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UPDATE: Yellowstone, Grand Teton National Parks Proposing Sweeping Changes In Fees

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Editor's note: This updates with Grand Teton's proposed fee increases.

Yellowstone National Park officials, seeking to cover more of their bills, are proposing sweeping changes in their fees, from higher entrance fees to backcountry user fees. If all the proposals were instituted, it would generate roughly $3 million for the park, which currently spends about $4 million a year in existing fees on projects ranging from campground upgrades to road repairs.

At the same time, Grand Teton National Park a short distance down the road also is proposing to boost its fees, with a week-long pass proposed to cost $30 (up from $25).

Yellowstone, though, is proposing the most significant changes in fees.  

Under current legislation, 80 percent of the revenue from entrance fees is allowed to remain in the park and used on projects which benefit park visitors. Currently, visitors pay $25 for a 7-day pass for a single, non-commercial vehicle entry into both Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, with the current cost of an annual two-park pass at $50.

Yellowstone officials are proposing to offer a 3-day Yellowstone-only pass for $30. A 7-day pass good for both Yellowstone and Grand Teton would be available for $50. An annual pass to Yellowstone only will be $60. Those entering the park by motorcycle or snowmobile are currently charged $20 for a 7-day pass honored at both parks. The proposal is to offer a 3-day Yellowstone only pass for $25 and a 7-day pass for $40 honored at both parks.

Individuals who enter the park on foot, bicycle, skis, or as snowcoach passengers currently pay $12 for a 7-day pass. That would be increased to $15 for 1-3 days in Yellowstone, or $25 for 7 days at both parks.

The Interagency Pass rates will remain the same: Annual ($80), Senior ($10), Access and Military ($0).

These proposed changes would result in additional annual revenue of approximately $3 million for Yellowstone, where officials say the money would be used to continue or enhance projects such as Yellowstone cutthroat trout restoration, maintenance for the park’s seven campgrounds, preservation maintenance on park roads, improved restroom facilities, reconstruction and rehabilitation of trails including Tower Falls, and a new North Entrance Station facility.

Additionally, the park is proposing to institute a fee for overnight backcountry permits to help recover costs associated with the park’s backcountry program. In the past, Yellowstone has not charged an overnight backcountry permit fee, but a reservation fee, currently $25, has been charged since 1996.

The proposed backcountry camping permit fee would be $3 per person (age 9 and older) per night with a maximum party limit of $15 per night for backpackers. Stock groups would be charged $5 per person per night with no maximum fee limit. The current $25 fee for trips reserved more than 48 hours in advance would remain the same.

Users would be able to purchase an Annual Backcountry Pass for $25 which would exempt that individual from the per-person per-night fee.

Additional revenue from overnight backcountry permit fees would be used to help to sustain the current level of service that visitors expect and ensure that Yellowstone can continue to provide service at multiple locations throughout the park.

The current revenue stream from advance reservations covers 17 percent of the cost to operate all backcountry offices, while the proposed fee is expected to raise backcountry fee revenue to approximately 43 percent of the cost to operate backcountry offices.

The public is encouraged to attend one of the following public meetings to learn more about the proposed fee changes:

- Tuesday, November 11 in Cody, Wyo.: Holiday Inn at Buffalo Bill Village 6:30-8:00 pm

- Wednesday, November 12 in Jackson, Wyo.: The Lexington 6:30-8:00 pm

- Tuesday, November 18 in Bozeman, Mont.: Hilton Garden Inn 6:30-8:00 pm

Comments may also be hand-delivered during normal business hours to the mailroom in the park’s Administration Building in Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyoming, at one of the public scoping meetings, or mailed to: Management Assistant Office, Attn: Entrance Fee Proposal, P.O. Box 168, Yellowstone National Park, WY, 82190.

Comments will not be accepted by fax, e-mail, or in any other way than those specified above. All comments must be received by midnight MST on Friday, December 5th, 2014.

Grand Teton officials say the proposed increases are part of a larger National Park Service initiative to update entry fees that have been in place since 2006 in national parks across the country. As a first step toward potential fee changes, Yellowstone and Grand Teton will conduct a public open house on Wednesday, November 12, at the Lexington Inn on North Cache in Jackson, Wyoming from 6:30 p.m.–8 p.m.  Public comments will help determine how, or if, fee changes would be implemented at Grand Teton. The comment period will be open for 30 days from November 5 through midnight December 5, 2014.

The current Grand Teton fee structure, in place since 2006, includes:

  • $25 for a 7-day pass to enter both Grand Teton & Yellowstone National Park by private vehicle
  • $50 for a Grand Teton/Yellowstone Annual Pass valid for one-year entry into both national parks
  • $80 for an Interagency Annual Pass valid for one year entry to all fee areas on federal lands
  • $12 for a 7-day pass to enter both Grand Teton & Yellowstone National Park by foot/bicycle 
  • $20 for a 7-day pass to both Grand Teton & Yellowstone National Park by motorcycle

Proposed fee changes would include: 

  • $30 for a 7-day pass to enter only Grand Teton National Park by private vehicle
  • $50 for a 7-day pass to enter both Grand Teton & Yellowstone National Park by private vehicle
  • $60 for a Grand Teton National Park Annual Pass valid for one-year entry into Grand Teton only
  • $80 for an Interagency Annual Pass valid for one year entry to all fee areas on federal lands
  • $15 for a 7-day pass to enter only Grand Teton National Park by foot/bicycle
  • $25 for a 7-day pass to enter only Grand Teton National Park by motorcycle 

 

Entrance fees are not charged to persons under 16 years of age, or to holders of the following interagency passes:  Interagency Annual Pass ($80), Senior Pass ($10), Access Pass or Military Pass ($0).

