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Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness, Colorado

Tell the Forest Service fees aren’t the way to fund Wilderness stewardship!

In response to a surge in use and associated impacts, the U.S. Forest Service (FS) is proposing a fee-based permit system for camping in a number of places in the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness in Colorado.

Wilderness Watch supports quotas to reduce impacts and protect wildlife and solitude for visitors, so we feel the FS is justified in proposing quotas in this case.  However, turning the quota system into a plan to charge $12 per day just to visit Wilderness is both inappropriate and illegal.

Please voice your opposition to the proposed fees by September 15.



It is simply wrong to charge people to visit Wilderness areas, which are our shared natural heritage as Americans. They are our irreplaceable birthright as citizens, open to all, not just those who can pay fees.  Congress appropriates more than enough tax money to federal agencies to administer these national treasures, the agencies shouldn’t treat them as a way to raise even more funds.



The proposed fees are also illegal under the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act, which prohibits charging fees for parking at, hiking through, horseback riding in, or camping in undeveloped federal sites such as Wildernesses. Despite Forest Service claims, traveling on foot or horseback through a Wilderness is not a "specialized recreation use," which applies to group activities, recreation events, and motorized recreational vehicle use.

 The Forest Service is proposing (starting next year) to charge $12 per person, per night, from May 1 through October 31 (plus a $6 processing fee) for camping at Crater Lake, Snowmass Lake, Geneva Lake, Capitol Lake, and along the Four Pass Loop, which includes West Maroon, Frigid Air, Trail Rider, and Buckskin passes, and the FS has left the door open to add fee permits to additional places in future years.

The new fees are an expansion of an existing limited-access permit system in place for Conundrum Hot Springs in the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness meant to prevent overcrowding and resource damage. The agency proposes to add the $12 per person, per night fee to Conundrum Hot Springs as well, which currently charges the $6 processing fee for camping year-round.

The fees are another part of the effort to commercialize Wilderness, and would exclude the public from accessing and enjoying their public lands. Please voice your opposition to the proposed fees by September 15. Comments need to be submitted online: https://cara.ecosystem-management.org/Public/CommentInput?Project=NP-2849

We encourage you to write in your own words and personalize your comments, but consider including the following points:

  • I support quotas to protect Wilderness areas from being overrun by people, but I’m adamantly opposed to your proposal to charge people for camping at Crater Lake, Snowmass Lake, Geneva Lake, Capitol Lake, Conundrum Hot Springs, and along the Four Pass Loop in the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
     
  • It is simply wrong to charge people to visit Wilderness areas, which are our shared natural heritage as Americans. They are our irreplaceable birthright as citizens, open to all, not just those who can pay fees.  Congress appropriates more than enough tax money to federal agencies to administer these national treasures, the agencies shouldn’t treat them as a way to raise even more funds.
    


  • The FS is incorrectly claiming authority for charging such fees under a clause in the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act (FLREA) that allows a fee for "specialized recreation uses" such as group activities, recreation events, and motorized recreational vehicles. Congress never meant that to apply to private individuals who are hiking, walking, horseback riding, and camping in a completely undeveloped part of a national forest. These fees are illegal under the FLREA and would exclude the public from accessing and enjoying their public lands.
     
  • This fee proposal is unprecedented as it would impact more than 20 percent of the Wilderness, with more areas likely to be added in the future.
     
  • Such fees would set a horrible national precedent for other Wilderness areas around the country, and I urge you to abandon your fee scheme for the Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.

Help us protect the Maroon Bells-Snowmass and Wilderness around the country. All first-time donations matched by a generous donor in Massachusetts!

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Photo: Dan Nevill via Flickr 

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