommendation, as written, gives the 
agency the flexibility sought. The department also said that our report 
creates a misleading impression concerning the state of park operations 
in that (1) record high levels of funds are being invested to staff and 
improve parks, and (2) the report does not examine the results achieved 
with these inputs. The department also believes that while employment 
levels at individual park units may have fluctuated for many reasons, 
employment servicewide, including both seasonal and permanent 
employees, was stable. We believe however, that our report provides a 
detailed analysis of the major funding trends affecting Park Service 
operations, including those at the 12 high-visitation park units we 
visited, as well as the department's initiatives and efforts to achieve 
results. 

This concludes our statement for the record. 

GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

For further information on this statement, please contact Robin Nazzaro 
at (202) 512-3841 or nazzaror@gao.gov. Individuals making contributions 
to this testimony included Roy Judy, Assistant Director; Thomas 
Armstrong, Ulana Bihun, Denise Fantone, Doreen Feldman, Tim Guinane, 
Richard Johnson, Alison O'Neill, and Patrick Sigl. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Project Allocations for 12 Selected Park Units, Fiscal 
Years 2001 through 2005: 

Table 1: Project Allocations for 12 Selected Park Units, Fiscal Years 
2001 through 2005 (dollars in thousands): 

Park unit: Acadia NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $385; 
Fiscal year 2002: $772; 
Fiscal year 2003: $699; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,237; 
Fiscal year 2005: $481; 
Total: $3,574. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $385; 
Fiscal year 2002: $747; 
Fiscal year 2003: $659; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,119; 
Fiscal year 2005: $417; 
Total: $3,327. 

Park unit: Badlands NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $217; 
Fiscal year 2002: $130; 
Fiscal year 2003: $689; 
Fiscal year 2004: $647; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,394; 
Total: $3,077. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $217; 
Fiscal year 2002: $126; 
Fiscal year 2003: $649; 
Fiscal year 2004: $585; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,210; 
Total: $2,787. 

Park unit: Bryce Canyon NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $531; 
Fiscal year 2002: $365; 
Fiscal year 2003: $357; 
Fiscal year 2004: $433; 
Fiscal year 2005: $402; 
Total: $2,088. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $531; 
Fiscal year 2002: $353; 
Fiscal year 2003: $336; 
Fiscal year 2004: $391; 
Fiscal year 2005: $349; 
Total: $1,943. 

Park unit: Gettysburg NMP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $7,551; 
Fiscal year 2002: $638; 
Fiscal year 2003: $753; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,296; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,324; 
Total: $11,562. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $7,551; 
Fiscal year 2002: $618; 
Fiscal year 2003: $709; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,172; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,150; 
Total: $11,200. 

Park unit: Grand Canyon NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $824; 
Fiscal year 2002: $1,550; 
Fiscal year 2003: $1,173; 
Fiscal year 2004: $2,125; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,053; 
Total: $6,725. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $824; 
Fiscal year 2002: $1,500; 
Fiscal year 2003: $1,106; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,922; 
Fiscal year 2005: $914; 
Total: $6,266. 

Park unit: Grand Teton NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $861; 
Fiscal year 2002: $423; 
Fiscal year 2003: $1,327; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,233; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,070; 
Total: $5,914. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $861; 
Fiscal year 2002: $409; 
Fiscal year 2003: $1,250; 
Fiscal year 2004: $1,115; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,797; 
Total: $5,432. 

Park unit: Mount Rushmore NMem; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $271; 
Fiscal year 2002: $118; 
Fiscal year 2003: $113; 
Fiscal year 2004: $146; 
Fiscal year 2005: $696; 
Total: $1,344. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $271; 
Fiscal year 2002: $114; 
Fiscal year 2003: $107; 
Fiscal year 2004: $132; 
Fiscal year 2005: $604; 
Total: $1,228. 

