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Author: Subject: BLM's "Purple Book"... plans for our future "recreation"
Lack-O-Slack
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[*] posted on 2-3-2007 at 07:16 PM
BLM's "Purple Book"... plans for our future "recreation"


Greetings, fellow buggy pilots and stewards of the California desert wilderness!

Here's another excerpt from Scott Silver of the Western Slopes No-Fee Coalition, citing BLM's plans to "commoditize" all public lands under their jurisdiction, and create for us the "wilderness experience", complete with high fees and total control of who, where, what, when, why and how we recreate on OUR public lands...

I hope just a few of you out there are listening and paying attention, because we're about to lose access to most of the western desert playgrounds we so enjoy, and to have our BuggyTown handed to us as a ticketed, sponsored, commercialized, regulated, government-managed event.

Please read on:

Imagine the still-warm body of outdoor recreation lying in a puddle of blood upon the ground. Standing over the body is the Bureau of Land Management holding a red-hot smoking gun. Imagine that clear motives for the crime have already been well established. Such a crime scene exists today.

If you want to read the government's document and would prefer to skip past my introduction and explanation, then click here now http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/purple.pdf . That link will take you to a 31 page booklet titled "A Unified Strategy to Implement 'BLM's Priorities for Recreation and Visitor Services' Workplan (Purple Book).

If you'd like a short overview of what's at stake keep reading here.

In 1997, I wrote:

http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/takeover.htm
Traditional, rustic, passive and contemplative outdoor experiences must yield to highly developed recreation as Nature is transformed into a suitable playground for the spectacle of 'themed' and 'action oriented' entertainment. There is no money to be made in allowing the public access to Nature simply "as an amenity" or as "something extra we are privileged to enjoy." Free access must be eliminated
because it would otherwise compete with commercial ventures and would hurt the bottom line.

As the cost of recreation rises toward its free-market potential,
private sector investors will be encouraged to offer an ever wider array of commercialized recreation 'products'. We, the 'consumer', will be given the opportunity to purchase or to forgo these 'products' in accordance with our willingness and/or our ability to pay. These newly created commodities will encompass not only those nature-based recreational activities that the we have traditionally enjoyed on public lands. They will also include entirely new, far more profitable forms of 'eco-tainment', 'edu-tainment' and 'wreckre-tainment'.

I summarized the issue by setting forth what I called the new tenets of outdoor recreation. I expressed those tenets as follows in an essay written in 1998 for High Country News and titled: "*Our Public Lands: Their Working Capital*"

http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/capital.htm

1. Public lands recreation must become self-supporting.
2. Public recreation will be priced competitively with private
alternatives.
3. Funds will be preferentially spent near urban centers.
4. 'Under-utilized' resources will be developed to facilitate
increased usage.
5. Partnerships with private corporations shall be sought and
encouraged.
6. 'Nature Interpretation' will be emphasized.
7. Scenic Roads and Byways will be designated and actively promoted.
8. New and imaginative methods of doing business will be encouraged.
9. Land-swaps will be a preferred mechanism for acquiring desired lands.
10. Wherever practical or feasible, the management of recreation
resources will be turned over to private concessionaires.

I more fully explained those tenets in an essay published under the title "*Nature: Now Available in Designer Colors*"

http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/tenets.htm.

I strongly recommend reading that essay at this time. It proves a clear and concise prologue to the BLM's Purple Book - Unified Strategy.

Let me be clear about this, though I am today providing evidence related only to the BLM, all of the land management agencies have similar plans involving similar tenets. Here, for example is a passage from tenet #4 quoted from the Army Corps of Engineers' *Recreation Partnership Initiative:*

http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/ace-rpi.htm

"The intent of the program is to encourage private development of public recreation facilities such as: marinas, hotel/ motel/ restaurant complexes, conference centers, RV camping areas, golf courses, theme parks, and entertainment areas with shops, etc."

Pasted below is text from the inside cover of the BLM's Purple Book followed by their seven tenets for outdoor recreation. If you've read to this point, you'll likely find the BLM's tenets remarkably familiar. If you'd review the articles to which I've linked above, you'll likely gain a more complete appreciation of why the Purple Book is truly such an important document. And if you read the Purple Book in its entirety you will know what, exactly, is contained in the BLM's Unified Strategy for
implementing it's prioritized Recreation and Visitor Services.
Scott

--- begin quoted ---
(Quoted from:)
1/9/07*
Recreation & Visitor Services
Bureau of Land Management

<http://www.wildwilderness.org/docs/purple.dpf>

A Unified Strategy to Implement
"BLM's Priorities for Recreation and Visitor Services
Workplan (Purple Book)*

**

--- inside front cover ---

Only through the power of Partnerships can we conserve special recreation Places and provide for People on the Public Lands “Elevating the ideals of the Public Good and Public Service through Cooperative Conservation”


*PEOPLE*
By using a customer driven approach, we will identify visitor and
community resident desires for highly valued recreation experiences and quality of life beneficial outcomes. Emphasis will be on defining a wide range of accessible and highly desirable recreation outcomes accomplished through management, planning, monitoring, and marketing
with our managing partners and service delivery providers.

