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NewsMarch 17, 2008

YAKIMA, Wash. -- Hundreds of trees blown down by wind exceeding 100 mph. Roads and campgrounds washed away by swollen rivers. Damages still unknown to be repaired on backcountry trails. Winter storms have devastated the Pacific Northwest's popular national parks each of the past two years, causing damage that has run into the millions of dollars...

The Associated Press

YAKIMA, Wash. -- Hundreds of trees blown down by wind exceeding 100 mph. Roads and campgrounds washed away by swollen rivers. Damages still unknown to be repaired on backcountry trails.

Winter storms have devastated the Pacific Northwest's popular national parks each of the past two years, causing damage that has run into the millions of dollars.

After last year's enormous repair effort in nearby Mount Rainier National Park, the major repairs this year are taking place in Olympic National Park, which offers visitors miles of Pacific coast in addition to craggy alpine peaks and forested lowlands.

But while Olympic is the focus of the major storm repairs this year, teams also have new damage to fix at Mount Rainier and North Cascades national parks, hopefully before summer visitors arrive.

This season's biggest storm struck in the first week of December, pouring more than 10 inches of rain on some areas in 24 hours. Two people were killed, dozens were stranded in flooded homes, thousands were left without power.

Total damages have been estimated at more than $4 million. That's on top of the $5 million still being spent to fix damage caused by last year's storms.

Repair work continues at Mount Rainier National Park, the crown jewel of the Pacific Northwest, where damage from a storm in 2006 was estimated at about $24 million. The 2007 storm narrowly missed the park, Superintendent Dave Uberuaga said.

The park will reopen its popular Paradise Inn at the foot of Mount Rainier in May following a two-year refurbishment project, Uberuaga said. Workers struggled to stay on schedule this winter after 162 inches of snow fell in just 10 days.

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"It's been a challenge getting up to Paradise. We lost more days because of the snow than we did last year because of the flood," Uberuaga said.

Just south of the Canadian border, 684,000-acre North Cascades National Park has reopened miles of trails that had been impassable since the 2006 storm. Campgrounds also have been repaired, Superintendent Chip Jenkins said.

Several conservation and recreation groups banded together following the 2006 storm to recruit volunteers and raise money for repairs at the region's parks.

"Our park system is the most recognized park system in the world, and these are environmentally important areas that need to be protected and preserved for current and future generations," said David Graves, northwest field representative for the National Parks Conservation Association.

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On the Net:

Olympic: http://www.nps.gov/olym/

Mount Rainier: http://www.nps.gov/mora/

North Cascades: http://www.nps.gov/noca/

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