Mercury (Hobart)

PARK PASS OVERHAUL

REVEALED Tourists face higher fees

- BLAIR RICHARDS

ENTRY fees to national parks could soon be lifted for the first time in 10 years, in a bid to boost parks funding on the back of booming tourist numbers.

The State Government has confirmed advice was being considered from the Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environmen­t following its review of park entry fees.

Both the tourism lobby and the Greens have called on Tasmania’s new Parks Minister Peter Gutwein to make tourists pay more for entry than locals.

Tourism Industry Council Tasmania CEO Luke Martin said Tasmanian parks were underfunde­d and it was time for tourists to pay more.

“We should make visitors pay more to visit our national parks. How do you do that while keeping it affordable for Tasmanians is a problem for government,” Mr Martin said.

But UTAS expert Professor Richard Eccleston said it would likely be unconstitu­tional to charge mainlander­s more.

THE State Government is considerin­g raising entry fees to national parks for the first time in 10 years, in a bid to boost parks funding on the back of booming tourist numbers.

A spokesman confirmed the Government was considerin­g advice from the Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environmen­t after a review of park entry fees.

“The Parks and Wildlife Service national park pass fees have remained unchanged since 2009. Every dollar from the National Parks Pass system goes directly back into our natural assets — protecting them for generation­s to come, and providing experience­s that match the expectatio­ns of visitors and locals alike,” the spokesman said.

Both the tourism lobby and the Greens have called on Tasmania’s new Parks Minister Peter Gutwein to make tourists pay more for entry to the state’s national parks.

However, a Mona-style scheme requiring non-Tasmanians to pay more would fall foul of the Constituti­on, which prohibits any barrier on trade or tax between states.

Tourism Industry Council Tasmania CEO Luke Martin said Tasmanian parks were underfunde­d and it was time for tourists to pay more.

“We should make visitors pay more to visit our national parks. How do you do that while keeping it affordable for Tasmanians is a problem for government,” Mr Martin said.

Visitor numbers to Tasmanian national parks continue to break records.

In 2017-18, about 310,000 people visited Freycinet, an increase of 6 per cent on the previous year, and about 280,000 people visited Cradle Mountain, an increase of 11 per cent.

Professor Richard Eccleston of the University of Tasmania’s Institute for the Study of Social Change said the obvious solution to a lack of funds for parks infrastruc­ture was user pays, both in terms of raising the funds and maintainin­g community support for tourism.

Prof Eccleston said arrival levies and bed taxes worked well in other countries.

“But state-based visitor or bed taxes aren’t an option in Tasmania,” Professor Eccleston said.

“Section 92 of the Constituti­on prevents any barrier to or tax on trade between Australian states so an interstate arrival tax would be unconstitu­tional.”

“The (parks) fee structure already favours local Tasmanians with a two-year pass for $124, only five time and day pass $24, with extremely generous concession­s.

“There is clearly scope to increase parks fees although the revenue raised — even doubling would only raise $5-10 million — would be relatively modest compared to the cost of upgrading infrastruc­ture.”

Greens leader Cassy O’Connor said her party had long called for national parks entry fees to be increased for tourists to help fund the protection of the Tasmanian wilderness.

“Visiting Tasmania’s parks is a privilege for which visitors to our beautiful island should pay,” Ms O’Connor said.

“If the Liberals were to increase entry fees, we would expect those funds to flow directly back to the Parks and Wildlife Service.”

An Auditor-General’s report in 2016 found funding for Tasmanian parks was low by national standards, at $12 per hectare compared with a national average of $26/ha.

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