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Rocky Mountain National Park remains open despite government shutdown

Trails, roads will remain accessible, but some visitor centers may close

Visitors check in at portals to enter Rocky Mountain National Park during the shutdown of the federal government Wednesday, Oct. 1,2025, in Estes Park. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Visitors check in at portals to enter Rocky Mountain National Park during the shutdown of the federal government Wednesday, Oct. 1,2025, in Estes Park. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
DENVER, CO - NOVEMBER 8:  Elise Schmelzer - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : Denver Post's John Meyer on Monday, January 13, 2014.  (Photo By Cyrus McCrimmon/The Denver Post)
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Colorado’s most-visited national park remains open despite the federal government shutdown, but details about how the shutdown will impact services and operations remain unclear.

The gates to east side — at Beaver Meadows and Fall River — are open, staffed and visitors are traveling into the park, Estes Park Mayor Gary Hall said Wednesday. “That’s a good thing — how long that’s sustainable, that remains to be seen.”

Many of Colorado’s 54,000 federal civilian workers in limbo amid shutdown, but public lands are open

Park spokeswoman Kyle Patterson referred questions from The Denver Post to National Park Service headquarters in Washington.

A -- which oversees the Park Service -- about nationwide operations during the shutdown said park roads, trails and open-air memorials will generally remain accessible to visitors. However, park facilities or areas that are generally locked during non-business hours should be locked and inaccessible. That includes buildings, the majority of the visitor centers and gated parking lots. Road and trail conditions won't be updated, and websites won't be maintained.

Much of the park service's staff will be furloughed, except those deemed necessary for law enforcement and emergency response.

Estee Rivera Murdock, executive director of the nonprofit Rocky Mountain Conservancy, said the Fall River Visitor Center near the entrance to the park on U.S. 34, will remain open, however, since it is operated by the conservancy, not park staff, and is located outside of the park boundary. "We've done that in all previous shutdowns, also," Murdock said.

The shutdown comes at the worst possible time because this is a peak season when the park attracts hordes of visitors to see fall colors and rutting elk, she added.

"We need peak staffing this time of the year," Murdock said. "We’re absolutely concerned about not having full staffing in the park. We want visitors to have a wonderful experience, and we want to make sure the resources are appropriately protected."

The conservancy is urging visitors to use caution, warning that there could be delays in emergency response, including search-and-rescue and law enforcement.

"Those are positions that are not furloughed," Murdock said, "but there are always delays when you're missing the vast majority of the staff throughout the park who have been furloughed."

Rocky Mountain National Park's mountainous Trail Ridge Road, which climbs over the Continental Divide and reaches 12,183 feet, typically closes in the fall when snow begins to fall.

In August, Gov. Jared Polis told The Denver Post that the state stood ready with a plan to keep Rocky Mountain National Park open in the event of a shutdown.

“We will keep our national parks open," Polis said then. "That requires cooperation with the federal government. Both Biden and Trump, when they were facing shutdowns, were fine with that. Itap a matter of us figuring out how to pay for it and do it. We haven’t had to do it, but we came very close a couple times.”

According to a news release posted Wednesday afternoon, the Polis administration expects Colorado's eight destinations managed by the National Park Service to remain open under conditions similar to Rocky Mountain, at least for the near term. They include three other national parks -- Great Sand Dunes, Mesa Verde and Black Canyon of the Gunnison -- and four national monuments (Dinosaur, Florissant Fossil Beds, Hovenweep and the Colorado National Monument).

“I have repeatedly called on the federal government to keep national parks open, especially during the busy fall tourism season," Polis said in the release. "The state is offering support to keep Colorado’s iconic national parks open for Coloradans and visitors and we continue to monitor for next steps.”

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