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There Likely Is A National Park Fee Increase In Your Future...

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It very likely will be a bit more costly to enter Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Acadia, Shenandoah and the other 126 units that charge entrance fees by the time the National Park Service's centennial arrives in 2016, and you also should brace for slightly higher fees to camp, shower, paddle, and participate in boat and cave tours.

Park Service Director Jon Jarvis last month notified his superintendents (see attachment) that they could increase their park's fees "after they have actively engaged the public and stakeholders about proposed changes and impacts."

Accompanying that notification, which was not announced publicly, was an entrance fee schedule that placed the 131 units that now charge entrance fees into four groups. Under those guidelines, for example, Yellowstone, which now costs $25 for a week's entry by vehicle, would be allowed to charge $30 after going through public engagement activities, which could entail "soliciting opinions through local media or online media such as Facebook, Twitter, etc."

The four groupings are intended to reflect the size and expense of running a park. So parks such as Yellowstone in Wyoming, Grand Canyon in Arizona, Glacier in Montana, and Yosemite in California would be in Group 4, while parks such as Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area in Wyoming, Chesapeake & Ohio Canal National Historical Park in Maryland, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, and Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve in Idaho would be in Group 1.

Under Director Jarvis' schedule, "if supported by civic engagement," by 2017 all Group 4 parks would charge $30 per week for vehicle entry, $15 for someone on foot, and $25 for a motorcycle; all Group 3 parks would set their entrance fees at $25, $12 and $20; all Group 2 parks would move to $20, $10, and $15, and; all Group 1 parks would move to $15, $7 and $10.

Also increasing would be the cost of an individual park's (or parks') annual pass, and the director left open the possibility that parks could increase fees for camping, RV dump stations, and tour fees, just to mention some of the fees now in place across the National Park System.

The Park Service is promoting these proposed increases as a way to provide needed dollars "to invest in the improvements necessary to provide the best possible park experience to our visitors."

"Additional funds will enable us to enhance visitor facilities and services as we approach our centennial anniversary in 2016," Director Jarvis wrote in his letter to regional directors. "Each park should identify how the additional revenue will be used to improve the park experience. Sharing this information will be an important part of each park's civic engagement plan."

Park managers authorized to seek fee increases were instructred to begin the engagement process this fall. 

"Each park's implementation timeline may vary, depending on the public feedback received," wrote Director Jarvis. "If there is significant public controversy, a park may choose not to implement new fees, may phase in the new rates over three years, or delay the new rates until 2016 or 2017."

(Back in 2007, then-Park Service Director Mary Bomar relented on a proposal to increase Yosemite's entrance fee from $20 to $25 after local communities complained in a letter-writing campaign that high gas fees and declining visitation were already hurting park visitation and a higher entrance fee would not be prudent at the time.)

Also likely to be increasing next year are the costs of using Recreation.gov to reserve a campsite or cabin in the parks, or to participate in some tours.

"All parks on Recreation.gov will be subject to slight increases in overhead costs so it is advisable for parks to examine rates for 2015," wrote Director Jarvis. 

Higher fees to enjoy the parks seldom are welcomed. The Park Service notes that entrance fees across the system have not changed since 2008, and that "the majority of fees have not increased since 2006, and there continues to be a growing need for funds to improve facilities, infrastructure and visitor services in parks."

Congress also has been reluctant to increase discretionary spending.

There was no mention in the director's directive concerning the price of the America the Beautiful National Parks and Federal Lands Pass, which has been $80 for a number of years. That pass allows the holder unlimited entry to all national parks and other federal lands that charge entrance fees. As such, it could become even more of a bargain if its price tag does not increase while the parks move towards the new entrance fee schedule.

How the proposed increases are received, both by the public and in Congress, remains to be seen. There has been an effort in the House to rewrite the fee authority legislation that governs fees collected by the Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and other federal land managers. That legislation, as drafted, would require the price of the America the Beautiful passes to be recalculated every three years "to reflect the change in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers over the same period..."

That legislation, if enacted, also would restrict sales of the passes to U.S. citizens and permanent residents, a move that likely would prove unpopular with international travelers who come to the United States to see a number of national parks on one visit. Kitty Benzar, president of the Western Slope No-Fee Coalition that long has fought fee creep on public lands, said that restriction could require one to provide proof of U.S. citizenship or permanent residency to purchase an America the Beautiful pass.

"Besides being unfriendly to foreign visitors, it opens the door to all kinds of racial and ethnic profiling abuse," she said Wednesday in an email to the Traveler. "Would the groups that are opposing ID requirements to vote be OK with having to show ID to purchase an ATB pass? I don't think so. Would entrance station staff have to see proof of citizenship/residency along with each pass presented?

