The Grand Canyon closed indefinitely to visitors Wednesday, joining other national parks seeking to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Staff at the Grand Canyon had been shutting down visitors services piecemeal as the federal government initially rebuffed its request to shutter completely. On Tuesday, visitors still had access to restrooms, a grocery store, and bank at Grand Canyon Village, and trails along the popular South Rim. Interior Secretary David Bernhardt said he finally approved the park's request at the recommendation of a county health official who said keeping the park open puts employees, residents, and tourists at risk, the AP reports. The park reported earlier this week that a resident who worked at a lodge run by a concessionaire tested positive for COVID-19 and spent time in isolation.
"It is a relief to a lot of the people in the park and community members," says Grand Canyon spokeswoman Joelle Baird. The Navajo Nation had pleaded with the federal government to deny tourists access to the Grand Canyon to keep its confirmed cases of coronavirus among residents from rising. Forty new cases pushed the total to 214 as of Wednesday while the death total remained at seven, according to tribal officials. "The closure of the park took longer than it should've, but we're glad it's finally closed," Navajo President Jonathan Nez said. The Grand Canyon closure includes a state highway that runs through the park's South Rim entrance and the East Rim on to the Navajo reservation. The road will be open to local traffic only.
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