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Foreign visitors would be charged more to see national parks in the United States under the new executive order.
Rain can put a damper on your July 4 display, and drought risks can turn a neighborhood celebration into a five-alarm fire.
The visitors who trek to America’s national parks are already noticing the changes, just months after President Donald Trump ...
In its 2026 fiscal year budget proposal released in May, the Interior Department estimated that such a surcharge would ...
The two campers found dead at a remote campground in Michigan last month have been identified as a John and Bradley Baird, a ...
The National Park Service has seen a staggering decline in its permanent workforce since the start of the second Trump ...
War artifacts are typically weapons and uniforms, but occasionally something so strange shows up, that even historians are at ...
Layoffs and departures after pressure from the Trump administration have left sites struggling, with the remaining employees ...
At the Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland, visitors this summer are seeing shuttered lifeguard towers and signs ...
President Donald Trump told an Iowa crowd he would sign the megabill legislative package in a patriotic ceremony on July 4 ...
Launched in 2008 by the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators, Operation Dry Water is a nationwide ...
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday to increase entrance fees at U.S. national parks for visitors ...