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Hold the National Park Service Accountable for Missing Americans
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Sponsor: The Veterans Site
Every year hikers vanish into thin air while their families beg for answers. Call for action now before more people disappear!

Every year, hundreds of people vanish in national parks. Some are lost hikers, others are experienced outdoorsmen who disappear without explanation. Some are found, but too many are never seen again1. Families search for answers, but there is no centralized missing persons database to help them. The National Park Service does not release a full list of the missing, and the resources dedicated to search-and-rescue operations are shrinking2.
The Reality of the Disappearances
From the Grand Canyon to Yosemite, people vanish in national parks every year. Some cases stretch back decades, like that of six-year-old Dennis Lloyd Martin, who disappeared while playing hide-and-seek in Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 19693. Others are more recent, such as James Pruitt, a 70-year-old man who set out on a day hike in Rocky Mountain National Park and never returned4.
Most disappearances follow disturbing patterns. Many victims are last seen alone. Weather often takes a sudden turn right after they vanish. Search dogs sometimes fail to pick up a scent5. Even trained hikers with proper gear have gone missing without a trace.
A Failing System
The National Park Service tracks missing persons but does not maintain a public, centralized database6. Families are left searching for information across scattered reports, old news articles, and fragmented agency records. Critical time is lost, and searches sometimes end before answers are found.
Budget cuts have made the situation worse. Fewer rangers, fewer trained rescuers, and fewer resources mean slower response times when every second counts7. The number of park visitors continues to rise, yet search-and-rescue efforts are underfunded and stretched thin8.
Demand Action Now
No family should be left in the dark. No hiker should step onto a trail knowing that, if something goes wrong, there may be no effective system to find them. It is time for the National Park Service to create a public, centralized missing persons database and increase funding for search-and-rescue teams.
Sign the petition now and call for change. Every voice counts.