The United States National Search and Rescue Plan, which sets
domestic and international rescue policy for federal agencies, specifically rejects charging for rescues. The document states that participating agencies, among them the National Park Service and U.S. Coast Guard, “…agree that [search and rescue] services that they provide to persons in danger or distress will be without subsequent cost recovery from the person(s) assisted.”24 At one point in the mid-1990s, representatives of the Air Force, Navy, Army, Coast Guard, Civil Air Patrol, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Federal Aviation Administration and the National Park Service voted to no longer participate in search and rescue missions for agencies that charged fees for humanitarian missions. The National Park Service has a separate search and rescue policy that indicates it will not charge for rescues of any type within the national park system. Since 1940 the NPS has studied the cost recovery issue on five separate occasions, each time rejecting the idea. The most recent report, which focused on climbing rescues in Denali National Park, was issued in August 2001.