Las Vegas Review-Journal

Burning Man pursues OK for more attendees

Critics wary of altering cap for annual festival

- The Associated Press

RENO — Burning Man organizers are seeking permission for as many as 100,000 people to attend the annual countercul­ture festival in future years.

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management caps attendance at the annual event in the Black Rock Desert at 68,000.

Burning Man officials are proposing their new special use permit be expanded to allow at least 80,000 participan­ts and eventually as many as 100,000, the Reno Gazette-journal reported. The proposed cap would rise over a number of years.

The BLM is reviewing the criteria used to set the attendance cap and other guidelines that regulate the festival to minimize environmen­tal and other impacts on the high desert and surroundin­g communitie­s.

The agency plans to issue a rough draft of the new conditions in about a year with a final draft scheduled to be released for public comment in early 2019.

Several critics expressed concern to BLM officials about any expansion of the event during public meetings this past week in Reno, Lovelock and Gerlach, the small town that borders the festival site about 110 miles northeast of Reno.

“I’m just concerned because, when I moved here 45 years ago, (the Black Rock Desert) was just the most remote, least-visited area. That area was so full of solitude, it was a wilderness with a small ‘w’,” said Karen Boeger, a conservati­onist from Reno.

Gerlach residents wanted issues with traffic and trash along Nevada State Route 447 resolved before an expansion is considered. They also expressed concerns about Burning Man’s use of the town’s local water supply.

Reno residents were more curious about the timeline and how else the event would change, while Lovelock residents fretted over the limited resources that they lend to Burning Man, particular­ly law enforcemen­t and court services.

“There’s a lack of benefit for the community in Pershing County. While (Burning Man organizers) noted that they bring $50 million to the state, Pershing County sees not even half of a percent of that,” county Sheriff Jerry Allen said.

With raising the attendance cap, organizers are asking to increase by more than 500 acres the area closed off before, during and after the event to about 22.5 square miles.

Organizers expect to see an increase in the number of art pieces, closer to 400 compared with the 330 featured this year.

They also want to allow nearly 2,000 theme camps, compared with the 1,100 this past year, and closer to 1,000 mutant art vehicles compared with 600 since 2009.

Burning Man began in 1986 in the San Francisco Bay Area with no more than a few dozen locals and moved four years later to the Black Rock Desert, where a few hundred people attended initially.

In 1991, the BLM issued its first permit for the event and began monitoring the safety, security and health practices.

 ?? Jim Urquhart ?? Reuters Participan­ts explore the playa Aug. 28 as approximat­ely 70,000 people from all over the world gathered for the Burning Man festival in the Black Rock Desert.
Jim Urquhart Reuters Participan­ts explore the playa Aug. 28 as approximat­ely 70,000 people from all over the world gathered for the Burning Man festival in the Black Rock Desert.

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