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Effort To Overturn Backcountry User Fee At Great Smoky Mountains National Park Fails

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A legal challenge to a backcountry user fee at Great Smoky Mountains National Park has failed, with a federal judge ruling the National Park Service was within its rights to levy the $4 per night per person fee.

Whether Southern Forest Watch will appeal the ruling hasn't been decided; the group was examining its options in the wake of the ruling Monday to grant the government summary judgment (attached below) in the case.

The challenge to the user fee, filed last summer, raised many issues. Among the charges was that the park staff concocted complaints about the existing backcountry reservation system, that minutes of public meetings were missing from the administrative record, and that some staff discussions of the matter were conducted on private, not government, email accounts. It also argued that federal regulations prohibited fees for backcountry campsites unless they come with "drinking water, access, road, refuse containers, toilet facilities ... (and) reasonable visitor protection," none of which exist, short of privies, in the park's backcountry.

More so, the lawsuit, contended that federal law prohibits the National Park Service at Great Smoky from charging "an entrance or standard amenity recreation fee ... unless fees are charged for entrance into that park on main highways and thoroughfares."

Southern Forest Watch also contended that "(A) 25 percent drop in backcountry camping (from 84,236 in 2012 to 62,863 the following year) since full implementation of this fee is dramatic evidence that this fee has impaired this generation's use of the Smoky Mountains ... "

Great Smoky officials maintained the fee was necessary to afford a better reservations system for backcountry campsites and to police the backcountry.

In his 59-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Thomas W. Phillips cast aside each point raised by Southern Forest Watch, at times saying the group's legal counsel didn't adequately buttress his arguments against the fee and the Park Service. 

"Plaintiffs’ initial reply brief states that 'defendants’ pattern of consistent failure to follow the law in fulfilling their duties is the issue' with respect to these claims. This allegation does not state a valid claim for relief," the judge wrote at one point.

At another point Judge Phillips seemed to agree with Southern Forest Watch that a majority of the public did not support the implementation of the fee. Yet he also seemed to acknowledge the Park Service's longstanding position that public comment periods are not the equivalent of a vote on an issue.

"... the record contains evidence of substantial support for the BCF from the public, including GRSM employees. The support is not overwhelming, or even a majority of the responses received. Nevertheless, there is evidence of more than minimal support for the BCF proposal and 'support for the change' is all that the NPS public participation guidelines require," he wrote. "Neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants have provided any authority to suggest how such 'support' must be measured, nor has the Court found any. Accordingly, in the absence of any such guidance, the Court must reasonably interpret the guidelines as written and not 'substitute its judgment for that of the agency.'

"On this record and under the (Administrative Procedure Act's) narrow standard of review, the Court must conclude that the record does show 'support' for the BCF plan. Plaintiffs’ dispute of the characterization of the level of support does not mean that the facts themselves are in dispute."

The judge wrote that the passion in the case made it understandable to question whether the Park Service shouldn't have found a different solution for caring for the park's backcountry, but said that question was not one for him to answer.

"The plaintiffs and those opposed to the (backcountry fee) are understandably disappointed in (the park's decision to implement the fee) and could easily assume that defendants did not truly consider the public comments. After all, if so much of the public response was negative, how could the defendants have considered that input and still decided to proceed with the BCF?," he wrote. "Indeed, the passionate opposition to the BCF leads a reasonable mind to question whether another conclusion should have been reached, or why the Park management placed such emphasis on benefits for the 'less represented stakeholder group' rather than benefits for the frequent, local Park visitors.

"The legal question for this Court, however, is whether that decision was arbitrary or capricious."

In the end, he found, it was not.

 

Comments

Good job Southern Forest Watch thanks for bringing a fight to these type things. I feel this is only the beginning and what we really need are more groups of citizens who aren't afraid to push back on things like this.


Uh Delores........ you believe those numbers the NPS is putting out about back overnight stays being up?


My personal experience doesn't jive with the NPS numbers. Many folks are walking into smokies backcountry sites showing full only to find them almost empty.  The NPS is trying to put lipstick on this pig proposal that cut backcountry usage by fudging data, yet again. When you own the system, you can manipulate it to your advantage.  And that is obvious that this federal bureaucracy is doing that very thing.


Good luck on that angle.  You obviously are missing the big picture and that is the court ruled that the NPS can have a backcountry system in the Smokies and that the system remains in place. Regardless if 10 people, or 5.6 trillion are in the backcountry at any given time, if those backcountry users want to stay overnight in a backcountry campground they have to pay a fee.  The end. 


That is true, the court has ruled they can have a backcountry fee system. But this is because they are allowed to write their own rules, and as long as they stay within those rules, right or wrong the public has no recourse to sucessfully have their  own wishes taken into account.

True, the issue is now settled. But something seems very wrong when county commissions surrounding a park pass resolutions condemning a fee, most of the public comments are against..  no compromises are made,  and they march blindly onward.

Yes they may be within their rules to do so, but is ignoring the wishes of most users really the correct route to take?  I am of the belief it is not.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Actually, the NPS is a federal agency, and not under direction from what those County Commissioners in Blount County say.  The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is federal land, which trumps county land.  Blount counties resolution doesn't matter, and has no bearing on the organic act.  And seriously, Sevier county also borders the park, and they didn't pass the resolution.  Cocke county also borders the park, and didn't pass a resolution either.  Many of the other counties in NC didn't bother passing resolutions too.  So, that resolution is meaningless and has no effect on the use of the organic act which was passed by congress.   I realize you folks see that Blount County resolution as some victory, but it holds little weight.  And I also don't believe "Most of the public" was against it.  Most of the negative comments were driven by the same 5 or 6 people and you guys acted like it was a "Vote Early, Vote Often" election.  Once again, most national parks have backcountry fees, and entrance fees, so, the NPS wrote those rules a long time ago as they were directed to do by Congress.  If anything, the Smokies have been an exception to the rules.  Once again, Civics 101 - Federal > State > County.


Civics 101. The people are greater than all of those.  


I have no personal stake in this issue, although I can sympathize both with those who oppose the fee and the park staff which was trying to find new source of funds. That said, I have to be a bit amused at the discussion about the "voices of the majority" being ignored on this issue.

According to the court's finding (link above) a total "of least 30 people attended" one of two open houses on the proposed fee, and "at least 40 people" attended the other.  During the period for written comments, the NPS received a whopping 230 written comments on the proposal. 

Most of those comments were against the proposed fee, but the reality seems to be that a rather small but very vocal group was opposed to this fee....and the rest of the world, including thousands of backcountry users (a reported 86,153 of them in 2014) apparently could care less about the issue. 

If you believe SFW anecdotal's numbers rather than the park's number of users, and then seriously reduce the park's number's by 75%, you'd still have 21,000+ backcountry users in just one year who were silent, not to mention what we're told was an even larger number in recent years. Where were they when this proposal was being debated? Absent their groundswell of complaints, this seems to a bit of a tempest in a teapot.

I'd prefer the fee be abandoned, but the reality seems to be the "majority" of either the citizens in general or those directly affected by the fee don't seem to care.


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