Trump Administration Cuts Leave Park Service With Fewer Lifeguards
Recreational beaches at National Park Service sites are coping with a shortage of lifeguards caused by Trump administration staffing freezes and cuts, lawmakers and advocacy groups told 窪蹋勛圖厙 News.
Some of the parks are reducing the hours when lifeguards are available, rushing to recruit hires, or opening beaches without any lifeguards at all. Fewer than half of the 7,700 seasonal federal park positions such as lifeguards had been filled as of late May, according to Bill Wade, executive director of the , a membership group that has sought to get employees reinstated.
We can assume in some cases, because there are a lot of national parks with water, that there will be a shortage in some areas, he said.
The National Park Service did not respond to questions about the situation. The Department of the Interior said lifeguard shortages are a nationwide concern even outside of public lands.
At the National Park Service, we are expecting our lifeguard staffing to pick up as summer goes on, said agency spokesperson J. Elizabeth Peace. We appreciate the publics understanding and cooperation as we work to ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for all.
Entrances to the recreational beaches on , a more than 37-mile barrier island in Maryland and Virginia, bore signs in early June warning that there were no lifeguards on duty. Their absence worried Azania Lane-Majestic, a visitor from Pittsburgh. She went online and looked up how to spot and escape a riptide just in case.
The presence of lifeguards provides an extra level of security, said Lane-Majestic, 28. Lifeguards are an important extra set of eyes.
on Staten Island in New York will have lifeguards only on Saturdays and Sundays, according to the sites National Park Service webpage, although lifeguards staffed the beach Thursday-Sunday previously, per lifeguard hours posted by the National Park Planner, a resource on more than 160 National Park Service sites.
And the safety of swimmers at the s Sandy Hook, a 6-mile-long barrier beach in New Jersey, could be at risk, said Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.). He is calling on the Trump administration to about why the National Park Service is failing to hire the lifeguards and other essential personnel, according to a June 9 letter to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum.
About 1,000 park service employees in February by the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, Wade said. An estimated 2,500 permanent park service workers or about 13% of the total workforce also or offered by the administration in its effort to downsize the federal government. A hiring freeze also delayed the recruiting season for lifeguards.

At Some Federal Beaches, Surfs Up but the Lifeguard Chairs Empty
Some of the nations most well-known beaches are managed by the National Park Service, which saw about 1,000 employees laid off in February by the quasi-agency Department of Government Efficiency, then led by Elon Musk. The void has become a serious public health and safety concern.