Get ready to pay through the nose to use your public lands - and expect
to see more commercial development and hear more noisy motor vehicles
in our forests, desert canyons and grasslands.
Congress is set to re-up the so-called Fee Demonstration Program, which
requires citizens to pay to even walk onto their own public lands. While
the fees apply to only certain locations now, conservative think tanks
and big corporations want Congress to expand the program and make it
permanent.
Ultimately, if these special interests have their way, people may have
to pay every time they hike or picnic.
By making four agencies - the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management,
National Park Service, and Fish and Wildlife Service - increasingly
dependent on the fees, Congress will push the agencies toward decisions
that produce the most money, and away from the management choices that
protect the long-term health of the ecosystems. Wildlife habitat, solitude,
biological diversity - these crucial concepts are devalued in bottom-line
accounting.
The insidious policy was supposed to expire two years ago, but its
being kept alive by corporate political forces who could profit handsomely
if citizens grow accustomed to paying for recreation on public lands.
Advocates include the makers of snowmobiles and dirt bikes, who want
to see more and more of the machines roaring along our back country
trails; the concessionaires who run for-profit campgrounds; and Disney.
Gee, what a theme park our wilderness areas could be made into, complete
with Jurassic Park-style rides! What profits could be made if fishing
and hunting access were reserved only for those willing to pay private-club
level fees!
Far-fetched? Hardly. Consider this memo, written by the American Recreation
Coalition, the political group pushing for more public land fees: Have
we fully explored our gold mine of recreational opportunities in this
country and managed it as if it were consumer-brand products? As we
transition from providing outdoor recreation at no cost to the consumer
to charging for access and services, we can expect to see many changes
in the way we operate. Selling a product, even to an eager consumer,
is very different from giving it away.
The first step, of course, is to get people used to paying for something
that is rightfully theirs to begin with - a psychological task that
the fee-demo program accomplishes effectively. After the public gets
softened up, citizens wont whine as much as the fees grow more
expensive.
Its not just campgrounds and the like being affected. In one California
wilderness, citizens already have to pay just to day hike on the national
forest, and the waiting list for a reservation for a hiking permit is
many months long.
Regardless of what word games the bureaucrats play, these fees are entrance
fees, because if you dont pay them before you enter, youll
face major fines.
When Congress started the program in 1996, each of the four agencies
involved could collect fees only at 50 sites. Now its up to 100
per agency, including five in Colorado, such as Vail Pass and the Maroon
Bells. But there will be no limit on the number of fee sites under a
measure just passed by the House Appropriations Committee.
When the fee-demo program was put in place during the Clinton administration,
it was heralded as a way to help fund needed repairs and allow the areas
collecting the fees to keep the cash. On the surface, the idea seemed
reasonable, but the real-life consequences are alarming.
Whenever public agencies become dependent on a source of revenue, they
promote that use over all other interests. For example, for years the
Forest Services budget was determined largely by how many trees
the agency let the lumber companies cut. The result: So much clear-cutting
occurred that forest eco-systems were nearly ruined.
So now Congress wants to make land-management agencies dependent on
money from motorized recreation, concessionaires and other commercial
recreation development. What are the odds that the agencies soon will
be promoting loud, costly recreation, to the detriment of all other
uses?
Despite the glowing reports that the agencies file with Congress each
year, even areas that collect fees still suffer from disrepair. Trails
are poorly signed, bridges are frightfully unstable, privies are overflowing
and picnic tables and campsites are often vandalized. Meantime, the
fees have let bureaucrats build an awful lot of fancy entrance stations
and assign a lot of employees to do nothing more than collect money.
The very concept of paying fees to use public lands flies in the face
of what these wide-open spaces have been and should remain: places that
belong to the American people, where everyone has access and where everyone
is welcome. The fee program turns that ideal on its head and makes the
publics domain a private reserve. It shreds the American concept
of the wilderness and other open lands as a national heritage, and revives
the medieval notion of the kings land - places where we peasants
arent welcome.
Congress should kill the fee-demo program. If public lands need additional
funding, then this Congress - which was bragging about a budget surplus
not long ago - should just budget the money.
(Purdy is a member of the Denver Post editorial board. Language to
extend the Fee-Demo four more years has been inserted into a House bill
to be voted upon this week. Call your representative and ask that extension
of the Recreation Fee Demonstration Program be removed from the House
Interior Appropriations Bill. Capitol Switchboard: 202.224.3121.)