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DO LOOK DOWN:
Tourists stroll on the Skywalk that extends 70 feet
over the western rim of the Grand Canyon. It costs
$75 for a 15-minute walk ($50 for entrance to the
reservation and $25 for the walkway). Tribal leaders
see a tourist bonanza, but critics see it sullying a
natural wonder. ROB SCHUMACHER/THE ARIZONA
REPUBLIC/AP
|
At Grand Canyon skywalk,
controversial twist on eco-tourism
The Hualapai
Indians' glass horseshoe over the lip of the
national treasure stirs awe – and ire.
By Steve Friess
| Correspondent of The Christian Science
Monitor
Grand Canyon West, Ariz. Anita
Wells shuffles cautiously up to the edge of the
glass floor and then stops short. The view
before her of the Grand Canyon thousands of feet
below causes her to tremble. "Oh, I can't do
this," she moans.
But Ms. Wells and her sons have arrived at
6:30 a.m. on this snow-flurried spring morning
to be among the first tourists to step out onto
the horseshoe-shaped bridge. And so, with her
son Adam's prodding, Wells takes her first few
steps gingerly. She feels a comforting
sturdiness beneath her in the three-inch-thick
glass. Then, minutes later, she's smiling and
laughing at the far end of a structure
cantilevering off the West Rim of the world's
most famous chasm.
"I was really nervous about doing this, but
my boys wanted to so I figured I should try
something new," says Wells, who is on a road
trip from Atlanta with her 21-year-old twins.
"Once I got out there, I got used to it, and
then it was kind of a charge to be doing this."
Almost overnight, the glass-and-steel oxbow
protruding out over the lip of the Grand Canyon
has become one of the world's most unusual
curiosities. Part high-wire act and part window
into the womb of the Earth, the structure
represents a new and controversial twist on the
budding eco-tourism movement.
The Hualapai Indians, who consented to allow
investors to build the $30 million Skywalk on
their land, hope it draws thousands of visitors
a year and brings a lift to their isolated
reservation 120 miles southeast of Las Vegas.
They're counting on it to create jobs and
provide much-needed revenue for the 2,000 tribal
members spread across 1 million acres of
Arizona.
But critics, including some tribal members,
consider it an affront to one of the world's
most hallowed pieces of earth. "I'm not trying
to denigrate their need, but this is designed to
provide a thrill of being able to walk over the
edge," says Robert Arnberger, a retired
superintendent of Grand Canyon National Park. "I
dislike the motivation behind it."
The seat of the Hualapai reservation is 60
unpaved, extraordinarily sinuous miles away from
the Skywalk in the town of Peach Springs. It is
an outpost along Route 66 that bustled with
traffic until Interstate 40 was built in 1960s.
Today, like similar small towns on that
much-traveled mid-century road, it's desolate,
the last gas station abandoned within the past
year. Trash is strewn along roadsides and in
front of the small houses that line streets near
the railroad tracks where freight trains shudder
by several times an hour. The most opulent spot
is the Hualapai Lodge, where visitors stay
before they head out for rafting trips or other
tours in the region.
While clearly not a prosperous place, debate
swirls about the level of poverty on the
reservation. The 2000 US Census put the average
income for the 600 residents of Peach Springs at
about $18,000 a year. It's important because
people like Sheri YellowHawk, the chief
executive officer of Grand Canyon West Corp.,
the arm of the Hualapai Tribal Council that
manages tourism operations, argues that Skywalk
and its accompanying development are necessary
to prop up a flailing economy. Similarly, David
Jin, a Las Vegas entrepreneur who is the lead
investor in Skywalk, has long insisted that his
main motive in building the walkway was not
profit but "to help these poor people improve
the way they live."
No one doubts the importance of tourism to
the reservation. It accounts for 70 percent of
the Hualapai Tribal Council's budget. Visits to
the area has stagnated in recent years at
200,000 people annually – a fraction of the 4
million who flock to the US-owned south rim of
the Grand Canyon.
With the latest development, the Hualapai
believe they could finally mine real treasure
from the vast swath of the Grand Canyon they
control. The Skywalk, in fact, is just the most
spectacular piece of a $45 million development
plan on the reservation. Blueprints also call
for a 6,000-square-foot visitors center, a
vertical tram that will whisk people from the
rim to the canyon floor, and more lodging. They
will pave some of the washboard roads to make
the trip to the glass menagerie seem like less
of a Safari.
Something "had to be done for the future,"
says Ms. YellowHawk.
To boost tribal incomes, the first 30 Skywalk
jobs were offered to Hualapai members, although
not all could be filled because of educational
deficiencies and other problems. Daniel Havatone
says he didn't make the cut because he failed a
drug test. Even so, he's enthusiastic about the
development. "I hope it will attract more
tourists and more people," he says. "That will
help us."
Other tribal members are less enchanted. Many
older Hualapai, in particular, consider their
piece of the Grand Canyon holy and protest the
project on those grounds. "They're mad and their
hearts are hurting, but they don't talk about it
anymore because it's such a hard thing for
them," says Rhiannon Watahomigie.
Some outsiders bristle at commercializing
such a sacred natural wonder in this way. What's
next, they wonder, bungee jumping to the canyon
floor? When he was superintendent of the Grand
Canyon National Park, Mr. Arnberger says he
heard all kinds of proposals to make money from
the canyon: tramways, hot air balloon rides –
even stringing bras from one side of the rim to
the other to raise awareness for breast cancer.
"I turned all of that down," says Arnberger.
"The Grand Canyon deserves special care by
everyone responsible for it."
Admission is $50 to the Grand Canyon West region of the reservation and
then another $25 for 15 minutes on the Skywalk.
YellowHawk and Mr. Jin believe 2,000 people a
day, or more than 600,000 people a year, will
eventually visit the site. On this opening day
to the public, the crowd is thinner – maybe
1,000 people – despite vast publicity
surrounding the project.
Early visitors watched a trio of Hualapai
elders shake gourds, chant tribal hymns, and cut
the ribbon opening the Skywalk. Many then moved
on to other sites. "There doesn't seem like
there's that much of a line anymore," says Mike
Cote of Chicago, who thinks the $75 cost for the
Skywalk is too high. "There was such a rush to
get people out here, and now it's sort of
quiet."
YellowHawk is undeterred. She thinks tour
operators will soon start including the Skywalk
in their packages, and it will become a "must
stop" for people visiting the Grand Canyon.
Future tourists will enter the Skywalk from
the visitors center, which is expected to be
completed by year's end. For now, they ascend a
metal staircase and sit on benches to don
hospital-style booties to protect the glass
floor from scuffs. Most people, like Wells, seem
tentative as they approach the place where the
walkway becomes glass and the salmon abyss
plunges below. Many admit feeling a sense of
vertigo in their first steps. Once comfortable,
some show confidence by jumping up and down. The
floor doesn't quiver.
"Once you step out and the floor doesn't feel
any different from other floors, you know you're
safe and you can enjoy it," says Randy Holabird
of Reno, Nevada.
The glass floor isn't seamless: It is laid
out in huge square tiles with one-inch gaps
between them. The glass wall railings along the
Skywalk are only about five feet high, which can
add to the sense of adventure and trepidation.
But none of this bothers Jayne Williams. "To
me, I almost forgot that I was on top of all
that space, and it was like looking at a picture
window in the floor," says the Las Vegas
resident.

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