Park unit: Shenandoah NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $1,409; 
Fiscal year 2002: $781; 
Fiscal year 2003: $647; 
Fiscal year 2004: $862; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,393; 
Total: $6,092. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $1,409; 
Fiscal year 2002: $756; 
Fiscal year 2003: $610; 
Fiscal year 2004: $779; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,078; 
Total: $5,632. 

Park unit: Sequoia and Kings Canyon NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $2,038; 
Fiscal year 2002: $2,859; 
Fiscal year 2003: $3,364; 
Fiscal year 2004: $2,927; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,760; 
Total: $13,948. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $2,038; 
Fiscal year 2002: $2,768; 
Fiscal year 2003: $3,171; 
Fiscal year 2004: $2,647; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,396; 
Total: $13,020. 

Park unit: Yellowstone NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $43; 
Fiscal year 2002: $4; 
Fiscal year 2003: $9; 
Fiscal year 2004: $12; 
Fiscal year 2005: $3,128; 
Total: $3,196. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $43; 
Fiscal year 2002: $4; 
Fiscal year 2003: $8; 
Fiscal year 2004: $11; 
Fiscal year 2005: $2,716; 
Total: $2,782. 

Park unit: Yosemite NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $3,620; 
Fiscal year 2002: $2,718; 
Fiscal year 2003: $4,034; 
Fiscal year 2004: $3,532; 
Fiscal year 2005: $3,778; 
Total: $17,682. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: $3,620; 
Fiscal year 2002: $2,631; 
Fiscal year 2003: $3,802; 
Fiscal year 2004: $3,194; 
Fiscal year 2005: $3,280; 
Total: $16,527. 

Park unit: Zion NP; 

Nominal; 
Fiscal year 2001: $0; 
Fiscal year 2002: $103; 
Fiscal year 2003: $310; 
Fiscal year 2004: $195; 
Fiscal year 2005: $1,000; 
Total: $1,608. 

Inflation-adjusted; 
Fiscal year 2001: 0; 
Fiscal year 2002: $100; 
Fiscal year 2003: $292; 
Fiscal year 2004: $176; 
Fiscal year 2005: $868; 
Total: $1,436. 

Legend: 

NP=National Park: 

NMP=National Military Park: 

NMem=National Memorial: 

Source: GAO analysis of Park Service data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Park Service Management Initiatives to Address Park Units' 
Fiscal Performance and Accountability: 

Table 2: Park Service Management Initiatives to Address Park Units' 
Fiscal Performance and Accountability: 

Management initiative: Business Plan Initiative (BPI); 
Description: Park managers, with the help of business interns, identify 
all sources and uses of park funding and operational requirements to 
determine levels needed to operate and manage their park. From this, a 
plan is developed to address any gaps between available funds and park 
unit needs; 
Development and implementation: Park Service headquarters and regional 
offices seek voluntary participation in the BPI process; First BPI was 
prepared in 1997 by Yellowstone National Park; About 12 parks units 
participate in a BPI every year; As of January 2006, 25 percent of all 
park units have participated. 

Management initiative: Core Operations Analysis (COA); 
Description: A step-by-step process where park unit, regional, and 
headquarters officials evaluate the park unit's core mission and 
identify essential park unit activities and associated funding needs; 
Development and implementation: Developed in 2004; The Park Service 
intends to have all park units complete a COA by 2011; To achieve this 
goal, the Park Service will select 50 park units per year to 
participate. 

Management initiative: Park Scorecard; 
Description: Headquarters officials use a series of indicators to 
compare each park unit's fiscal and operational condition, and 
managerial performance; 
Development and implementation: Park Scorecard is in the development 
stage; Used to justify park units' budget increases for daily 
operations in 2005; To be used to support and evaluate park operations 
in the future. 

Source: GAO analysis of Park Service data. 

[End of table] 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] The Park Service has a separate appropriation account for 
construction, which includes major improvements and repairs; an 
appropriation account for the U.S. Park Police; and other appropriation 
accounts, such as National Recreation and Preservation, Historic 
Preservation, and Land Acquisition and State Assistance. However, they 
are not the subject of this report. 

