logo
Australian company Intrepid Travel fights back against Donald Trump threat to US national parks

Australian company Intrepid Travel fights back against Donald Trump threat to US national parks

News.com.au07-06-2025
An Australian company is fighting back against Donald Trump's planned upheaval of US national parks.
Since US President Donald Trump took office, more than 1000 park workers have been laid off (more than 700 others took buyouts), and more are expected to be let go.
There is also a proposal to cut more than $US1 billion ($A1.5 billion) in federal funding for the US National Parks Service (nearly 40 per cent of the agency's current budget). NPS oversees 85 million acres of federal land and there are 433 sites in the National Park System, with parks in every state.
National Park Conservation Association president Theresa Pierno described Mr Trump's proposed budget plan as 'catastrophic,' arguing that the 'national park system would be completely decimated'.
Mr Trump wants to see some parks (that the White House describes as 'not 'national parks' in the traditionally understood sense') go to the states, but there are concerns states don't have the resources to maintain the parks, which will force them to close.
The White House claims the proposed budget would 'continue supporting many national treasures, but there is an urgent need to streamline staffing and transfer certain properties to state-level management to ensure the long-term health and sustainment of the national park system'.
Aussie-born company fights back
A Melbourne-born global travel company, which runs tours across 18 US national parks, has made its stance clear.
Speaking to news.com.au on Thursday, Intrepid Travel's Leigh Barnes described national parks as 'incredibly important' to the US and said the White House's massive proposed funding cuts are 'putting access at risk'.
'We need healthy, vibrant national parks for our business, and also the impact of not having tourism go to national parks in the USA is going to put local businesses underground,' said Mr Barnes, an Australian who relocated to Seattle this year to take up the role of managing director of the Americas.
In response to the Trump Administration's actions, Intrepid has now launched limited edition 'Active-ism' trips in the parks, hosted by influential activists and local guides.
The trips are about $US500-$600 ($A770-$920) cheaper than a standard itinerary, despite the addition of an activist.
'That has been a deliberate focus, making them as accessible as possible,' Mr Barnes said.
'They're not going to be the world's greatest profit generator for the organisation, but that's not the purpose.'
Intrepid will also donate $US50,000 ($A77,000) on behalf of its travellers to nongovernmental organisations protecting the US national parks.
Intrepid has 26 trips across 18 national parks, and employs 200 local guides and 60 staff there. The company has taken more than 20,000 travellers and expects to host another 5000 this year.
Mr Barnes explained that it's not just direct jobs at the US National Parks Service at risk.
'They (national parks) are absolutely amazing economic drivers for these areas. Having these national parks creates jobs in and around the national parks ecosystem. Not just the national parks employees but all the little smaller businesses and ecosystems it supports,' he said.
He added: 'They're a massive pride and icon in the USA.
'We want to ensure these amazing parts of the USA are not just here for this generation but the generations beyond.'
Mr Barnes said the more people who experience nature, the more that are likely to advocate for these spaces, so his team simply asked themselves, 'how do we encourage more people to go out to national parks?'.
The Active-ism trips include two five-day 'Zion and The Grand Canyon' trips hosted by public lands advocate Alex Haraus in November and environmental advocate Wawa Gatheru in April next year, and then two six-day 'Yellowstone and The Grand Tetons' trips hosted by climate educator Michael Mezzatesta and environmental author Leah Thomas in June next year. The target market is Americans but anyone can book.
Discussions guests can expect include the current threats facing US national parks, the impact of climate change, Indigenous land rights, equity in outdoor spaces, and how to turn awareness into advocacy.
Mr Barnes, previously Intrepid's chief customer officer in Melbourne, took on leading the Americas side of the business at a challenging time for US tourism.
March — the same month Mr Barnes relocated his family to the States — saw the sharpest drop in Australians travelling to the US since during the height of the Covid pandemic, according to US International Trade Administration statistics.
Australian visitor numbers fell 7 per cent in March this year, compared to March 2024 — the biggest drop since March 2021.
Flight Centre and Intrepid Travel told news.com.au last month bookings to the US had dropped significantly as Aussies, Canadians and Europeans choose to travel elsewhere.
Globally, Intrepid saw a year-on-year 9 per cent decline in US sales for the first four months of the year. US sales for Australian and New Zealand travellers in particular were down 13 per cent. April alone was down 44 per cent on last year. But other areas such as South America are 'booming'.
As a result, Mr Barnes said his team had increased their focus on domestic travel within the US, promoting the right products at the right time, and increasing their brand presence (last week Intrepid became an official partner of the Seattle Storm WNBA team).
All eyes on American tourism
The global tourism industry is keeping a close eye on the impact of Mr Trump's strict border stance and other controversial government policies like sweeping tariffs are having on travel.
On Thursday, Mr Trump signed a new travel ban banning people from 12 countries to 'protect Americans from dangerous foreign actors'.
The ban targets nationals of Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
Flight Centre CEO and founder Graham Turner told news.com.au it was an 'unsettled climate' impacting business travel, while tourists worry about passport control and others simply don't want to go to the US 'because they don't like what Donald Trump's doing'.
Tourism Economics — which forecasts foreign traveller arrivals in the US will sharply decline this year resulting in a loss of $9 billion in spending — said decisions from the Trump Administration are creating a 'negative sentiment shift toward the US among travellers'.
The travel data company's April report cited Mr Trump's stance on border security and immigration as one of the factors discouraging visits.
Mr Trump rejects the notion that the country's tourism industry is in any trouble — saying 'tourism is way up'.
Security checks at US airports have garnered much attention in recent months amid Mr Trump's 'enhanced vetting' for arrivals at US airports and cases of tourists being denied entry on arrival, and at times, strip searched and thrown in prison.
Former NSW police officer Nikki Saroukos is one of those people who recently travelled to the US using an Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) under the Visa Waiver Program and was deported, but first she had to spend a night in a federal prison.
She said she was subjected to invasive searches and humiliating treatment for trying to spend time with her US military husband stationed in Hawaii.
The US Department of Homeland Security later issued what it described as a 'fact check' on X after she went public with the ordeal, accusing her of having 'unusual activity on her phone, including 1000 deleted text messages from her husband'.
Homeland Security said 'officers determined that she was travelling for more than just tourism'.
But Ms Saroukos strongly denies having any plans to live permanently in the US.
The Sydney resident, who married her husband Matt in January after a whirlwind long-distance romance, told news.com.au she was 'in disbelief at how ridiculous' the statement was and claimed that some of the information included had been 'twisted'.
Why denied tourists can end up in federal prison
CBP has long had strong powers to deny entry, detain and deport foreigners at their discretion when travellers arrive in the country even if they have a valid visa or ESTA. However, what we are seeing under the Trump administration is described as 'enhanced vetting'.
Australians are being warned to not assume they are exempt to more intense checks, including inspections of emails, text messages or social media accounts at the airport.
Melissa Vincenty, a US immigration lawyer and Australian migration agent who is managing director of Worldwide Migration Partners, told news.com.au recently that being taken to federal prison with no criminal record, no drugs or anything that is a danger to society is the reality of being denied entry to the US in Hawaii.
Ms Vincenty, a dual-citizen who was a deportation defence lawyer in Honolulu before moving to Australia, explained the state did not have an immigration facility so people were taken to the Federal Detention Center Honolulu, where there was no separate wing for immigration.
It meant tourists who were denied entry to the US could be held alongside those awaiting trial — or who have been convicted and were waiting to be transferred to a mainland prison for serious federal crimes, such as kidnapping, bank robbery or drug crimes.
'It's like in the movies — you go there and there's bars, you get strip searched, all your stuff is taken away from you, you're not allowed to call anybody, nobody knows where you are,' Ms Vincenty told news.com.au in April after the experience of two young German tourists being strip searched and thrown in prison made global headlines.
Ms Vincenty said for Australians who were denied entry to the US in other locations like Los Angeles, San Francisco or Dallas, being held in detention facilities until the next available flight home was a real risk as there weren't constant return flights to Australia — meaning you might have to wait until the next day.
If not taken to a detention facility, some travellers may stay sitting for hours in what is called a secondary inspection at the airport.
A secondary inspection includes further vetting such as searching travellers' electronic devices.
'That period can last from half an hour to 15 hours or more,' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

