Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:12:12 AMI don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force. As far as I know most fees are per car. Rainier is $25 per car. What would you say the per person price be? Visiting public lands will sure get expensive.
I don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force.
Quote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:17:40 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:12:12 AMI don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force. As far as I know most fees are per car. Rainier is $25 per car. What would you say the per person price be? Visiting public lands will sure get expensive.I don't know and am not even sure that's the solution. But visiting public lands is already expensive. It's just we're not paying the bill. It's clear something needs to be done to finance the maintenance backlog. Take the senior pass, for example. One person pays $80/year and then, for all intents and purposes, could bring a van of 10 seniors, none of whom have bought the pass. Is that fiscally sensible? Consider allowing a spouse but others should have to pay to play. Again, just as an example. Not sure it's a solution. But I do get where he's coming from.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:31:29 AMQuote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:17:40 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:12:12 AMI don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force. As far as I know most fees are per car. Rainier is $25 per car. What would you say the per person price be? Visiting public lands will sure get expensive.I don't know and am not even sure that's the solution. But visiting public lands is already expensive. It's just we're not paying the bill. It's clear something needs to be done to finance the maintenance backlog. Take the senior pass, for example. One person pays $80/year and then, for all intents and purposes, could bring a van of 10 seniors, none of whom have bought the pass. Is that fiscally sensible? Consider allowing a spouse but others should have to pay to play. Again, just as an example. Not sure it's a solution. But I do get where he's coming from.The senior pass is good for life, it's not an annual pass.And I agree with you. But we all know many people don't like fees.
Quote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:33:44 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:31:29 AMQuote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:17:40 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:12:12 AMI don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force. As far as I know most fees are per car. Rainier is $25 per car. What would you say the per person price be? Visiting public lands will sure get expensive.I don't know and am not even sure that's the solution. But visiting public lands is already expensive. It's just we're not paying the bill. It's clear something needs to be done to finance the maintenance backlog. Take the senior pass, for example. One person pays $80/year and then, for all intents and purposes, could bring a van of 10 seniors, none of whom have bought the pass. Is that fiscally sensible? Consider allowing a spouse but others should have to pay to play. Again, just as an example. Not sure it's a solution. But I do get where he's coming from.The senior pass is good for life, it's not an annual pass.And I agree with you. But we all know many people don't like fees.I think movie tickets are too expensive. So I don't go. We all have a choice.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:37:26 AMQuote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:33:44 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:31:29 AMQuote from: bigtex on March 15, 2018, 10:17:40 AMQuote from: pianoman9701 on March 15, 2018, 10:12:12 AMI don't think this is a single solution problem. Logging is possible but we're talking about National Parks, which for the most part, are supposed to be untouched, natural wilderness areas. So, you're not going to completely solve the problem by clear cutting Yellowstone. I agree with his assessment that more people should pay, that a car with a disabled person and 4 other abled people should fork up 4 admissions or at least require 4 passes. And although I agree that active duty and their families should visit free, this should not apply to the Air Force. As far as I know most fees are per car. Rainier is $25 per car. What would you say the per person price be? Visiting public lands will sure get expensive.I don't know and am not even sure that's the solution. But visiting public lands is already expensive. It's just we're not paying the bill. It's clear something needs to be done to finance the maintenance backlog. Take the senior pass, for example. One person pays $80/year and then, for all intents and purposes, could bring a van of 10 seniors, none of whom have bought the pass. Is that fiscally sensible? Consider allowing a spouse but others should have to pay to play. Again, just as an example. Not sure it's a solution. But I do get where he's coming from.The senior pass is good for life, it's not an annual pass.And I agree with you. But we all know many people don't like fees.I think movie tickets are too expensive. So I don't go. We all have a choice.Cost is an important issue too, if passes cost too much people will stop going. That is exactly what happened with parks in WA. I think the best answer is for congress to fund the parks shortfall with everyone's tax dollars and at the same time managers need to cut costs in the parks so they can balance their operating budgets.
I didn't know so many people went through parks completely free, maybe they should be paying half, maybe that would help?
Quote from: bearpaw on March 15, 2018, 01:49:50 PMI didn't know so many people went through parks completely free, maybe they should be paying half, maybe that would help?It's not just parks it's all federal lands. The pass that let's then into park for free let them on all the other fed lands for free too.Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk
I'll listen to Zinke bitch about people not paying National Park fees after he stops charging the American taxpayers $12,000 for private jets from Vegas to Montana when commercial flights cost a couple hundred bucks. I thought we were draining the swamp, no?
It's all bad, and the one won't forgive the other. But anyway back on topic...I have no problem paying more for admission to our federal public lands, but I don't want to be closing down our federal lands or selling them to private companies while the cost for the remaining ones is going up. For FAR too long, hunters' main concern has been gun rights and anti-hunters. Those problems can be fixed with the stroke of a pen. Loss of habitat, and loss of access, is basically forever. That's where the future of hunting lives or dies.