"My Canadian friends are livid about this, pointing out that although their annual Parks Canada passes are more expensive than ours, they are available equally to all, both Canadians and foreign visitors. Because they WANT to encourage foreign tourism. Don't we?," she added. "Overall, I think that making the parks less affordable, both to Americans and others, is a pretty shabby way to celebrate the NPS Centennial."

Comments

No John, Steve is just another American that is sick of the NPS lying to double tax citizens to use public lands. And that is what they are supposed to be. Jarvis' NPS has a track record of ignoring public comments and civic engagement is a widely held myth to which the NPS is not bound and doesn't even read. There is plenty of documentation to that effect. No one wants to give more money to a agency that treats its "customers" like that. And the NPS isn't disneyworld. That is the dumbest analogy in the world. This should be a message to the agency. Your abuse of fee authority is calling FLREA into question and I for one have contacted my reps to ask for its repeal. Like my representative said, "the NPS does what it wants to regardless of what we say."

Poor NPS crying again and  how many fall for their lies. Totally lost sight of their mission since the national parks are now  nothing more than revenue generators. They ought to learn how to make do or do without like everyone else. Charging fees to enter God created NOT government created lands is wrong on many levels, especially when tax dollars already fund the basic needs of visitors. Learn to make do with what you have. If they want more young people to start visiting parks, raising already ridiculous fees wont help that. Hypocrites.


Actually, the government protects these lands.  Without the NPS it would be overran and the resources would be destroyed.  You guys obviously skipped out on the history behind the Park Service, and sound clueless, like usual.  Maybe if there weren't buffalo soldiers, there would be no buffalo.  Just this morning when I entered the Smokies, I saw maintence spray painting the park sign brown again, because some idiot tagged it.  I guess if you don't mind that your park looks like a used up trailer park, then that's one thing.

Secondly, how many of you that are whining about this actually travel to other National parks?  I know that smokies backpacker always belittles me for doing such activities and so I know he spends little to any time outside of Tennessee.  The question is how many of you actually spent time beyond just the Smokies, since the only ones complaining about this seem to be the Southern Forest Watch crowd  (steve gorge, john quillen, myers morton, etc), and from what I see none of you travel much beyond the 20 miles from where you were born.  Outside of the Smokies, fees are common in just about every park in the west, and even in parks like Shenandoah in the East, and have been that way since many of those parks establishment. 


Actually, many national forests dont charge entrance fees, are much larger than national parks, and get along just fine. The amount one travels has nothing to do with what is wrong or right. Go lay troll bait elsewhere.


I've seen many of the National Forests around this region.  A lot of them are trashed, compared to what you find in national parks, like the Smokies.I went to the cherokee NF to do some hellbender surveys, and so many trees were cut around the campsite areas, and it was not anywhere near as protected as what you find in the Smokies.  You could tell it was a free-for-all party place.  It's a free for all in the USFS areas, and it shows.  You go up to the wilderness areas like the Shining Rock, and Linville Gorge, and you find a Dr Seuss line of tents crowded into areas because it's free.  Like I said, if you don't mind the place looking like a used up trailer park, then I can understand why you think all places should look and function like that.  At least there is campsite number limits, permits and regulations in the National Parks.


Fees are not "double taxation." They're entirely voluntary. I agree that the NPS, like all government agencies, could and should be better stewards of the money they receive. But, while God may have created the land, we have charged the government with protecting it. That costs money. People who use the parks should pay for their use, the same way people who drive pay a gas tax to build and repair roads. That seems little enough to ask.


I am not one of those people who live in Tennessee and haven't traveled more than twenty miles from home (I've been to all but three of the fifty states, and dozens of national parks), and I think raising the fees is wrong because it's elitist, the same way that raising lodging prices is. 

I also think the *inequity* of fees is wrong.  Why should Mt. Rainier NP cost $15 for an entrance fee when it's free to get into the Smokies?  You folks in the Smokies have *no idea* how good you have it, to be able to get into your local national park for free.  None.  Whatsoever.

If the NPS *really* wants to balance its budget, it will fix the inequity (IOW, figure out a way to get round that legal fiasco), and the fees from the Smokies alone (the park with the most visits, BTW) will help more than anything else.


I know that smokies backpacker always belittles me for doing such activities and so I know he spends little to any time outside of Tennessee.

Wow Gary you've really put your foot in that one. Perhaps you should ask smokies backpacker for a copy of his e-book about his latest Himalayan expedition.


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