No. 36 CFR 2.17a3 explicitly states that parachuting may be allowed pursuant to the terms and conditions of a permit
No. All permit applications to date have been rejected, including permit applications for paragliding. See history here.
The one exception to this is a permit that is granted for a special event Bridge Day that takes place at the New River Gorge Bridge for one day each year. This event predates the New River Gorge bridge being within a National Park.
At the 2024 Bridge Day Event 325 BASE jumpers completed 755 BASE jumps with zero injuries. There were two non-jumper related medical transports for spectators on the bridge.
It's unclear. Climbing has never gone through a comprehensive formal park planning process but is allowed. Most activities that take place in a national park have not gone through a comprehensive formal park planning process before being allowed: backcountry skiing, roller blading, bicycling, juggling, fly fishing, high-lining, skateboarding, hiking, horseback riding
No
No such study exists or has ever been cited by the government
0
USA Hang Gliding has a fatality rate of 1 fatality per thousands participants. USA BASE jumping has a fatality rate of 2 fatalities per thousand participants.
Yes! The most successful model for regulated jumping in the world is in Switzerland. Jumpers in Switzerland call local heliports before each jump and pay for a landing card that subsidizes local farmers whose fields they use. This system has worked well for the past 20 years and you can learn more about it at the Swiss BASE Association. Most American jumpers travel to Switzerland each year for access to safe legal jumps.
BASE jumping has a large veteran community. One of the largest fundraising events of the year within the BASE community is by a veteran non-profit 22 Jumps.
Moab, Utah
No
No
As of January 2024, there are four pending BASE jumping cases in Yosemite court: USA vs Nunn, USA vs Madl, USA vs Brokemond, USA vs Hennage
Yes. Chamonix banned the two jumps in town that are accessible by cable car in 2016 and has not seen a single BASE jumping fatality since. Our Yosemite proposal would call for no jumps to be allowed from Glacier Point, the one jump in Yosemite that does not require a hike.
It's worth noting that there has only ever been 1 fatality in the history of the activity in New Zealand. All popular New Zealand jumps require a minimum 4-hour approach. Jumping locations that require long hikes have very low -- close to zero -- volume of incidents.
BASE jumpers are charged with a federal misdemeanor. There exists no possibility for expungement for federal misdemeanors. In addition to a permanent federal criminal record, jumpers are issued a $5000 fine and sometimes banned from the National Parks.
Multiple jumpers have been given prison time in addition to a fine; in 2024 in USA vs Kempf, an El Cap jumper was sentenced to 7 days in prison. In one egregious case, Yosemite motioned for the court to expand the length of a jumper's sentence after the jumper had already served 20 days in prison