Infrastructure on
Public Lands
The Key Principles:
- Tourism is a major contributor
to the quality of life and the economic, social, cultural and
environmental fabric of the western states. It is a major economic
driver in the West, employing nearly 2 million Americans.
- Tourism and public lands in Americas
West have mutually evolved, each affecting the other and each
contributing mightily to the wealth and greatness of our nation.
The Situation:
- In the later half of the nineteenth
century, as we experienced unbridled western expansion, tourism
played a pivotal role in awakening the publics awareness
and support for our emerging national forests, parks, wildlife
refuges and public lands.
- The designation of our first national
parks could not have occurred without the support of the railroad
industry which saw tourism as a tool for garnering public favor
and support for western expansion.
- Ever since the designation of Yellowstone
as the worlds first national park in 1872, we have struggled
with the problem of how we can provide the infrastructure necessary
to support adequate access, use, protection and development of
our public lands.
- Infrastructure is critical for
the American public to reap the immense benefits to be derived
from the tourism potential and the natural and cultural
resource potential of these lands.
- Studies have shown that the West
is perceived to represent the closest to the ideal destination
in the United States. When you include National Parks as a destination,
they are perceived to be as near ideal as the West.
- Most of the National Parks and
nearly 93% of all the public lands in the U.S. are in the West.
The Challenges:
Problems facing infrastructure on
public lands primarily center around:
- Providing adequate facilities
to meet growing, unprecedented demands. Our public lands are
victims of their own popularity. National park visitation increased
25% from 1984 to 1994 with 308 million visitors expected in 1999.
Highway travel increased 30%, revenue passenger miles on US airlines
have increased over 60% and cruise passengers through US seaports
have increased over 100% during this decade. The aging infrastructure,
largely built in the thirties, forties and fifties, is literally
crumbling under the strain.
- Repairing and restoring currently
aging facilities, and providing for on-going maintenance.
Tight fiscal policies have forced land managers to defer major
repair and restoration of aging facilities. Historically, meager
authorizations of construction dollars have far outstripped the
agencies authorizations for operations and maintenance.
Visitors experience has been impacted. Federal agencies
face a backlog of over $5 billion in infrastructure maintenance
and rehabilitation needs.
- Securing adequate funding.
Money to pay for major construction, rehabilitation and maintenance
for all forms of infrastructure has been infrequently and sporadically
provided. Major infusions came with the depression era Civilian
Conservation Corps program (1933-1943) and again in 1964 with
the Land and Conservation Fund (LWCF) matched by state and local
governments. The present Congress has limited LWCF to one of its
lowest levels since 1965 -- one ninth the amount authorized by
the LWCF legislation.
- Defining public and private
roles. Concessionaires, as regulated monopolies, have provided
visitor services by operating such things as hotels, lodges, restaurants,
stores, service stations, campgrounds, marinas, riding stables
and downhill ski slopes. Problems have arisen over the degree
to which the government agencies or the concessionaires are responsible
for capital improvements, renovations and repairs.
- Creating sustainable developments
that can coexist and harmonize with environmental and natural
resource restraints. The very attractiveness of our western
public lands has been shaped by extremes of climate, temperature,
precipitation, elevation, remoteness and catastrophic natural
disturbances. It is inherently more expensive to develop infrastructure
that can tolerate such extremes. The very remoteness and wildness
that makes these lands so attractive to travelers also makes these
lands home to an abundant, but sometimes sensitive, variety of
fish and wildlife species. Often developers and investors from
distant urban areas have little understanding of environmental
sensitivity. They are often unaware of the fact that introducing
too much development may compromise the very natural attributes
that form the basis of their attractiveness for paying tourists.
Policy Recommendations:
- Increase Congressional appropriations
for parks, recreation and related activities on federal lands.
Fee reform is imperative, however, the long-range objectives of
the tourism industry incorporate vigorous support for the budgets
of the public lands agencies as they are affected through the
appropriations process in Congress.
- Appropriations Bills The
stakeholders should exert a more unified voice to support appropriate
levels of authorization and appropriate levels of spending.
- Dedicated Funds Existing
dedicated funds need to be re-authorized and allowed to support
development and maintenance of infrastructure for tourism on public
lands.
- Special Use Fees and Levies
Improved legal authorization is needed to collect special use
fees and levies. A mechanism is desperately needed to enable user
fees to be returned to the collection unit for the protection
and enhancement of the resource.
- Evaluate public land concessions
policy to seek more common administration among agencies. Ensure
a competitive process for the favorable balance of service to
users, quality of facilities, economic stability of the concessionaire,
and return to the government.
- Concessions contracts and special
use permits -- The various land management agencies need to strive
for consistency in how the tourism industry is treated in concession
contracts and special use permits. Issues concerning tenure, renewal,
vested interests and ownership need to be resolved.
- Locate private and public facilities
together to benefit a stronger partnership and provide more cost
effective services to the public
- Re-authorize the Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991.
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