Jason_Martin Posted September 15, 2003 Posted September 15, 2003 I don't know if this particular info has been placed on this site yet... So here it is: http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=161-09092003 Assistant Secretary Lynn Scarlett: Recreational Fee Demonstration Program Enhances Visitor Facilities and Services 9/9/03 4:00:00 PM To: National Desk Contact: Joan Moody of the U.S. Department of the Interior, 202-208-6416 WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 /U.S. Newswire/ -- In testimony today before the Subcommittee on National Parks of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget Lynn Scarlett stated that S. 1107 should be amended to allow for a new interagency national pass, standardizing recreation fees, and forming partnerships with states and gateway communities. "Our suggested amendments to S. 1107 are the result of a great deal of analysis and discussion through the Interagency Recreation Fee Leadership Council," said Scarlett. "These concepts were developed from the lessons learned in administering the Fee Demo program." Assistant Secretary Scarlett recommended that in addition to the National Park Service, the permanent program should include the Bureau of Reclamation, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and USDA Forest Service. The creation of a new annual interagency pass would expand the National Parks Passport to cover all participating agencies and would consolidate the Golden Passes established under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act. Consolidating these passes would decrease visitor confusion about various agency passes and shift the emphasis to recreation opportunities on federal lands, Scarlett testified. In order to standardize recreation fees and minimize fee layering, a new system of "basic" and "expanded" recreation fees would be consistently applied across all agencies and would minimize fee layering by ensuring that the basic fee covers the primary attraction site. By developing partnerships with states and gateway communities, all can work together in concert to promote tourism and better serve visitors. Such efforts are consistent with Secretary Norton's "Four C's" -- Communication, Consultation, and Cooperation, all in the service of Conservation. The Fee Demo was developed in 1996 in direct response to the federal agencies' concern about growing backlog maintenance needs. The program allowed participating agencies to retain a majority of recreation fees at the site collected and reinvest those fees into enhancing visitor facilities and services. "A permanent recreation fee program enhances the Department's efforts to support the president's initiative to address the deferred maintenance backlog at our national parks," Scarlett said. "Authorization of a permanent program would allow the agencies to better serve visitors by making long-term investments, and creating more partnerships." Assistant Secretary Scarlett emphasized that while much has been learned from administering the Fee Demo program, the proposed permanent recreation fee program would be dynamic and responsive to new lessons. http://www.usnewswire.com/ -0- /© 2003 U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/ =======BEGIN ACTION ALERT======== Subject: Alert! E-mail DC on Fee Demo! Please send a quick e-mail to DC by Tuesday September 23rd, opposing Fee Demo on lands administered by the US Forest Service, the BLM and the US Fish & Wildlife Service. Senator Craig Thomas (R-WY) is holding a public hearing on 9.9.03 on his bill, S.1107, which will make Fee Demo permanent ONLY for the National Park Service. The public record is open for citizen comments on this bill for two weeks after 9.9.03, until 9.23.03. Please remember that with Congress hesitating to make Fee Demo permanent except in National Parks, this is the year to keep the pressure on! e-mails are quick and easy - can you help generate more? (Please note, we first sent out this alert on 7.27.03, only to hear that the public hearing then scheduled for 7.29.03 was postponed at one day's notice. You may, therefore, have already responded to this alert. If possible, can you resubmit the same email?) WHERE TO SEND YOUR E-MAIL: megan_badasch@energy.senate.gov WHAT TO SAY ** Please thank Senator Thomas for NOT including permanent recreation fees for the US Forest Service, BLM or US Fish & Wildlife Service! ** Add your own comments about Fee Demo in National Parks. Though not so controversial as forest fees, there are two sides to Park Service fees. (See BACKGROUND, below.) ** State briefly why you DON'T like Fee Demo in the other three agencies. BASIC SAMPLE LETTER (please add to it and use your own words! Look-alike e-mails carry less weight.) Senator Craig Thomas, Chair, Subcommittee on National Parks, 364 Dirksen, Washington, DC 20510. Dear Senator Thomas, Thank you for not including permanent fees for all four public lands agencies in S.1107. Recent increases in the entrance fees have led to a drop in visitation. I strongly object to paying a fee to visit undeveloped public lands managed by the Forest Service, BLM and US Fish & Wildlife Service, but I don't mind a small fee for a car campground or boat launch and am willing to pay modest National Park entrance fees. Please include this letter in the public record for the hearings on S.1107. Thank you. Yours, sincerely, (name and address) BACKGROUND ON PARK SERVICE FEE DEMO - Park Service fees have some major differences from Fee Demo in the other three agencies - ** Parks had staffed entry kiosks before Fee Demo, so less money was spent on collecting fees, compared with, for example, new forest fees. ** Parks tend to be destinations (rather than, say, the National Forest adjacent to your backyard). ** Parks usually have more amenities than National Forests, and visitors expect (at least some of) these. OTHER POINTS - ** Fee Demo allows the Park Service to keep and use entry fees that previously were sent off to the US Treasury. This can lead to further commercialization. ** National Parks are now adding further new fees (on top of entry fees) such as backcountry hiking and camping fees, parking fees, etc. ** Entry fees doubled (or more) with Fee Demo, which may be one reason visitation is down. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Scott Silver Wild Wilderness 248 NW Wilmington Ave. Bend, OR 97701 phone: 541-385-5261 e-mail: ssilver@wildwilderness.org Internet: http://www.wildwilderness.org ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -- "the most powerful weapon an oppressor has is the mind of the oppressed"; Steven Biko Quote
Jason_Martin Posted September 16, 2003 Author Posted September 16, 2003 Just want to keep this at the top for awhile... J. Quote
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