Adventure Travel Wilderness And Hiking Trails Fees Continue To Rise

Adventure Travel Wilderness And Hiking Trails Fees Continue To Rise


Is adventure travel getting expensive for the family? The good news for

adventure travel and wilderness hiking trails is that the USA has some

of the most unique and incredible places to see on earth. Our National,

State Parks, Monuments and Wilderness Areas are awesome, but for years

there have been reduced number of visitors. Many citizens have said that

a four-year program to increase national parks entrance fees to make

them more uniform may discourage some Americans from visiting their

national parks such as the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Zion and Yellowstone.



Adventure Travel Wilderness And Hiking Trails Fees Continue To Rise

The National Parks have been faced with a budget crisis. The parks are

struggling to protect the historic, cultural and natural resources that

the parks were created for. The parks are short of funds for operating

facilities, repairs to roads, bridges, trails and buildings. There was

an 814 million dollar shortfall in 2006. There are almost 400 areas of

protection covered by the National Parks Service. Almost every park has

fewer full time employees now than in 2001, while there were over

273,000,000 visitors to the parks in 2005. The park service needs more

funding to provide education, interpretive and for the safety

requirements of their visitors. This is a time of controversy about park

fees, current plans for oil, gas and mineral exploration in our parks

and of course removing the O'Shaughnessy Dam to restore the Hetch Hetchy

Valley in Yosemite.



Recently the federal government has moved to replace the National Park

Service's $50 annual pass with a new $80 multi-agency pass. Some people

think that the fee increases are getting out of line. The park service

raised entrance fees at 34 parks over the past two years and plans to

raise them at another 124 parks in 2008 and 2009. At Glacier National

Park in Montana and Joshua Tree National Park in California, the fees

will go up twice, and beginning in 2011, park officials plan to increase

fees every three years, based on inflation. There is a proposal to

double entrance fees next year at Crater Lake National Park, now $10 per

car. Will it drive the local visitors away? In 1997, when the park

service began raising fees, the number of national parks visitors has

fallen 1% while entrance fee revenue has gone up almost 16%. Many of

them are from outside the United States and love to visit the American

protected lands.



Will the National Park Centennial Act to rescue our parks before 2016 –

the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service? The acts purpose is

to eliminate the annual operating deficit and maintenance backlog in the

national parks. If it passed, it was to create a check off box on

American tax returns to fund the parks. As H.R. 1124 and S 886 it did

not get passed in 2006. In spring of 2006 the Government Accountability

Office (GAO) issued a report about our National Parks based on research,

to the House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee that found that

funding had not kept pace with need, requiring park managers to reduce

services including, reducing visitor center hours, educational programs,

basic custodial duties, and law enforcement operations, such as

back-country patrolling. Additionally, the park system has been forced

to close campgrounds, shorten operating hours, eliminate many

interpretive programs, lay off many seasonal rangers, and eliminate many

of the parks' scientific studies programs.



So where's the good news about our public lands? Being an outdoor writer

and avid traveler to our parks and wilderness areas Bob Therrien,

President of TrainingPASS Sales, Inc. has created an outdoor recreation

message board, he commented "As I've visited the outdoors, the hardest

part over the years, for me has been the research about which parks,

hikes, climbs, locations and activities I want to visit with my family

and friends. Exploring federal then state website after site, then

mapping the distance from each area of interest is inefficient and many

times lacking in information. To solve that inefficiency we have

collected all the basic information about our parks, wilderness areas

and national monuments and put them into one website. I don't personally

have a problem with the new park fees. It costs me more to take my

family to the movies. I'd rather enjoy a full day or two at a place like

Denali National Park, the Arches or Canyonlands.



The USA has incredible adventure travel wilderness and hiking trails. To

promote these areas AdventureZoneTOURS created a forum for sharing trip

reports on National Parks, State Parks, National Monuments and

Wilderness Areas.



The Outdoor Adventure Message Board opens up to reveal a listing of U.S.

States, separated into travel regions. Click on any state region and

there are sub forums for all the parks, monuments and wilderness areas

in that region. Many times there are several interesting choices to pick

from of federal or state lands, within a state region. For the

activity-specific minded, AdventureZoneTOURS.com encourages users to

share trip reports for a variety of outdoor activities from hiking,

climbing, canyoneering, geo exploring, photography, ghost towns, mines,

and cave to water sports such as boating, fishing, jet and water skiing,

tubing, rafting, and scuba. Winter travel sports such as snowmobiling,

skiing and snowboarding are featured. Hunting locations, ATV and

horseback trails as well as the most scenic areas for outdoor

photography are also available as individual topic posts. To research or

share your favorite adventure travel location, you're invited to sign up

and share today.


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