Pros
Beautiful location. Cozy employee housing (if you're lucky enough to get one of the good houses). Some of the co-workers are pleasant to work with, I guess.
Cons
Upper management is practically invisible and unreachable at all times. Front desk managers are underqualified and seldom communicate in a healthy way. Expectations of management are not followed up by good instructions and healthy communication. Hiring everywhere right now is a problem, but the standard for hiring is so low for this location at this moment in time that if you show up with zero experience in whatever it is you're applying for, you'll be hired. "Bodies that fill a room" was the way that upper management described these people to me (they're not the best with verbiage). Complaints and/or suggestions on how to best approach certain things are swept under the rug and fall on deaf ears. While management in general is absent in mostly every endeavor, IT is always watching your every move on the work computers. Visiting websites such as Facebook to show guests pictures of your experiences in Yosemite will get you written up. Most departments outside of Front Desk are completely neglected and forgotten about, exception being when someone does something wrong. The free food for employees provided in employee dining is often undercooked and has caused multiple people indigestion yet nothing is done about it. HR is about as coordinated as a three-legged newborn gazelle competing in a triathlon; they will straight-up rip you from your employee housing at the drop of a pin in order to make room for someone new to the company is accommodated. "Housing is a privilege," after all.