'Gestapo'
tactics meet senior citizens at Yellowstone
By John Macone
Pat Vaillancourt went on a trip last week that was
intended to showcase some of America’s greatest treasures.
Instead, the Salisbury resident said she and others on
her tour bus witnessed an ugly spectacle that made her embarrassed, angry and
heartbroken for her country.
Vaillancourt was one of thousands of people who found
themselves in a national park as the federal government shutdown went into
effect on Oct. 1. For many hours her tour group, which included senior citizen
visitors from Japan, Australia, Canada and the United States, were locked in a
Yellowstone National Park hotel under armed guard.
The tourists were treated harshly by armed park
employees, she said, so much so that some of the foreign tourists with limited
English skills thought they were under arrest.
When finally allowed to leave, the bus was not allowed
to halt at all along the 2.5-hour trip out of the park, not even to stop at
private bathrooms that were open along the route.
“We’ve become a country of fear, guns and control,”
said Vaillancourt, who grew up in Lawrence. “It was like they brought out the
armed forces. Nobody was saying, ‘we’re sorry,’ it was all like — ” as she
clenched her fist and banged it against her forearm.
Vaillancourt took part in a nine-day tour of western
parks and sites along with about four dozen senior citizen tourists. One of the
highlights of the tour was to be Yellowstone, where they arrived just as the
shutdown went into effect.
Rangers systematically sent visitors out of the park,
though some groups that had hotel reservations — such as Vaillancourt’s — were
allowed to stay for two days. Those two days started out on a sour note, she
said.
The bus stopped along a road when a large herd of
bison passed nearby, and seniors filed out to take photos. Almost immediately,
an armed ranger came by and ordered them to get back in, saying they couldn’t
“recreate.” The tour guide, who had paid a $300 fee the day before to bring the
group into the park, argued that the seniors weren’t “recreating,” just taking
photos.
“She responded and said, ‘Sir, you are recreating,’
and her tone became very aggressive,” Vaillancourt said.
The seniors quickly filed back onboard and the bus
went to the Old Faithful Inn, the park’s premier lodge located adjacent to the
park’s most famous site, Old Faithful geyser. That was as close as they could
get to the famous site — barricades were erected around Old Faithful, and the
seniors were locked inside the hotel, where armed rangers stayed at the door.
“They looked like Hulk Hogans, armed. They told us you
can’t go outside,” she said. “Some of the Asians who were on the tour said, ‘Oh
my God, are we under arrest?’ They felt like they were criminals.”
By Oct. 3 the park, which sees an average of 4,500
visitors a day, was nearly empty. The remaining hotel visitors were required to
leave.
As the bus made its 2.5-hour journey out of
Yellowstone, the tour guide made arrangements to stop at a full-service
bathroom at an in-park dude ranch he had done business with in the past. Though
the bus had its own small bathroom, Vaillancourt said seniors were looking for
a more comfortable place to stop. But no stop was made — Vaillancourt said the
dude ranch had been warned that its license to operate would be revoked if it
allowed the bus to stop. So the bus continued on to Livingston, Mont., a
gateway city to the park.
The bus trip made headlines in Livingston, where the
local newspaper Livingston Enterprise interviewed the tour guide, Gordon
Hodgson, who accused the park service of “Gestapo tactics.”
“The national parks belong to the people,” he told the
Enterprise. “This isn’t right.”
Calls to Yellowstone’s communications office were not
returned, as most of the personnel have been furloughed.
Many of the foreign visitors were shocked and dismayed
by what had happened and how they were treated, Vaillancourt said.
“A lot of people who were foreign said they wouldn’t
come back (to America),” she said.
The National Parks’ aggressive actions have spawned
significant criticism in western states. Governors in park-rich states such as
Arizona have been thwarted in their efforts to fund partial reopenings of
parks. The Washington Times quoted an unnamed Park Service official who said
park law enforcement personnel were instructed to “make life as difficult for
people as we can. It’s disgusting.”
The experience brought up many feelings in
Vaillancourt. What struck her most was a widely circulated story about a group
of World War II veterans who were on a trip to Washington, D.C., to see the
World War II memorial when the shutdown began. The memorial was barricaded and
guards were posted, but the vets pushed their way in.
That reminded her of her father, a World War II
veteran who spent three years in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.
“My father took a lot of crap from the Japanese,” she
recalled, her eyes welling with tears. “Every day they made him bow to the
Japanese flag. But he stood up to them.
“He always said to stand up for what you believe in,
and don’t let them push you around,” she said, adding she was sad to see “fear,
guns and control” turned on citizens in her own country.
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