Blackfeet Tribe closes eastern boundary of Glacier Park
KALISPELL, Mont. (AP) — The Blackfeet Tribal Business Council has voted to close the eastern boundary of Glacier National Park for the rest of the tourist season after a recent spike of COVID-19 cases in Montana.
Montana has reported 164 cases of the respiratory virus in the past seven days, including 29 cases reported Friday. There has also been another death, the state’s 22nd.
In a Facebook post, the Rosebud County Health Department said the death would be assigned to the county because the victim had a residence there. However, the person had not been living there. County officials were not available Friday to say where the person had been living.
Montana has confirmed 829 cases of COVID-19, including 218 people who are still infected and 14 who are hospitalized.
The Blackfeet Tribal Council passed its ordinance Thursday “for the protection of the residents of the Blackfeet Reservation,” tribal officials posted on Facebook.
The decision, along with other coronavirus-related adaptations, will make for an unusual season in Glacier National Park, which saw just over 3 million visitors in 2019.
The scenic Going-to-the-Sun Road will not be open to vehicles to Logan Pass by July 4, park spokesperson Gina Kerzman told the Daily Inter Lake.
Park Superintendent Jeff Mow said without the eastern entries and exits from the park, managers may have to develop a timed-entry system to spread out visitor use on Going-to-the-Sun Road. The two-lane mountain road has limited parking and restroom facilities.
Park staff close the Sun Road when parking lots at Avalanche Creek fill up to avoid overcrowding.
Social distancing requirements have prevented operations of Glacier’s “Jammer” buses as well as the park’s shuttle bus service.
The Fish Creek campground opened Friday to those with reservations made through reservations.gov. Fish Creek and the St. Mary Campground, which likely won’t be available before July 9, are the only two of Glacier’s 12 developed campgrounds expected to operate this summer, Mow told the Missoulian.
The border between the United States and Canada is closed to all but essential travel, meaning tourists can’t travel between Glacier National Park and Waterton Lakes International Peace Park.
For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. The vast majority of people recover.