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Grand Canyon National ParkRangers on rim with ambulance and patrol vehicle
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Grand Canyon National Park
Visitor & Resource Protection

Grand Canyon National Park

Visitor and Resource Protection

“. . .to promote and regulate the use of the . . .national parks . . . which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”   - National Park Service Organic Act, 16 U.S.C.1

This statement in the National Park Service Organic Act of 1916, continues today as our vision statement. Protecting our visitors and our cultural and natural resources are the heart of the National Park Service. This is the mission of the NPS Visitor and Resource Protection (VRP) program at Grand Canyon National Park.

Our staff continue to perform a multitude of varied functions including enforcing laws that protect people and the parks, administering the fee program, protecting and preserving the resources, fire management, structural fire prevention and response, providing search and rescue, providing emergency medical response and care, managing large-scale incidents, field training our newest park rangers, responding to and managing developing emergencies, actively participating in the park’s aviation program, patrolling and protecting the river, and providing a level of on-the-ground customer service that has long been the tradition of park rangers.

Grand Canyon has one of the most complex, challenging and innovative protection programs in the National Park Service.


 
park helicopter doing a short haul

 

Click here to download a ranger made flyer for

Grand Canyon Ranger Jobs. (107kb PDF File)

 
backcountry archeology

Click here to go to Canyon Ranger page.

 
Ranger Boyers on horse patrol
Click here to go to South Rim Ranger page.
 
UNKAR DELTA IN GRAND CANYON  

Did You Know?
In Grand Canyon, the broad, sandy expanse on the north bank of the Colorado River is Unkar Delta, composed of rock debris carried from the North Rim by Unkar Creek. Prehistoric Pueblo people occupied numerous sites on Unkar Delta and along Unkar Creek for about 350 years (A.D. 850 to A.D. 1200)

Last Updated: September 26, 2008 at 14:50 EST