Diamond Head State Monument Reopens to Visitors After Nine-Month Closure
Diamond Head State Monument on Oʻahu reopened at 6 a.m. on Thursday, Dec. 7 since closing exactly nine months ago due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The park is instituting health and safety measures including mask-wearing, physical distancing and no lingering at the top of the crater.
The first visitors to DHSM seemed to be mostly locals. One woman said she really missed her daily hike to the top of the crater over the past nine months.
State Parks officials are making daily assessments of how their new protocols are working and say the real test will come when tourism recovers and as many as 3,000-6,000 people could be expected to visit each day. Later in the day there was a shift from those getting free entrance to those paying $10 to enter. DLNR Division of State Parks bosses Curt Cottrell said, “That’s good for our parking vendor who needs to at least break even to remain viable to manage parking and entrance activity.”
Prior to the COVID-19 crisis, DHSM entrance fees brought in slightly more than $1 million annually to help fund park operations, maintenance, staffing, and improvements.
During one TV interview Cottrell commented, “Our entrance fees were static for twenty years. We’ve increased our rates for walk-ins from $1 to $5 and for cars from $5 to $10. We have a scaled increase for commercial vehicles once they return. Residents used to have to pay but to be in alignment with all of our other parks, Diamond Head is now free for Hawai‘i residents. Prior to COVID we had projected a 3.5 to 4-million-dollar revenue stream from Diamond Head. It’s going to be difficult to calculate actual numbers until we see how tourism recovers.”
For now, the number of people in the park and on the trail will be partially regulated by the parking lot capacity. If it’s full, cars, pedestrians and bicyclists may be asked to wait on the other side of the combined vehicle/pedestrian tunnel until others clear out.
Cassandra Springer is the only full-time park interpretive center coordinator assigned to Diamond Head. She said, “I only reminded a couple of people to wear their masks. We know the 225-foot, two-way pedestrian tunnel near the top of the summit trail was going to be a challenge because there’s just no way to physically separate people no matter which direction they’re heading. We’re just asking visitors to move through the tunnel as quickly as possible, to not stop, and to avoid congregating at either end or for that matter anywhere else in the park.”
Two maintenance workers are also assigned to DHSM. and they helped put up twenty new health and safety signs throughout the park.