[2] U.S. Government Accountability Office, National Park Service: Major 
Operations Funding Trends and How Selected Park Units Responded to 
Those Trends for Fiscal Years 2001 through 2005, GAO-06-431 
(Washington, D.C.: March 31, 2006). 

[3] To remove the effects of inflation, we adjusted nominal dollars 
using the Gross Domestic Product Price Index for Government Consumption 
Expenditures and Gross Investment (federal nondefense sector), with 
2001 as the base year. 

[4] These include (1) national parks, such as Yellowstone in Idaho, 
Montana, and Wyoming; Yosemite in California; and Grand Canyon in 
Arizona; (2) national historic parks, such as Harper's Ferry in 
Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia; and Valley Forge in 
Pennsylvania; (3) national battlefields, such as Antietam in Maryland; 
(4) national historic sites such as Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C; 
and Carl Sandburg's home in North Carolina; (5) national monuments, 
such as Fort Sumter in South Carolina and the Statue of Liberty in New 
York and New Jersey; (6) national preserves, such as Yukon-Charley 
Rivers in Alaska; and (7) national recreation areas, such as Lake Mead 
in Arizona and Nevada. 

[5] During the period of this review, the Park Service collected fees, 
referred to as "offsetting collections," under the Recreational Fee 
Demonstration Program authorized by Pub. L. No. 104-134, as amended, 
which stipulated that uses for these funds include backlogged repair 
and maintenance projects, interpretation, signage, habitat or facility 
enhancement, resource preservation, annual operation (including fee 
collection), maintenance, and law enforcement relating to public use. 
Under this program at least 80 percent of the fees were retained by a 
park unit and 20 percent went to a central fund managed by the Park 
Service. Under current legislation (the Federal Lands Recreation 
Enhancement Act, Pub. L. No. 108-447, enacted December 8, 2004), park 
units are allowed to collect and use visitor fees in a generally 
similar fashion. 

[6] Projects and other support programs include allocations from the 
ONPS account other than allocations for daily operations. It includes 
overall funding for numerous project-related sources such as Cyclic 
Maintenance, Repair and Rehabilitation and other support programs such 
as allocations for central offices (seven regional offices and the 
headquarters office), field resource centers, and other external 
administrative costs such as telecommunications and unemployment 
compensation payments. 

[7] From 2001 through 2005, the Park Service allocated a total of about 
$62 million to Natural Resource Challenge related-programs from its 
ONPS lump-sum appropriation, the majority of which was project-related 
funding. 

[8] As reported on pages 8 and 9, appropriations for the ONPS account 
increased from about $1.4 billion in fiscal year 2001 to almost $1.7 
billion in fiscal year 2005, an average annual increase of about 4.9 
percent. 

[9] In both 2001 and 2005, visitor fee spending goals for deferred 
maintenance were not met. In fiscal year 2001, the amount of visitor 
fees obligated for deferred maintenance was $61 million. In fiscal year 
2005, the amount was $73.1 million. 

[10] While these reductions do not directly affect a visitor's 
experience, they also may hinder the park's ability to carry out 
operational duties. For example, officials at several park units 
explained that equipment, such as maintenance trucks, were old and in 
need of replacement. For several of the park units, certain divisions' 
personnel costs account for such a large percentage of their allocation 
for daily operations that reductions in other areas are not an option. 
At Grand Canyon National Park, for instance, the interpretive division 
had approximately $75,000 available in their allocation for daily 
operations in 2001 to pay for non-personnel costs such as travel and 
supplies. By 2005, approximately 99 percent of the division's 
allocation for daily operations was spent on personnel, relying on 
other authorized funding sources to make up the difference. 

[11] The Student Conservation Association provides high school and 
college students (among others) with conservation service internships 
and volunteer opportunities in the National Parks, National Forests, 
and other public lands. 

[12] Park Service officials said that 2 out of the 12 parks we visited 
(Grand Canyon and Yosemite National Parks) completed a BPI through 
contracting external consultants on their own.