I've wrestled with the question of 'pay for use' for a while. I personally don't object to paying for a parking pass in the WMNF since the funds stay in the system locally, I believe.
So if you're in a car with three adults in the car, does your group pay $70 or $160? Note children are free as are holders of various special passes (seniors, military)
Assuming it continues to work the way it does now, your group pays $70. The individual fees are aimed at people who bike or walk in. Possibly folks arriving via tour bus - not sure about the last group.
Generally about 50% of the fees for the fee "demonstration" program stays local. The increase of user fees is part of a strategy explicitly aimed at privatizing public lands. I'm okay with paying in. I'm not okay with privatization.
Generally about 50% of the fees for the fee "demonstration" program stays local. The increase of user fees is part of a strategy explicitly aimed at privatizing public lands. I'm okay with paying in. I'm not okay with privatization.
"Generally about 50% of the fees for the fee "demonstration" program stays local."
>That's the top level appearance.
"Bummer, I was hoping it was higher."
>It's actually much lower than that.
"...parking fee revenue had effectively been offset by the budget process so that there was little or no net impact to the overall WMNF budget..."
>Truth. Consistently, at almost all levels of Government, "user fees" are played as a shell game. The regular budget is reduced concomitantly. The net effect is no additional benefit to the resource, just more money going to headquarters.
Generally about 50% of the fees for the fee "demonstration" program stays local. The increase of user fees is part of a strategy explicitly aimed at privatizing public lands. I'm okay with paying in. I'm not okay with privatization.
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