Washington — The National Park Service will remove free admission on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth and add free entry on President Donald Trump’s birthday next year, officials said Tuesday. The Department of the Interior announced the changes on the Park Service website; they take effect Jan. 1 and accompany higher entrance fees for visitors. Remaining fee-free dates include Presidents, Memorial and Independence Days, Veterans Day and Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday. Critics said the move promotes the president and downplays civil rights history; officials called it a resident-focused fee change. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting existing research.
The addition of free entry on President Trump’s birthday and the restructuring of park fee policies benefits U.S. residents visiting on that date, may increase domestic visitation, and could provide publicity for the administration while shifting more entrance fee burden toward international visitors.
People and communities who observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth — and organizations that use free national park access for commemoration and education — suffered reduced free access and a perceived symbolic exclusion from nationally recognized fee-free days.
After reading and researching latest news.... I find that the National Park Service will drop fee-free access on MLK Day and Juneteenth and add free entry on Trump’s birthday starting Jan. 1, accompanied by higher fees for non-resident visitors; officials cite a resident-focused policy while critics cite politicization and debate.
U.S. Parks Drop MLK, Juneteenth; Add Trump Birthday
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