XPeng reveals plan to be top 5 EV brand in Australia
XPeng reveals plan to be top 5 EV brand in Australia

News.com.au

time37 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

XPeng reveals plan to be top 5 EV brand in Australia

The battle for Australia's booming car market is heating up, with Chinese EV disruptor XPENG firing back at BYD's claim that local success is a 'signal to the world' of its global dominance. In response to BYD Founder and President Mr Wang Chuanfu's rare and exclusive interview last week, TrueEV CEO Jason Clarke, who heads XPENG's local operations, said that while BYD has 'shifted the EV landscape,' the next wave of innovation is just beginning, and XPeng plans to lead it. 'We agree that Australia represents a globally visible market with high consumer expectations, and XPEND is proud to be part of this shift,' he said. 'We view this as an opportunity to demonstrate what the next generation of EVs can deliver – in both technology and driver experience.' XPEND's response comes after Mr Chuanfu declared that success in Australia proved BYD could 'meet and exceed the expectations of mature markets' – a statement seen by many as a declaration of global EV domination. Clarke said Australia is equally critical to XPEND's global expansion strategy, and he confirmed that the brand is 'here for the long haul'. 'Our goal is bold. We aim to be among the top five pure EV brands in Australia within the next three years,' he said. 'The future of XPEND here is about more than just presence. It's about leadership in the EV revolution.' The Australian market has been heating up over the past few years as Chinese EV makers vie for a position in Australia's booming market, with brands such as BYD, GWM, Chery, and XPEND expanding their local presence. BYD has surged ahead with volume, recently celebrating its 60,000th delivery in Australia, and last month ranked 5th in the best-selling brands nationally. For Clarke, it's not about volume but offering consumers advanced technology like AI-assisted driving, 800V ultra-fast charging and the brand's Turing Chip, an in-house design to power its advanced ADAS systems. 'XPEND is at the frontier of AI and smart driving,' he said. 'Our MONA M03 offers advanced ADAS with XNGP support, over 20 smart hardware components standard, and full-scenario smart parking. We also lead in charging speed with our 800V 5C platform, and our 10-year battery warranty sets a new benchmark for customer confidence.' The brand has already received strong response to the G6 and the upcoming release of the G9. Clarke said the XPEND is taking the Australian market seriously, with infrastructure, innovation and customer support at the centre of its long-term strategy. 'We understand that long distances and fast charging are non-negotiable in Australia,' he said. XPEND is also focused on extended range options, including the Kunpeng Super Electric System offers up to 430km of electric-only range and an impressive 1,400km total range in hybrid format. 'That's why our vehicles use 800V platforms with 5C charging, meaning you can go from 10 per cent to 80 per cent in just 12 minutes.' XPEND is preparing to launch several models locally, including the flagship X9 and the futuristic MONA M03, powered by AI-driven systems and full-scenario smart parking.

