The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Freedom-versus-common-good debate roils New Jersey forests

- By Wayne Parry

SHAMONG, N.J. >> Sprawling across 1.1 million acres of pine trees, sandy soil, remote wetlands and home to rare plants and animals, the New Jersey Pinelands is the personific­ation of the freeas-a-bird Great Outdoors.

Locals speak passionate­ly of walking or riding through the woods that their parents or grandparen­ts introduced them to, hiking, fishing, hunting or driving motorcycle­s or 4-wheel-drive vehicles along the unpaved sand and gravel roads.

But the Pinelands is being loved to death in many places.

The illegal use of offroad vehicles has cut wide swaths of damage into the ecological­ly sensitive region. Some riders veer off approved trails into sensitive areas, marring them with tire tracts and litter.

New Jersey officials have been struggling with this situation for decades, particular­ly in Wharton State Forest, a 124,350-acre track of woods and wetlands in the southern part of the state where tensions between vehicle lovers and opponents have been rising.

And what appears to be the state’s preferred solution — institutin­g a permit system to use parts of the forest — is pleasing few people.

At an online public hearing Wednesday night on the issue, the age-old freedomver­sus-the-common-good debate dominated the discussion. Virtually no one supported permits, even at a nominal cost.

Most locals viewed it as government overreach by charging them to use land they already own as members of the public. Many riders said they meticulous­ly follow the rules, and they don’t want to be punished for the actions of what John Cecil, assistant commission­er of the New Jersey Department of Environmen­tal Protection described as “a small percentage of people abusing the space.”

On the other side are those who argue the state has an obligation to crack down on illegal behavior to protect the Pinelands for future generation­s. Yet many of them doubt that the need for a permit will stop irresponsi­ble riders from continuing to damage the woods.

The Department of Environmen­tal Protection, which has not yet decided whether to require permits or how much they might cost, says the system would check incoming vehicles to ensure they are safe for the woods and comply with requiremen­ts on the type of vehicles that are allowed. Dirt bikes, motorcycle­s, pickup trucks and 4-wheeldrive vehicles are allowed as long as they are streetlega­l, licensed and insured. Vehicles designed for offroad terrain, which are not allowed on city streets, are also banned from the Pinelands.

“When someone from the government says you should give up some freedom in the name of safety, that should be a red flag,” said Jason Stetser, who swims, camps and canoes in Wharton State Forest.

He said state-imposed restrictio­ns on where vehicles can go have already placed a favorite hunting spot off limits to him because it is three miles from the nearest road.

But Deb Smith, who loves living in the Pinelands, said things are getting dangerous.

“I have been physically and verbally attacked in the forest, so I’m leery now,” she said. “People say, ‘This is our land, no one should tell us how to use it.’ That’s a bad attitude.”

Created by an act of Congress in 1978, the Pinelands district is overseen by a joint federal and state commission. It occupies 22% of New Jersey’s land area, and it is the largest body of open space on the midAtlanti­c seaboard between Richmond, Virginia, and Boston. It also includes an aquifer that is the source of 17 trillion gallons of drinking water.

It contains many rare plant and animal species, some existing nowhere else on Earth, and it has been designated by the United Nations as an internatio­nally significan­t site worthy of special protection.

Wharton State Forest draws 800,000 visitors a year. As part of the ongoing debate over its future use, New Jersey officials sought input from people who live in or near the forest, or who travel to visit it.

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