(CNN) — The partial government shutdown in the United States raises all sorts of questions for travelers on topics from aviation safety and security to passports and national parks.
Many national parks open, without facilities
Although National Park Service sites across the country have been closed during previous government shutdowns, many have initially remained open -- but severely understaffed -- under the Trump administration.
As the shutdown continues, closures are more likely.
Many park sites have had to curtail operations in some areas due to the shutdown.
"For most parks, there will be no National Park Service-provided visitor services, such as restrooms, trash collection, facilities or road maintenance," said Jeremy Barnum, a National Park Service spokesman. Some services may be available from concessionaires or other entities, he said.
Nearly 331 million people visited National Park Service sites around the United States in 2017. Letting millions visit the parks without ranger support will damage the parks, says former NPS director Jonathan Jarvis.
California's Joshua Tree National Park on Wednesday had to close its popular campgrounds because of health and safety concerns over near-capacity pit toilets.
A car drives into Joshua Tree National Park in California past a shuttered entrance station.
Loic Pialat/AFP/Getty Images
Many national parks routinely close off some sections to visitors (or their cars) during the snowy winter months, including Grand Canyon National Park's North Rim and Yosemite National Park's Mariposa Grove.
The National Park Service has signed more than 40 agreements with those entities to provide various visitor services, including trash removal and servicing restrooms, at a number of national parks, said NPS spokesman Barnum. How long these agreements last varies by location.
While some visitors are enjoying free entry into the national parks, only 27% of the park service's 418 sites normally charge a fee.
Smithsonian museums and National Zoo closed
A closed sign is posted on the gate of Smithsonian's National Zoo.
Carolyn Kaster/AP
The 19 Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo in Washington, DC, closed their doors Wednesday as the partial government shutdown entered its twelfth day.
"Due to the federal government shutdown, all Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo are closed," the Smithsonian Institution said in a statement released Wednesday. Programming and events were also canceled.
In addition to the National Zoo's grounds being closed to the public, its live-animal cameras -- including the popular panda cam -- will not be operating during the shutdown, the statement said.
The National Zoo will continue feeding and caring for the animals during the stalemate. "A shutdown will not affect the Zoo's commitment to the safety of staff and the standard of excellence in animal care," the statement read.
The government shutdown doesn't mean the nation's capital is closed to visitors.
"While we're disappointed the Smithsonian Institution museums and National Zoo, National Gallery of Art and National Archives are temporarily closed, the vast majority of things for visitors to see and do throughout Washington, DC's neighborhoods remain open," said Ellliott L. Ferguson, president and CEO of Destination DC, the tourism office for the nation's capital.
Air space operational, union forecasts delays
Although a union representing aviation safety workers warns of possible travel delays, air traffic is still humming.
"The nation's airspace is fully safe and operational. Air traffic controllers and the technicians who maintain the nation's airspace system continue to work without pay as they fill a critical mission to ensure the public's safety," Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Gregory Martin said via email.
However, other agency activities have been curtailed, including air traffic controller training and accident investigation.
The FAA has closed its training academy in Oklahoma City during the partial shutdown.
The National Air Traffic Controllers Association, a union representing FAA air traffic controllers and other aviation safety workers, says the shutdown is likely to exacerbate an existing air traffic controller staffing shortage.
"This staffing crisis is negatively affecting the National Airspace System, and the shutdown almost certainly will make a bad situation worse," NATCA President Paul Rinaldi said in a statement. "Even before the shutdown, controllers have needed to work longer and harder to make up for the staffing shortfall."
A worsened staffing situation would mean reduced capacity in the airspace system, Rinaldi said, leading to more flight delays.
The FAA's Martin said the agency is meeting targets for its 10-year air traffic controller staffer plan, and the agency will not speculate on any potential impact a training slowdown might have if the shutdown goes on for a long period of time.
Accident investigation by personnel at the FAA is currently limited to "emergency essential activities," Martin said.
Those are "activities that protect life and property in which there is some reasonable likelihood that either or both would be compromised to some significant degree by the delay in the performance of an agency function," he said.
Investigators were not dispatched to a weekend accident in Saginaw County, Michigan, involving one fatality due to a lack of resources. The FAA shares accident investigation responsibilities with the National Transportation Safety Board.
"Early indications suggest that operational factors may have contributed to this accident and currently there is no significant risk to transportation safety indicated," Martin said of the incident.
"While the Sheriff cited concerns about accident site security, the wreckage has been recovered and moved to a secure salvage facility for subsequent investigation once investigators return," he said.
Airport screening continues at pre-shutdown levels
"Basically what we've learned is just to stay focused on the mission, take it one day at a time, and I can't say enough about the professionalism and dedication of the TSA workforce," Bilello said. There has been no impact on TSA operations at this time, he said.
Passports and visas still being processed
In an advisory released at the start of the shutdown, the Bureau of Consular Affairs said that "scheduled passport and visa services in the United States and at our U.S. Embassies and Consulates overseas will continue during the lapse in appropriations as the situation permits."
A US State Department official said facilities "will remain open as long as there are sufficient fees to support operations."
Domestic passport agencies located in government buildings affected by a lapse in appropriations may be closed to the public, the official said.
Calls and inquiries will still be accepted by the National Visa Center, National Passport Information Center and Kentucky Consular Center, the Bureau of Consular Affairs advisory said.
The bureau's website will not be updated, with the exception of urgent security information, the advisory said.
CNN's Devan Cole contributed to this report.
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