Generation Recreation

Bighorn National Forest Resorts to User Fees at Popular Trailhead


By Michael Pearlman, 11-22-09

 
 

Wyoming’s state slogan might be “Like No Place on Earth” but next summer another of its National Forest trailheads is going to look a lot like those found in Colorado. And Washington and Oregon. And increasingly, like anywhere in the country the Forest Service can justify charging a “Recreation Access Tax” or RAT.

The West Tensleep Trailhead in the Bighorn National Forest --the most popular access to the Cloud Peak Wilderness-- will have a $10 parking fee next summer, though forest managers can’t legally call it a parking fee (a mistake they made when they first filed a notice on the Federal Register. I’ve been told it will be replaced with a “correctly worded” version). The RAT is the first of its type at a day-use trailhead in the Bighorn Forest, which is the second forest in the state to implement these fees. The Medicine Bow-Routt National Forest near Laramie implemented a $5 fee for trailheads a few years ago. The fee is authorized through the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act (FLREA), legislation passed in 2004 that made permanent the controversial “Fee Demo” program that has been in place since the mid-90s. Bill Schneider has discussed this issue at length here on New West, and I can only echo his arguments. 

It’s all about a funding shortfall, according to forest service managers who have crunched numbers. The Bighorn National Forest annual budget took a big hit this year due to the bark beetle infestation that’s devastated some forests in the same region further south. The FLREA requires certain “amenities” to be in place before a fee may be charged. What amenities does the $10 get you? At the West Tensleep trailhead, users get to park in the same parking lot that was previously free, you get an odoriferous pit toilet, some scattered picnic tables, the presence of wilderness rangers and thanks to the fee, trash collection, which was never there before. The new fee will pay for that service. Locals who want to use the lot regularly will have to pony up $50 for an annual permit.

I can’t fault forest managers for searching for an additional revenue stream after years of funding shortfalls, but the West Tensleep user fee unfairly targets certain user groups to pay the costs of a larger problem. The seven-mile corridor between U.S. Highway 16 and this trailhead is an enormously popular free-for-all of fifth-wheel and pop-up campers, ATV riders, hunters and fisherman. There’s over 100 dispersed campsites in this corridor where forest users don’t pay a penny to tear up vegetation, probably because charging these groups would provoke a much larger public outcry. Instead, forest managers have targeted the day hiker, horseback rider and backpacking crowd.

Clearly the issue of Forest Service budget cuts needs to be addressed, but that conversation needs to start in Congress, rather than being foisted off on the public on a piecemeal basis. With public lands visitation declining, fees like the one proposed in this case just gives families one more reason not to head into the forest on foot. Most of the other accesses to the Cloud Peak Wilderness require punishing drives down two-track roads that require a high-clearance vehicle. In other cases, forest-trailheads are primarily the domain of off-road enthusiasts. The $10 fee feels to me like a penalty for seeking out the quickest access to the wilderness experience.

The practical effect of this fee being implemented remains to be seen. Visiting backpackers who show up to tag the summit of Cloud Peak from the West Tensleep Trailhead might not mind paying the fee, but the local user who only visits the forest occasionally is probably going to think twice about heading there. More likely, they’ll opt to camp for free along the corridor, creating even heavier impacts near West Tensleep Creek. Or else they’ll just stay home altogether. Forest managers are by default promoting one type of forest use over another by charging only one user group.

I’m happy Senators Max Baucus (D-MT) and Mike Crapo (R-ID) have introduced legislation to repeal the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act. Now it would be nice to see Wyoming’s congressional delegation step up and throw their support behind S. 868, the Fee Repeal and Expanded Access Act of 2009. The bill has been referred to the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Commiittee, where hopefully it will get a hearing in 2010. Funding the management of our public lands needs to be approached in a different way.



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