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How To Keep The Traveler’s Lights On

Together, We Can Save “the NPR of National Park News”

By Kurt Repanshek, Founder and editor-in-chief

Since announcing four weeks ago that the National Parks Traveler would be shutting down due to insufficient funding to keep it afloat, I have been overwhelmed by the outpouring of concern for the Traveler's future. I deeply appreciate this outreach, and it is gratifying to know that over the past 18 years so many readers have appreciated our unique journalistic endeavor.

While we don’t want to shutter the media organization whose sole mission is to provide coverage of the National Park Service and the National Park System, it can no longer be done on a shoestring. It requires a reliable revenue flow. To improve both editorial coverage and financial stability, the nonprofit organization needs to employ a small (3-4) full-time staff, continue to commission freelance assignments, and address IT needs and other operational expenses.

Kurt Repanshek, founder and editor-in-chief of the National Parks Traveler/Patrick Cone

In the past, I have issued open pleas seeking your financial support. Now I need your help more than ever if there can be any glimmer of hope to keep the Traveler from being dispatched to the “news desert” of American journalism, another vital media outlet lost.

Doug Leen, of Ranger Doug acclaim, calls the Traveler “The NPR of National Park news; the Lonely Planet virtual guidebook to the NPS Galaxy.”

“Most small independent and publicly supported news outlets are vanishing in America thanks to big money. Kurt keeps the NPS on its toes and the public informed,” says Leen, a once-upon-a-time seasonal ranger who spent decades collecting and preserving Works Progress Administration national park posters so he could donate them to the Interior Department. “I urge everyone who loves NPS news to support National Parks Traveler.”

With roughly 2 million readers and listeners a year, the Traveler has an audience that can provide the stability it needs. If just 4,000 readers and listeners committed by year’s end to recurring monthly donations of $10 — just $120 a year — the lights would burn brightly.

The Traveler has been recognized through the years by the Coalition to Protect America’s National Parks, the George Wright Society, and the Western National Parks Association for its coverage of the parks and its guardian agency. We’ve provided you with in-depth coverage of climate-change impacts on the parks, invasive species, and the fallout of budget and staffing shortfalls. We’ve explored parks called the crown jewels of the park system as well as overlooked wonders, and we've been the only organization to annually point to threatened and endangered parks.

With your support, and that of your friends, colleagues, and organizations, we can continue to bring you that coverage. But we can't do it without you. If this coverage is important to you, please sign up for recurring monthly donations before year’s end.

In issuing this final plea, I wanted to give you a chance to help decide whether the Traveler has any future beyond this year.

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Comments

It boils down to a public service to pay.  I'm in.


I have chipped in. Hope to keep seeing Traveler going.


Fingers crossed that enough people sign up. I would miss this site dearly.


Park Lovers,

NOTHING IS FREE.  There is an operational cost to keeping the National Parks Traveler going.... There is also a cost of shuttering the National Parks Traveler.  Not only will we loose the fantastic content and coverage of OUR Naitonal Parks, the National Parks will lose one of its strongest advocates.  The Traveler provides good, honest, advocacy for our National Parks and speaks on behalf of all of us who love the Parks, Americas greatest idea.  The Traveler brings together journalists, authors, park service employees, other non-profits, you, and me in an effort to speak with one voice on defending, preserving and improving our National parks and the National Park experience.  The cost of closing the National Parks is so much greater than the cost operating it.  Let's not let that happen-  Take up the charge, do your part, and contribute.   


Your work is much appreciated. I'm in!


Never having donated in previous years of reading and enjoying the Traveler, I owe you big.  I'll sign up.


There is only one National Parks Traveler. 


The Traveler is an invaluable source of information on so many levels. Personally, I use it for trip planning and to keep abreast of the news and politics surrounding these special places. I also appreciate its role as "watchdog", holding public officials accountable for decisions that adversely impact the parks and their resources.

Professionally, I use the Traveler's content in my middle school science classroom. The website is an invaluable collection of reliable articles and resources my students can use to deepen their understanding of and appreciation for their/our national parks. I also listen to the podcast and share stories with my students when they connect with a topic we are studying. When I saw the news of the Traveler shutting down, my first thought was to race and save as much content as I could. It would be a shame to lose this repository of information.

Admittedly, in the past, I supported the Traveler on a periodic basis, giving once or twice a year. Now, I am becoming a monthly supporter for $20 per month in hopes that maybe we just need 2,000 people giving that amount to "keep the lights on" now and for a long time to come.


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The Essential RVing Guide

The Essential RVing Guide to the National Parks

The National Parks RVing Guide, aka the Essential RVing Guide To The National Parks, is the definitive guide for RVers seeking information on campgrounds in the National Park System where they can park their rigs. It's available for free for both iPhones and Android models.

This app is packed with RVing specific details on more than 250 campgrounds in more than 70 parks.

You'll also find stories about RVing in the parks, some tips if you've just recently turned into an RVer, and some planning suggestions. A bonus that wasn't in the previous eBook or PDF versions of this guide are feeds of Traveler content: you'll find our latest stories as well as our most recent podcasts just a click away.

So whether you have an iPhone or an Android, download this app and start exploring the campgrounds in the National Park System where you can park your rig.