Well why not have fees for police, ambulance and fire calls?
As a side note, when was the last time a lodging guest of one of these establishments was the subject of a search & rescue, and one of these establishments didn't contribute either employees (croo) or volunteers to assist?
Well why not have fees for police, ambulance and fire calls?
As a side note, when was the last time a lodging guest of one of these establishments was the subject of a search & rescue, and one of these establishments didn't contribute either employees (croo) or volunteers to assist?
I would say that backpackers are probably the best prepared with survival gear and day hikers the least, hut users may not be carrying food and shelter and they may travel in unusually bad weather because they have a prepaid reservation - would the Madison guy have turned around sooner if he wasn't expecting a warm bed? Gene Daniell once wrote a letter to the AMC Bulletin that the existence of huts attracted relatively inexperienced people farther into the outdoors, and many of the angry responses actually proved his point. "Boy was it nice when I broke my ankle to have a hut close by."If anything, guests of the hut facilities are probably better prepared in general than those without an inkling of the facilities available.
Demographically I'm sure you'll find that AMC hut users tend to be in higher income brackets, lesser true for RMC. Many taxes are based on "soak the rich" and that is probably the second part of why this tax is being proposed.I disagree with the notion that guests of the hut facilities can better afford the additional tax and I don't think that is relevant either. We are all in this together and these things ought to be paid out of general funds, not by some preconceived notion of who can or can't afford the tax.
And to piggy-back on that thought... I don't think the following scenario has played out yet, but: Say a hiker requires a rather involved rescue, is deemed negligent, and is charged by the state. Let's also assume resources were donated by the AMC or RMC to rescue said hiker, as is often the case. Does the AMC or RMC then get a reimbursement from the fines the hiker paid for his gross negligence?
My guess is no.
I'm sitting here thinking I would be happy to kick in $1 for SAR everytime I hiked in NH. Is there a recognized charitable organization in this field where I could send a yearly check and get a little tax break as well?
And FWIW - the AMC Crawford Notch facility caters to more than just the outdoorsy set. One of the times I was there recently the place was nearly full - booked by the NH Council on the Arts. As best I could determine, their multi-day stay had little to do with the outdoors. Rather, it was a gathering one might expect to find at many "destination resorts".
Hut users probably generate more S&R responses than couch potatoes which is probably the 1st reason this tax is proposed.
I am not a lawyer (although I was talking to several last night including a retired NH Supreme Court justice) but why would you think this tax is unconstitutional? There are any number of oddball taxes out there.Do we have any lawyers out there who wish to comment upon the possible constitutionality (I think that's a word) of this proposal? That issue was my second reaction to the proposal.
Sure (and I've only lived there 40 yrs) but not as confusing as MA or the US Congress.My first reaction was an old one - NH politics are, and always have been, such a muddled mystery to me.
Because huts already pay taxes so it's much easier to tack on more than to figure out a way to collect from every bird watcher, and its alleged hut users tend to be wealthy and out of state so they make nice targets.If couch potatoes are the comparison, this also applies to all hikers, not to mention walkers, hunters, campers, bird watchers...why single out the huts?
I seems to me that taxing huts (both AMC and RMC) is putting the burden on a snmall and narrow percentage of users. If you want to tax a broader base of recreational users, why not make it part of the WMNF parking fees?
It would hardly be the first time that the feds and the states both applied a tax, tariff or fee on the same item. There's no reason they couldn't add a buck to the parking fee and have the feds divert an appropriate amount of the monies collected to New Hampshire.
Other than not having the political will to do it, that is.
I am not a lawyer (although I was talking to several last night including a retired NH Supreme Court justice) but why would you think this tax is unconstitutional? There are any number of oddball taxes out there.
But then again, I not a lawyer, and I don't play one on TV.
It would seem to me that whatever establishments (at this point just RMC & AMC) who are required to assess/collect/remit this extra tax/fee/whatever could make a case that they were being singled out and that was in violation of their rights under the Equal Protection Clause, part of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
But then again, I not a lawyer, and I don't play one on TV.
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