After months of gathering public input, the U.S. Forest Service is moving forward with its request to increase or add recreation fees at 36 trailheads, campsites and cabins, and other recreation hubs …
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After months of gathering public input, the U.S. Forest Service is moving forward with its request to increase or add recreation fees at 36 trailheads, campsites and cabins, and other recreation hubs in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest.
A resource advisory committee will consider the proposed charge increases beginning 8:30 a.m. Thursday at the Gifford Pinchot National Forest Headquarters, 987 McClellan Road, Vancouver, or virtually through Zoom. The meeting link and further details can be found on the Forest Service's advisory committee website.
Officials said the fee increases are aligned with the agency's ongoing services and would make the forest's recreational rates more consistent with the rest of the state. Roughly 95 percent of the service's recreation fee revenue is reinvested in the forest to operate, improve and maintain its facilities, such as campground, restroom and trail upgrades, according to the Forest Service.
About 70 percent of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest's sites would remain available at no cost.
Here's an overview of what's being proposed:
Campgrounds
Cabins
Visitor centers and interpretive sites
Trailheads, other recreation
Based on public feedback, the Forest Service decided to not raise fees at Cat Creek and Blue Lake off-highway vehicle sites, Marble Mountain Trailhead and the Hemlock recreational area.
Similarly, proposed fee increases in the Mount St. Helens Monument boundary were dropped, including South Coldwater, Loowit Interpretive Site, Donnybrook and Cedar Creek.
During the public participation process, spanning between July and October 2022, the Forest Service received 278 comments, 67 of which were in support of the altered fees and 57 in opposition. Remaining feedback touched on increases presenting a barrier to access for low-income communities, revenue use or how the fees would directly impact specific sites.
In addressing concerns of inaccessibility due to cost, the Forest Service noted that it provides a minimum of six fee-free days per year on top of continuing to offer nonfee recreational sites.
The agency did not receive comments from federal and state officials, as well as the Puyallup, Squaxin Island, Nisqually and Yakama tribes, and various recreational groups. Representatives were briefed at the beginning of the engagement process.
Infrastructure restoration and necessary amenities would be installed at proposed sites prior to the fee implementation. This means some locations would roll out the proposed fee at different times, some potentially waiting until 2025.
To review further recreation fee details, visit the Forest Service's Gifford Pinchot National Forest website.