Happy Autumn, Volunteers! Here is a summary of our annual volunteer numbers for 2020:
Hours: 43,760.5 VIPs: 1,198
For comparison, here was 2019:
Hours: 69,481 VIPs: 2,420
Group volunteer participation was down especially dramatically this year, with a total of 314 people contributing 8,907 hours, when in a typical year we'd have twice that many people participating through WTA alone.
Overall, our volunteer numbers are 49.5% of what we reported in 2019, and volunteer hours are 63.0% of last year's.
The numbers are helped a bit by normal participation in October 2019 (since our report is by fiscal year, October through September) and over the winter pre-COVID (in spite of limitations from weather and the landslide that closed SR706 for a few weeks).
Many programs did not happen this year, or to a much more limited extent. The trails volunteer program, normally our most robust due to our partnership with WTA, was limited mostly to Northwest Youth Corps crews this year. In many programs, people chose to stay home due to COVID-19 risk, especially volunteers who belong to at-risk populations. Some programs that normally work with full-time volunteers or interns did not happen because we didn't have housing available. The Amphibian Survey citizen science program, like the WTA partnership, did not occur because we did not have housing for the supervisor.
At the same time, other programs continued, and adapted to offer safe alternatives for training and procedures, and the volunteers who did show up stepped up in a big way. We had only half our usual Meadow Rovers this year, but they turned in three quarters of last year's hours and 90% of last year's visitor contacts. The MeadoWatch and Cascades Butterfly Project citizen science programs remained robust, and a new bat survey program was welcomed enthusiastically by volunteers. (About a quarter of our volunteers participated in one or more citizen science projects.) And of course Mountain Rescue and Nordic Patrol were instrumental this year, not only with Search and Rescue but also Preventative Search and Rescue (PSAR) out of the new SAR Cabin.
Partners continued to help make it all happen: Washington's National Park Fund, the Mount Rainier National Park Associates, the Northwest Youth Corps, the Student Conservation Association, the University of Washington and The Evergreen State College. Other partners like WTA, The Mission Continues, and Starbucks couldn't safely participate due to the Pandemic but have expressed eagerness to return as soon as it's safe to do so.
We all hope for a more normal year next summer!
Photo by Chris and Sheryl Bizak














