Working for the National Park Service as campground hosts - you work for the Law Enforcement division, not the Interpretative division.
But you are not 'law enforcement'. You are expected to notify people of violations, and are asked to deal with such on a low level - non-confrontational. Law Enforcement rangers are federal agents, and are a radio call away. Talk about specific do's and don'ts with your supervisors. Things like alcohol, drugs, theft, non-compliance with your requests. Understand clearly where you need to call for LE, and when you should attempt to resolve a potential issue.
A couple examples:
We had campers complain about a camper couple fighting, screaming and throwing things at each other. By the instruction we had received - we were not to approach the couple - Do Not get involved in domestic confrontations. Leave that to professionals. Called LE on the radio. The only time they ever came up to the CG with lights flashing.
An unoccupied car rolled out of a parking spot and into another vehicle. Called LE.
Had a large group occupying a couple adjacent sites who would not secure their food while we had a bear in the area. LE ranger on patrol came by, talked to him - he issued tickets.
Were very specifically told - drugs, including marijuana, were illegal on NPS property - to call LE if we suspected drugs were being used, sold, etc.
We were not to attempt to enforce alcohol laws. If we suspected minors drinking, or had problem drunks, call LE.
It was not a law enforcement nightmare. Very seldom did we need to escalate anything. Most of the time if we saw food or such left out, we would secure it in the bear boxes, and leave the folks a note. Did have to remind some to make payment at the iron ranger and post their tag.
Be very nice to the full-time employees who clean the restrooms and grounds maintenance staff.
We had to monitor the reserved sites, post notice the site was reserved in advance and stay on top of those.
Our day was walk the CG early AM, note which sites would be leaving that day, write down license plate numbers for each campsite. Approx 10 am post the daily report around the CG. Check the CG near noon check-out time - make sure sites were emptied, or renewed for another day. Check each campsite after the campers left - pick up any trash, clean out the grills, make sure the fires were completely out first. Check the CG twice in the late afternoon and near dark/ quiet hours.
Plenty of time for a nap between rounds.
Learn the CG - someone will come and ask what is the best site for XXXX rig, scenery, etc.
Learn the local area, and the park in general. Though you are not in the interpretative division - which runs the Visitor Centers - you may be the only person some campers/ visitors see.
They want to know about trails, back country camping permits, where to buy XXXXX, etc. You are the information source.
Know emergency procedures and who to contact when.
As noted - you are on-duty. Occasionally there will be late night knocks on the door.
The greatest thing about camp hosting is the people you meet. We had people from all 50 states, Mexico, 9 Canadian provinces, Japan, China, Philippines, Indonesia, India, Australia, New Zealand, almost every country in Europe in the CG. One night I had a couple with a young child in a rental Class C. They were from Denmark and traveling across the US. She was a travel agent and writer for local magazines/ internet sites. Walked five sites over and met a young couple with a young child in a CruiseAmerica Class C - traveling the opposite direction across the US. From Switzerland. She was a travel agent.....
As far as campers - you are going to meet people who taught George Washington how to camp, and folks who don't know which end of the TT to hook the truck up to.
Had folks show up after a 600 mile drive - with a tent fly - no tent. Had folks show up missing something vital. Had folks show up with 500 pounds of gear for a one night stop.
Tent stakes were a big deal in the mountains where we were. The tiny things which come with tents were useless. The stakes like big nails were best. We had a lot left in the CG, and we would loan them out as needed.
We kept water and gatoraid for folks who needed it. We were in a CG where coolers could not be left unattended - so it was inside the trailer.
Full-Time 2014 - ????
“Not all who wander are lost.”
"You were supposed to turn back at the last street."
2012 Ram 2500 Mega Cab
2014 Flagstaff 832IKBS TT