Report may spur better cellphone coverage

Published: September 30, 2012 

communication: Mount Rainier park to look at improving reception, particularly at high-traffic areas

Can you hear me now?

The odds aren’t very good if you are trying to make a cellphone call at Mount Rainier National Park. There are places where you can get reception: the summit (sometimes), Sunrise (almost always), and standing next to the stop sign at Paradise (depending on your carrier).

However, there is no cellphone reception in one of the most popular areas of the park: the 10-mile corridor from Longmire to Paradise. And even at Paradise, reception is sketchy at best.

This might soon change as park officials look for ways to make Rainier a little safer.

Rainier superintendent Randy King told The News Tribune recently that the park will look at improving cellphone reception, especially in high-traffic areas such as Longmire.

A report released last week by the National Park Service board of review that examined the New Year’s Day shooting death of law enforcement ranger Margaret Anderson recommended the park update standard operating procedures related to communication during crisis.

King told The News Tribune that several responding agencies, including the FBI, had trouble communicating in the park during the Anderson shooting because of the lack of cellphone reception. Park officials communicate by radio.

“They (law enforcement agencies) really depend on the cellphones for a lot of what they do anymore, and when you get there ... (reception) is pretty hard to come by,” King said.

A separate NPS board of review is examining the backcountry deaths of five people above Paradise between December and January.

“One of the things we are looking at is, would cellphone coverage have a made a difference?” King said. “Maybe. Maybe not. But it’s cause to re-evaluate that need because that’s how people communicate.”

In the past, the park has launched search-and-rescue operations, mostly on the upper mountain, after being notified via cellphone. Sometimes even when park visitors can’t get a signal from their coverage provider, they are still able to call 911.

King said the mountainous environment would make comprehensive cell coverage quite challenging at Rainier. “But I think you could at least (provide coverage) within those high-activity, high-visitation corridors.”

craig.hill@thenewstribune.com 253-597-8497 Blog.thenewstribune.com/adventure @AdventureGuys

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