Free: Contests & Raffles.
Thanks for bringing this up bigtex. How does this typically affect access? Are the new "owners" usually less liberal with the permission slips?
In the case of Manke Lumber Co., in many cases access comes to a halt while the new owners either lock it up, or charge access fees.DNR needs to work for the ALL THE PEOPLE of Washington State to keep public access public. If you have the chance to shout out an objection to the land deals, do it quickly before these are gone too.
Quote from: Goshawk on November 23, 2014, 03:49:59 PMIn the case of Manke Lumber Co., in many cases access comes to a halt while the new owners either lock it up, or charge access fees.DNR needs to work for the ALL THE PEOPLE of Washington State to keep public access public. If you have the chance to shout out an objection to the land deals, do it quickly before these are gone too.You need to remember DNR is not around to provide us land we can recreate on. DNR is around to generate $ for the state. There is a large amount of DNR land in King County which is completely inaccessible as it is in an off-limits watershed.
Quote from: bigtex on November 23, 2014, 06:26:02 PMQuote from: Goshawk on November 23, 2014, 03:49:59 PMIn the case of Manke Lumber Co., in many cases access comes to a halt while the new owners either lock it up, or charge access fees.DNR needs to work for the ALL THE PEOPLE of Washington State to keep public access public. If you have the chance to shout out an objection to the land deals, do it quickly before these are gone too.You need to remember DNR is not around to provide us land we can recreate on. DNR is around to generate $ for the state. There is a large amount of DNR land in King County which is completely inaccessible as it is in an off-limits watershed.Hunting and other outdoor recreation does not generate revenue for the State?
However they do concern themselves with the Discover Pass access fee.Recreation is well promoted on their website. They even include a link to the buy a Discover Pass website. There is a link to the funding schools info page, but it's not first column first row. That's where they put recreation.Ideally folks in the DFW should be working with the DNR to ensure we retain hunting access, it is part of the reason why the hunting license costs more than zero. The King County Parks info pages about the DNR property acquisition mention "Wildlife" as one of the attributes of the property, but do not include "Hunters" in their list of recreation stakeholder groups interested in these lands.Here's a snapshot of the DNR home page as it is today:
DNR will be seeking legislative approval to transfer 620 acres of DNR lands in 5 areas to 5 new owners. The proposals are apart of the Trust Land Transfer (TLT) program. Under TLT lands are moved out of "trust" status either to a new owner, or given new status within DNR. The legislature then essentially writes a check to DNR to cover the timber revenue loss. The proposals that will move DNR lands out of DNR are:-80 acres of DNR land near Lake Cushman to Tacoma Public Utilities-40 acres of DNR land on the Preston Ridge to King County Parks-50 acres of DNR land on the "Olympic View" property to Kitsap County-160 acres of DNR land at Glenrose to Spokane County-The 290 acre Lake Spokane Campground will be moved from DNR to State Parks. The lands are currently owned by DNR but managed by State Parkshttp://www.dnr.wa.gov/Publications/em_bc_bnr_15_17_tlt_presentation.pdf