Millions up for grabs with ONP concession deals

Look west from Kalaloch Lodge and you’ll see the Pacific Ocean sweep time to the horizon.

Take a peek inside the lodge’s accounting office and you’ll get a completely different view of the resort, Olympic National Park’s most lucrative business.

More than $3 million in gross receipts is entered into the Kalaloch books each year. It’s one of 53 National Park Service concessions annually grossing that much, or much more.

At Kalaloch, where a contract with Aramark Corp. has expired, all that money is about to go up for grabs.

And Kalaloch isn’t the park’s only expired concession contract.

In fact, all six Olympic contracts are overdue and operating under special extensions.

Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort, Lake Crescent Lodge, the Hurricane Ridge Visitor Center, Log Cabin Resort and Fairholm General Store are the other private businesses operating under contract inside Olympic National Park.

Each pays the park service a franchise fee, a certain percentage of gross receipts, generally from 1.5 percent to 3.5 percent.

Due out Feb. 26

The Kalaloch and Sol Duc concessions will be the first filled in Olympic.

Prospectuses for both are set to be released Feb. 26, according to Olympic National Park Concession Specialist Jim Schultz.

“Until these two are worked out the others are on the back burner,” Schultz said last month.

Prospectuses list services the park expects to be offered as well as a minimum franchise fee.

“And then you award higher points if someone offers a higher franchise fee,” said National Park Service Pacific West Regional Concession Manager Tony Sisto, based in Oakland, Calif.

——————–

The rest of the story appears in the Monday Peninsula Daily News.

More in News

Steve Mullensky/ for Peninsula Daily News

Steve Chapin, left, and Devin Dwyer discuss the finer points of Dwyer’s 1980 standard cedar Pocock designed single scull. This scull and others are part of a display at the Wooden Boat Festival at Point Hudson Marina
Racing shells made from cedar built with ‘oral tradition’

Builder obtained smooth-grained materials from Forks mill

Clallam’s budget projects deficit

County to attempt reduce its expenditures

Housing project to receive $2M from tax fund

Commissioners approve use for North View complex

Security exercise next week at Naval Magazine Indian Island

Naval Magazine Indian Island will conduct a security training… Continue reading

Daytime alternating traffic planned for Elwha River Bridge

Travelers will see one-way alternating traffic on U.S. Highway… Continue reading

Paul Gottlieb
Retired reporter highlights impactful stories

Suicide prevention, fluoride two significant topics

Expenses to outpace revenue for Clallam Fire District 2

Projection based on rejection of levy lid lift

David Gritskie of Stripe Rite from Bremerton guides a stripe painting machine Wednesday east of Port Angeles City Hall. The new parking lot is using permeable pavement over a layer of gravel of 2 feet to 4 feet thick. The project is retrofitting the east city hall parking lot with a new stormwater detention and treatment infrastructure. The project will help manage runoff, slow down peak flow and remove pollutants before connecting and flowing into Peabody Creek. The parking lot will reopen to the public on Monday. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Parking lot project

David Gritskie of Stripe Rite from Bremerton guides a stripe painting machine… Continue reading

Looking to stay cool, several people jump off the Rainbow Bridge over the Devil’s Punch Bowl on the Spruce Railroad Trail on Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park over Labor Day weekend. A heat advisory has been issued by the National Weather Service with temperatures expected to reach the 80s and possibly the low 90s through today. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Heat advisory

Looking to stay cool, several people jump off the Rainbow Bridge over… Continue reading

Port Angeles police to join program to help those in need

Funding could pay for food, hotel or other means of aid

Port Townsend sewer pipe could be replaced by Friday

Sinkhole expedites work projected for this winter