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Where do Grand Canyon Park Rangers live?

Park rangers live and work in three main visitor use areas: North Rim, South Rim and Desert View. Additionally the Division staffs nine remote areas: Colorado River, Meadview, Lees Ferry, Tuweep, Phantom Ranch, Indian Garden, Roaring Springs, Cottonwood, and outlying wilderness areas.



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We live along the South Rim of the Canyon at a 7000-foot elevation in the ponderosa pine forest. Most new employees will reside in dormitory-style housing sharing a room with another employee. Employees who stay long-term and/or have a higher job grade can qualify to live in an apartment setting.

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The Employee Experience Live in the Grand Canyon! Each of our locations provides in-park housing.

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We Are Still Here Indigenous people are the first inhabitants and caretakers of the land that later became the United States of America and Grand Canyon National Park. Native people of this land still exist today and continue to have deep cultural connection to this land.

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Nine miles below the South Rim lies Phantom Ranch, a historic oasis at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. There are no roads to the bottom of the canyon. The only way to get there is on foot, river raft, or the Grand Canyon mules.

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The average hourly rate for Grand Canyon National Park Lodges employees is around $17 to $22. It's important to bear in mind that individual salary experiences can significantly differ due to factors like job roles, departments, locations, and individual skills and educational backgrounds.

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Sometimes rangers work in remote areas with no or very little means of communication. This can create a great deal of stress and danger should the ranger be injured, ill or need to subdue violent people.

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The historic Hopi House, located right on the rim of Grand Canyon, has been offering authentic American Indian arts and crafts for over 100 years and also carries many other items for sale. The structure was completed in 1905 and is a large, multi-story building of stone masonry.

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The Grand Canyon Village is the center of action in Grand Canyon National Park. Though the village was constructed entirely for tourism, the village feels like a charming trip back in time.

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There's a plethora of job opportunities through concessionaires — private companies that work with the park service to provide transportation, retail, tours, lodging, restaurants, and other services. Grand Canyon National Park has over 20 concessionaires, the majority of which are river rafting outfitters.

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(Note: According to the public relations office at Grand Canyon University, the institution is a nonprofit entity but is classified as a proprietary institution solely for the purposes of federal funding, which requires it to adhere to the stricter regulations for federal funding that apply to for-profit schools.

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Carved by the Colorado River and other geological forces, it is 277 miles long, up to 18 miles wide, and a mile deep. Nearly five million people visit the canyon annually, but as we later learned, only about one percent of them hike all the way to the bottom, as we planned to do.

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