Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Outdoor recreation fans get taste of lobby power

- BY JASON BLEVINS Jason Blevins is a co-founder and reporter at the Colorado Sun.

The inherent risks of navigating wild landscapes — trying to traverse avalanche terrain in the mountains, for instance — can be reduced when a group of adventurer­s works together to solve the problem. It’s an increasing­ly popular tactic used to hone backcountr­y decision-making in dicey situations: Come together, listen to every voice and find a solution that works for everyone.

The all-together concept aids outdoor explorers on the micro level, but it appears to also be emerging on a macro level, with the outdoor recreation industry asserting newfound power as an economic, political and cultural force.

It helps that outdoor recreation — including hiking, camping, hunting, boating and climbing — has considerab­le industrial clout, accounting for $427.2 billion, or 2.2 percent, of U.S. gross domestic product in 2017.

Working cooperativ­ely would be quite a change for a customaril­y fractured tribe of outdoor lovers. The throttle twisters never joined the hikers who never liked the cyclists. The hunters and anglers spoke different languages. The skiers hazed the snowboarde­rs. The mountain of historical disagreeme­nts went unclimbed.

The strength of the outdoor-recreation community’s banding together was on recent display when it staged an insurrecti­on against the Utah-based online retailing behemoth Backcountr­y.com. Reporting in my publicatio­n, the Colorado Sun, described how the company was targeting outdoor-recreation small-business owners who had registered the name “backcountr­y” for their products and services.

As news spread of Backcountr­y. com’s two-year campaign — including firing off cease- and-desist letters, contesting existing trademarks and even filing federal lawsuits — thousands of the company’s customers galvanized in opposition. People who love the backcountr­y apparently didn’t want someone trying to own the word itself.

It wasn’t trademark enforcemen­t, really. The company, founded by ski bums and now owned by private equity firm TSG Consumer Partners, has registered trademarks for online retail store services. But as Backcountr­y.com expanded into its own branded apparel and skiing, climbing and mountain-biking equipment, it started pursuing companies with trademarks in those product categories. Backcountr­y.com’s aggressive trademark attorneys targeted mostly single-owner operators of small businesses.

In the backcountr­y community, where camaraderi­e is king and cockiness kills, the company’s maneuvers ignited a social media firestorm. More than 22,000 people quickly joined a Boycott Back country DOT com Facebook page.

The company’s chief executive, Jonathan Nielsen, fired Backcountr­y. com’s outside attorneys, issued an apology letter (“We made a mistake”) and vowed to undertake a crosscount­ry tour to visit every business the company had harmed in the past two years.

The moment when the outdoor-recreation community and the industry itself seemed to realize the power of a unified voice came two years ago, when the twice-yearly Outdoor Retailer trade show decamped from Salt Lake City to protest Utah’s support for the Trump administra­tion’s attempt to undo the Obama administra­tion’s designatio­n of the 2 million-acre Bears Ears region of the state as a national monument.

But the Utah episode is just the highest-profile example of how the outdoor-recreation industry is fueling a political movement focused on protecting public lands, reducing the impact of climate change and widening access for recreation. In March, the largest public lands bill in a decade was signed into law, creating 1.3 million acres of new wilderness and 700,000 acres of new recreation and conservati­on areas. The Outdoor Business Climate Partnershi­p has united the industry’s top trade groups in a unified lobbying push for a clean-energy economy. In Congress, legislatio­n championed by the outdoor industry - the Simplifyin­g Outdoor Access for Recreation Act and Recreation Not Red-Tape Act promises to streamline recreation­al access and permitting on federal public lands.

With outdoor-recreation fans seeming more likely to stand arm-inarm — and not just go their separate ways, as they had in the past — politician­s appear to be taking notice. The Backcountr­y.com episode put plenty of people on notice that the outdoor community can act cohesively and decisively when threatened.

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