What's With Trump and Tariffs?
What's With Trump and Tariffs?

ABC News

time37 minutes ago

  • ABC News

What's With Trump and Tariffs?

In 2017, Donald Trump reportedly scrawled 'trade is bad' in the margins of a speech — a blunt rejection of economic orthodoxy that has transformed global politics. Economists tend to see international trade as good for everyone — a rising tide that lifts all boats. So why do so many voters, in the U.S. and elsewhere, feel like they're being left behind? Recorded live in front of an audience of economists at the Australian Conference of Economists in Sydney Guests: Jenny Gordon - Nonresident Fellow at the Lowy Institute and Honorary Professor at ANU. Michael Janda - ABC NEWS Business Editor. Get in touch: We read all of your emails, and appreciate each one. Please keep them coming or use the #PeterMartinEconomy on Instagram to get our attention.

Labor defends not calling ‘horrific' South Australia algae bloom a national disaster
Labor defends not calling ‘horrific' South Australia algae bloom a national disaster

News.com.au

time40 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Labor defends not calling ‘horrific' South Australia algae bloom a national disaster

The Albanese government has defended its response to the toxic algae bloom devastating South Australia's coastline, saying it does not fit the definition of a national disaster. A $14m funding request from the state government to combat the outbreak of toxic algae – which became known to authorities in March – was approved by the federal government this week. The bloom has caused significant damage to a variety of marine life, bringing industries such as tourism and fishing to a grinding halt, and leaving animal carcasses washed up on beaches within an hour of Adelaide. The Albanese government's response to the algae crisis has come under increasing scrutiny in recent weeks, with Nationals leader David Littleproud accusing Labor of being 'flat-footed'. Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young has repeatedly called for the bloom to be classified as a national disaster, claiming the response would have been much swifter had Bondi Beach been impacted and that current legislation was not 'fit for purpose'. 'This is a catastrophe, an environmental disaster and an increasingly a community disaster. I am disappointed (Environment Minister Murray Watt) stopped short of declaring a disaster,' she told the ABC on Monday. Questioned about Labor's response to the algal bloom on Tuesday, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said a 'legislated, formalised list of events' would have to occur for it to be classified as a national disaster. 'That doesn't change the fact that it's an environmental disaster. It doesn't change the fact that all eyes of the nation are on it,' he told ABC News Breakfast. 'That doesn't change the fact that for the people of South Australia, what they are seeing … carcasses washing up onto their beaches, it's absolutely horrific.' Mr Burke said what mattered was that Mr Watt was 'there on the ground' on Monday. 'The Premier of SA (Peter Malinauskas) made statements as well yesterday. We're working cooperatively,' he said. Mr Watt said on Monday the funding would be allocated towards both short- and long-term measures faced by South Australians, such as beach clean-ups, community awareness campaigns, and ongoing investment in scientific research. 'There will need to be some further discussions between ourselves and the South Australian government about exactly the details of how that funding is used,' he said. 'The reality is, we are in uncharted waters here.' Mr Malinauskas said it was important to recognise the unprecedented nature of the bloom, which had ballooned across thousands of square kilometres of ocean. 'We've never seen an algal bloom of this size and scale in the history of our country's coastline … I think it's reasonable to assume that it won't be the first incident of its type in this country,' he said. 'The type of investment that was announced yesterday will go a long way in better understanding how we can prepare and plan for these types of events into the future.' Mr Malinauskas told the ABC he wanted to be 'really clear' the bloom was a 'natural disaster'. 'There are over 400 different species of marine life that have been killed off or had deaths as a result of this algal bloom,' he said. 'It's been with us for a while (and) it's starting to affect various parts of the aquaculture industry here in South Australia. 'It's always going to be better if we have state and federal governments working collaboratively together and that's very much what Minister Watt demonstrated yesterday, which we welcome.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store