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HOME arrow - Activism arrow Solidarity or Bust
Solidarity or Bust
Written by Scott Silver   
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

What follows is a comment letter sent to the Supervisor of the Shawnee National Forest.




Hurston A. Nicholas, Forest Supervisor
Shawnee National Forest
 
RE: Shawnee Recreation Fee Comments

Dear Mr. Nicholas,
 
I can't recall having been to the Shawnee NF and the way things are going, it's possible I may never get there.  That said, I'd like to keep the option open and have interest in the forest under your supervision.
 
There was a time when I avidly explored our public lands. I did so with the hope and expectation that I'd be pleasantly surprised with what I'd discover.
 
Between 1991 and 1994, I slept more than 500 nights with my back upon the ground at National Parks and upon other public lands from coast to other (and most points in between). My then infant son, grew up in a tent. He did not suffer from Nature Deficit Disorder and did not need the FS's More Kids in the Woods marketing promotion.
 
Shortly after the imposition of the Recreation Fee Demonstration program I became, in effect, a homebody and my son (now in college) has almost no interaction with nature or with the lands upon which he grew up.
 
Once the FS got into the swing of charging fees, raising fees and treating outdoor recreation as if it was a commodity to be marketed and sold to paying customers, my expectation of a visit to the National Forest inverted. No longer did I set out into the woods with the expectation of experiencing some unknown delight.
 
In the new pay-to-play world my expectation was that of fear -- fear that I'd be disappointed. My fear was that I'd chance upon some wonderful place and would be prevented from getting out of my vehicle because I would not pay the fees. I would not pay those fees on moral principles, because I know the extremist Libertarian ideology that went into the fee program and because the organization for which I have served as Executive Director since 1991 is staunchly opposed to the commercialization, privatization and motorization of public lands -- three threats all directly related to pay-to-play.
 
In 1996, when Fee-Demo became law, Mike Dombeck, Francis Pandolfi and Jim Lyons all claimed 800 million annual Forest Service visitors. They predicted that that number would soon rise to more than a billion. They stated with pride that in the years to come, Recreation was going to be the primary business of the USFS. They planned to use the fee authority to create and market a line of branded products  the way Proctor and Gamble offers its bathroom products. SKI-US, FLOAT-US, HIKE-US, EXPLORE-US, FISH-US were just a few of the products in their new line.
 
In an effort to hype recreation the 800 million visitor number was, as was later admitted by the FS, an unfortunate fiction. The number was revised downward to just over 200 million.  Today annual visitation has fallen below 180 million, as determined by the NVUM process. With gas prices soaring, visitation will likely drop even further in spite of all the new and frantic marketing effort being undertaken by the agency and its partners.
 
The Forest Service continues to claim that recreation fees do not adversely impact visitation. The FS continues to claim that their customers love to pay and that some fraction of their customers think the fees are too low and wouldn't mind paying more. The FS continues to deny that the purpose for the fee program is to transform outdoor recreation from a public good to a product line of salable, market priced, predigested experiences and to make the agencies financially self-supporting.
 
Fortunately the people of Illinois have seen past the deception and have made it impossible for the Forest Service to claim that their customers are delighted with pay-to-play. The people of Illinois have risen up as have the people of the Kern River Valley in California. They are similarly engaged in a heated battle against the agency's efforts to create more, and higher, fees and to transform the relationship of those local folks to their public lands. Congress is likewise rising up having already introduced FLREA-repeal legislation in the Senate and soon to follow in the House.
 
One part of me wants to encourage you to abandon your efforts to push forward new and higher fees on the Shawnee NF. I empathize with the local users and would like to support them in solidarity.
 
Another part of me, however, would enjoy seeing the Shawnee NF become the powder-keg which explodes and, by so doing, brings down the entire pay-to-play, Corporate Takeover of Nature, Disneyfication of the Wild,  agenda.
 
I'm going to conclude this letter by opting for solidarity.  I lend my support to the fee opponents of the Shawnee and do so with the presumption that the FS will respond with it usual arrogance. If, as a result of this arrogance, the fee issue explodes in your face, who knows -- perhaps someday I will take to the road again and pay a visit to the Shawnee National Forest.

 

Comments (1) >>

Joe said:

  Thank you for your support.
July 01, 2008
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