2021 Annual Activity and Expense Report
Total Volunteer Hours: 60,490
(For comparison, 2020: 43,761; 2019: 69,481)
Total Number of Volunteers: 1,629
(For comparison, 2020: 1,198; 2019: 2,420)
Recurring volunteers: 633
Value of volunteer labor, based on estimates by Independent Sector: $1.74 million
Funding from Region: $15,622
Funding from WNPF: $53,303, matched by the Centennial Match program for a total of $106,605
Youth Partnerships Program (YPP) funding: $26,724
ONPS funding: Approximately $130,000
Cultural Resources: 1,127
Maintenance (including Trails): 21,396
Some individual programs:
Amphibian Surveys/Aquatics: 389 hours, 15 people -- much less than pre-pandemic, but like last year we did not hire an intern to coordinate the program.
Cascades Butterfly Survey: 1,114 hours, 18 people
MeadoWatch: 759 hours, 67 people
All Citizen Science combined (including wildlife surveys and archaeology): 2,609 hours, 144 people
Emergency Roadside Assistance (Raven): 1,692 hours, 4 people
Meadow Rovers: 10,000.5 hours, 216 people
(Plus 560 hours of substitute Meadow Rover Coordinator volunteer hours, mostly at Sunrise, by 11 people)
Nordic Patrol: 3,581 hours, 53 people
Revegetation: 702 hours, 60 people
Backcountry/Frontcountry Patrol and WIC: 10,234 hours
Trail Maintenance: 20,697 hours
WTA: 6,809 hours, 573 people)
(includes 11 youth crews or week-long projects and 6 community groups)
National Public Lands Day: 73 people, 54 of them under the age of 18
Programs basically back to normal include trail maintenance by WTA and youth crews; Meadow Rovers; backcountry patrol; Nordic Patrol; and Emergency Roadside Assistance (Ravens).
Programs still reduced due to Covid include citizen science, especially amphibian surveys; interpretation and astronomy; projects by community groups (trails, general maintenance, and campground maintenance); revegetation and greenhouse; Adopt-a-Highway; and internships through SCA and the Scientists-in-Parks program. Lack of housing continued to reduce our number of full-time volunteers and interns. We look forward to the future return of groups like The Mission Continues once the pandemic has receded.
Community partners this year included:
Backcountry Horsemen (trail maintenance)
Boy Scout Troops (271 hours by 44 people in 4 troops -- all "Boy Scouts," but not all members were boys; trail maintenance, revegetation, and ropes & rebar)
Geologic Society of America (1 Scientist-in-Park--usually we have several)
Joint Base Lewis-McChord (trail maintenance)
Mosaics in Science (1 intern--usually we have more)
Mount Rainier National Park Associates (805 hours by 50 people on 6 dates; trail maintenance, revegetation, and exotics removal)
Mountain Rescue Association (SAR and PSAR)
Olympia Mountaineers (trail maintenance)
Northwest Youth Corps (NYC) (trails: 3 Rainbow Crews, 1 ASL crew, 1 all women crew, and 1 Sound to Summit crew)
Peninsula School District JROTC (litter patrol)
REI (one small group doing revegetation--usually we have several with trails as well)
Student Conservation Association (SCA) (4 interns--usually we have more--and 1 youth crew)
Sierra Club (trail maintenance)
Starbucks (trail maintenance)
University of Washington (MeadoWatch)
Washington Conservation Corps (WCC) (trails)
Washington Trails Association (WTA) (drop-in trail work and two week-long youth projects)
Washington's National Park Fund (also a critical fundraising partner)
Yakima High School Outdoor Club (trails, revegetation, and ropes & rebar on National Public Lands Day)
The Longmire Campground hosted 734 people -- up from last year's 160, but still down from 2019's 1,201, in part due to a lack of community volunteer groups.