“National parks have historically provided an affordable and memorable vacation experience for individuals and families.  When compared to other vacation or recreation areas, national parks offer a bargain for many travelers,” said Grand Teton National Superintendent David Vela.  “National parks have also struggled to keep pace with increasing costs of providing the best possible visitor experience and therefore, we are looking at a modest fee change that will address the expense of providing important visitor services while keeping pace with the cost of doing business.

"Revenues from entrance fees are used for a variety of critical needs at Grand Teton, including trail improvement, road and pathway resurfacing, restoration of wildlife habitat, and stabilization of historic buildings.”

In the past, entrance fee revenues have supported the multi-phase restoration of the Kelly hayfields to improve wildlife habitat for bison and elk, the printing and distribution of park brochures for visitor information and education, road improvement and trail renewal projects.

Anyone wishing to provide public comment about the proposed restructure of park entrance fees should send written comments to: Superintendent, Grand Teton National Park, P.O. Box 170, Moose, Wyoming 83012, or submit comments online at http://parkplanning.nps.gov/GRTEchangestofees. Comments will not be accepted by fax, e-mail, or in any other way than those specified.

Changes to the fee structure are proposed to become effective May 1, 2015.

 

Comments

Dear Yellowstoners,

We feel your pain.  They slapped a backcountry fee on us in the Smokies so I suggest you follow our continuing legal fight on www.southernforestwatch.org      Be aware that they will misrepresent the civic engagement sham, under report public comments and emphasize "resource degradation".  It is part of their bs NPS playbook to justify unnecessary fees that will go straight to hiring more staff that will NOT be in the backcountry.  Be advised, they have this scam down to an art.  But what you really need to know is that this new reservation system will benefit the guide services and concessionaires whom they will use to promote the fee.  We just discovered that the concessionaires can log into the system which mere mortals are locked out of.  Then the guides etc can book up campsites well in advance to keep backpacking riff raff out of "their park".   Don't let them get away with it.  


These proposed changes would result in additional annual revenue of approximately $3 million for Yellowstone, 

Possibly, but unlikely.


LOL!!  No one around Yellowstone really complains about the fees.  It's not even on people's radar..   The culture is entirely different then what you find around the Smokies, and so is the type of visitor.  Jackson Hole is filled with billionaires, and Paradise Valley is mostly millionaires.  It's not even on the same level as a place like Pigeon Forge or any of the communities around the Smokies where some of us jokingly refer to it as "redneck vegas for christians on a buffet binge". And Yellowstone has always had a 25.00 reservation fee to enter the backcountry. Sounds like with this plan, 25.00 can cover the entire year, which is a steal if you ask me.   The backcountry reservation fee has been there for a long time.... If you don't like it, then just go to the wilderness areas, which surrounds yellowstone in every freaking direction and has just as much to offer and all you have to do is fill out a permit at a trailhead. 


Gary,  I would guess the vast majority of visitors to GSMNP don't come from Pigeon Forge, not do the vast majority of Yellowstone visitors come from Jackson Hole and Paridise Valley.   Therefore your bigotted comment is irrelevant. 


Pigeon Forge or any of the communities around the Smokies where some of us jokingly refer to it as "redneck vegas for christians on a buffet binge"

Wow what an offensive comment to the locals of that area Mr Wilson. 

Yellowstone allows free non-reservation backcountry visitation its only if you wish to reserve a site that you have to pay.


Truth can hurt.

And so can biggoted slander.

Once again, fees are not on peoples radar.

I don't have a problem with the current or proposed fees in general - that certainly doesn't mean they aren't on people's radar as demonstrated by the volume of comments that have been submitted to the NPS and other forums.


Truth can hurt.  And EC, no one outside of the locals in the Smokies care about the backcountry fees or even fees. So to apply the same logic to the few towns around Yellowstone and Grand Tetons shows a complete misunderstanding of the regional demographics, especially around the Tetons where a majority of the population is upper class. The target market in that resort is much different too.  A day of skiing in the ski resort at Jackson Hole for a family of 4 will run you well over a few hundred dollars, and the ski resort sits on USFS land. Or you can go over to driggs, and ski a bit cheaper, but you're still paying FEES.  30.00 for a 3 day pass at Yellowstone is 10.00 a day.  If you buy a 7 day pass, you're looking at 8.53 a day..  There's lots of "free" backpacking and hiking to be had in the northern rockies.  Once again, fees are not on peoples radar.  People have paid National Park fees and USFS Ski Resort fees for pretty much ever in that region.  It's not on their radar, and I guarantee that..  5.00 increase won't be seen anywhere near as extreme as a 20.00 increase on a ski pass.


ec -Thanks for your comment. This thread was in danger of sliding quickly downhill and off subject due to more tiring sniping between two regulars from the Smokies.

Meanwhile, back on subject, what does at least one media source from the vicinity of Yellowstone think about the proposed increase? Here's one example in an editorial from a newspaper in Cody, Wyoming:

"A $5 per car increase is justified and, in Yellowstone Park at least, the traffic is there to justify the hike and produce a significant financial impact...."Yellowstone is a place people from around the world want to visit, and no one ever fails to get their money’s worth."

The editorial notes that fee revenue  is "a key component to maintaining the park’s infrastructure, staff and programs."

Local business interests stand to be hurt if a fee hike drives down visits to the park. At least this local paper doesn't think that will be the case.


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