Proposed overnight wilderness fee widely opposed by public
The public supports a quota system in parts of the Maroon Bells-snowmass Wilderness but a fee was widely opposed in hundreds of comments submitted to the U.S. Forest Service.
The White River National Forest accepted comments through midseptember on the proposed fee system that would cover some of the most stunning sites in the wilderness area outside of Aspen, including the popular Four Pass Loop backpacking route.
Wilderness Watch, a conservation group based in Missoula, Mont., led the charge in support of the reservation and permit proposal but against the fee.
“Wilderness Watch supports quotas to reduce impacts and protect wildlife and solitude for visitors, so we feel the Forest Service is justified in proposing quotas in this case,” Wilderness Watch wrote on its website. “However, turning the quota system into a plan to charge $12 per day to visit Wilderness is both inappropriate and illegal.”
The White River National Forest unveiled its proposal in July to implement a reservation and permit system along with a $12 fee for overnight camping along the Four Pass Loop, the upper Capitol Creek Valley and Geneva Lake. The proposal would also impose the $12 fee at the Conundrum Hot Springs, where reservations are already required.
The fee for backpackers would apply from May 1 through Oct. 31. Reservations would be required through recreation.gov, which would charge a $6 processing fee on each reservation.
The Forest Service said the reservation system is needed to ease the environmental degradation occurring in the wilderness “hot spots.”
The agency said it must charge the fee to hire more rangers to patrol the wilderness and enforce the restrictions. Officials contend they can impose the fee under the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act.
Wilderness Watch counters that a fee cannot be charged simply for walking or riding a horse through wilderness.
“The fees are another part of the effort to commercialize Wilderness, and would exclude the public from accessing and enjoying their public lands,” Wilderness Watch said on its website.
The organization effectively rallied its membership to weigh in on the debate. The Forest Service posted 1,625 public comments in its “public reading room” and another 10 comments were submitted outside that online forum, according to White River public information officer David Boyd. Out of that total of 1,635 comments, roughly 800 were form letters, according to the filter available at the reading room. While not all the form letters were submitted by Wilderness Watch members, many were, according to a spot check by The Aspen Times.
Kitty Benzar, president of the Western Slope Nofee Coalition, is a longtime critic of fees to access public lands. She opposes the Maroon Bellssnowmass Wilderness fee but said she didn’t try to rally her troops.
“I’ve become cynical and jaded about ever making a difference,” she said. “The Forest Service just goes ahead and does whatever it wants regardless of what the public wants.”
Curiosity got the best of her so she took a representative sample of the 1,625 comments posted in the online reading room by examining every 10th comment. She categorized them as supportive or opposed to the fee and, separately, if they indicated support for a quota system and requirement for reservations.
“The bottom line is that 14% support a fee while 83% opposed it,” Benzar wrote in her analysis.
Boyd said the White River staff is analyzing the comments.
Proponents said reservations and the fee were necessary to prevent environmental damage.
“I’m in favor of the fees in order to halt the continuing degradation of this particular resource,” wrote James Kell, no address given. “Maroon Bells is an exceptional resource deserving exceptional care, and these funds are necessary to protect the resource.”