News

A Muir Woods exhibit became the first in the nation to be altered following President Trump's executive order in March that ...
At least two Connecticut towns are hoping to raise awareness about the hazards of swimming in prohibited areas near dams.
Descriptions and displays at scores of parks and historic sites have been flagged for review in connection with an executive ...
The Colorado Department of Transportation placed new safety signs around Washington Park in Denver to make it safer for ...
A symbol of Capitol HIll’s “Hot Rat Summer” has been restored — partially — on the historic Cal Anderson Gatehouse. Dedicated neighbors, artists, and two members of ...
A network of 40 organizations with Marxist and Islamist ideologies protest Israel in D.C., chanting militant slogans amid ...
EUCLID, Ohio -- Euclid City Council has officially adopted the Sims Park Master Plan after months of work and public engagement.
A troubling sign of the times: national park visitors being asked to report information that is "negative" about past or living Americans.
Signs with a QR code leads visitors at National Park Service sites to a survey asking if posted information "is negative about either past or living Americans" or fail to emphasizes site's beauty.
The signs, which were posted June 13 at all National Park Service sites by order of Interior Secretary Doug Bergum, begin innocuously by asking visitors to download a QR code and answer three ...