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More signs about climate change and Native Americans are disappearing from National Parks at Trump’s order

Trump administration officials are directing national parks to remove or revise signs addressing climate change and Native American history, among other subjects, according to a new report.

In recent weeks, park staff at more than a dozen locations across Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and Utah have received orders to alter or eliminate such displays, according to The Washington Post, citing government documents.​

These changes align with President Donald Trump’s March 2025 executive order, titled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History,” which aimed to purge “partisan ideology” from federal sites — including mentions of racism, sexism, LGBTQ topics and climate change.

The Interior Department, run by Secretary Doug Burgum, said its actions were in line with the president’s executive order.

“All federal agencies are to review interpretive materials to ensure accuracy, honesty, and alignment with shared national values,” the department said in a statement. “Following completion of the required review, the National Park Service is now taking appropriate action in accordance with the Order.”

Officials in Donald Trump’s administration have instructed national parks to remove signage related to climate change and Native American mistreatment, according to a new report (Getty Images)

But critics slammed the move as an attempt to whitewash U.S. history.

Kristen Brengel, a senior vice president for the National Parks Conservation Association, told the Post that the administration’s measures “should offend every American.”

She added that park staffers are “being forced to select stories because they think the administration will threaten their jobs if they don’t.”

Some of the country’s most popular parks, frequented by millions of tourists, have been targeted by the administration, including Grand Canyon National Park, Glacier National Park and Big Bend National Park.

The attempt to scrub language related to Native Americans and climate change ‘should offend every American’ said a National Parks Conservation Association official

The attempt to scrub language related to Native Americans and climate change ‘should offend every American’ said a National Parks Conservation Association official (Getty Images)

At the Grand Canyon, staff recently took down a section of an exhibit that included language about settlers exploiting land for mining and pushing “tribes off their land” in order to create the park.

Employees at the park, located in Arizona, also cut references to ranchers “carelessly overgrazing” and tourists “foolishly” tossing trash in the park, according to the Post. Roadside signs addressing climate change and pollution have been marked for possible elimination.

Language about climate change was also flagged at Glacier National Park in Montana, including on signs that detailed the possible loss of the park’s well-known glaciers.

Additionally, a sign at the gift shop was targeted for review. It stated: “Climate Change Affects National Parks and the Treasures They Protect.”

“We’re whitewashing or we’re taking out all those sort of not-so-nice stories that have occurred in our nation’s history,” Jeff Mow, the park’s former superintendent, told the newspaper.

At Big Bend National Park, located near the Texas-Mexico border, over a dozen displays have been targeted for removal

At Big Bend National Park, located near the Texas-Mexico border, over a dozen displays have been targeted for removal (Getty Images)

And, at Big Bend National Park in Texas, over a dozen displays have been slated for elimination, many of which are seemingly noncontroversial, pertaining to prehistoric history, geology and fossils.

The administration’s removal orders did not explain what was wrong with the signs, according to the Post.

“This is not something that the National Park Service should be blamed for,” Bob Krumenaker, the park’s former superintendent, said. “They are being told they have to do these things. And my hope is they’re saving these exhibits for when things change so they can put them back up.

It’s not the first time the Trump administration has enacted controversial changes within the country’s national parks.

Last year, the Environmental Protection Agency moved to weaken a decades-old rule designed to improve visibility at national parks. The administration also previously proposed slashing the parks’ budget by $1 billion, which would mark the largest cut in the system’s 109-year history.

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