*PLACES*
Improving our capability to identify and prescribe the more highly valued and distinctive recreation resource conditions and outdoor and community settings, BLM will work together with its partners to provide opportunities for people and communities to attain their desired recreation outcomes.

*PARTNERSHIPS*
Strengthening our capacity to forge sustainable relationships,
increasing support for communities of place and communities of interest, improving business practices, increasing opportunities for volunteerism, and leveraging resources will more effectively engage potential cooperative managing partners and service providers. These relationships ultimately determine the quality of recreation products and services on public lands and in surrounding communities.

BLM must collaboratively identify beneficial outcomes, manage for sustainable setting character, and work through partnerships to affect the quality and kinds of public land recreation opportunities being produced.


APPENDIX B*

*Seven Key Objectives from*
*“BLM’s Priorities for Recreation and Visitor Services”*
*(Purple Book)*


*Objective 1 - Manage public lands and waters for enhanced recreation experiences and quality of life:* This objective includes collaborative recreation management planning; improving the accuracy and consistency of BLM visitor use data; assessing visitor and community residents recreation opportunity and setting preferences; identifying and mapping
existing recreation setting conditions; and prescribing essential
setting character required to meet public preferences. The intent is to balance all management, marketing, monitoring, and supporting administrative actions to produce experience and benefit opportunities targeted by explicitly stated management objectives in relevant management plans. Workforce efficiency and capability will be improved through training (Goal 2, Objective 1, Purple Book).

*Objective 2 - Encourage sustainable travel and tourism development with gateway communities and provide community-based conservation support for visitor services:* Includes developing collaborative relationships
emphasizing appropriate practices with international and national tourism industry and local communities. Develop sustainable visitor services projects and collaborative strategies to assess socio-economic benefits of recreation and tourism with local governments and private industry, and assess the need for a BLM-administered system of National
Recreation Areas. Collaborative recreation-tourism partnerships with local communities and other tourism entities, strategically engage other key providers who influence the ability to provide benefits to visitors and communities. These partnerships are geared to achieve prescribed public land recreation settings and produce the types experience and benefit opportunities targeted by management objectives in management
plans (Goal 3, Objective 3, Purple Book).

*Objective 3 - Provide fair value and return for recreation through fee collection and commercial services:* Includes implementing consistent national fee policies, meeting public requests through the permitting process, being accountable to the public on fee programs, improving and expanding delivery of services through concessions, contracts, and leases, and establishing clear and consistent signing and information
for fee sites and facilities. These administrative actions must support management plan prescriptions for recreation settings, marketing actions, and facilitate delivery of experience and benefit opportunities targeted by management objectives in approved management plans (Goal 3, objective 1, Purple Book).

*Objective 4 - Establish a comprehensive approach to travel planning and management:* This includes both protective travel management planning (such as OHV designations) and proactive management planning (such as routes of travel, monitoring, signing, maintenance, mechanized and on-motorized trail activities). It uses education and interpretation to manage travel, public roads policy, acquiring outside funding through grants, collaboration with other agencies and constituencies, and fully integrating travel management with all programs. An important support
function to recreation and visitor services, proactive travel planning and management facilitates maintenance of prescribed recreation settings and production of experience and other benefit outcome opportunities targeted by recreation management objectives in management plans. (Goal
1, Objective 1, Purple Book).

*Objective 5 - Ensure public health and safety, and improve the
condition and accessibility of recreation sites and facilities:* Provide recreation facility accessibility and law enforcement to ensure public health and safety appropriate to the character of recreation settings in which they occur and to the attainment of experiences and benefits targeted by management objectives. Manage and maintain recreation sites and facilities to those same standards. Reduce deferred maintenance and achieve public health standards for critical drinking water and sewer
systems. (Goal 2, Objective 3, Purple Book).

*Objective 6 - Enhance and expand visitor services, including
interpretation, information and education:* Visitor services include all information and education, marketing, outreach and interpretation. Improve the accuracy, appearance, and consistency of visitor information, emphasizing both specific experience and benefit opportunities and the recreation setting in which they occur in marketing message content. Improve outdoor ethics and stewardship through tailoring the content of standard user ethics educational materials to match the specific character of diverse public lands recreation settings (Goal 2, Objective 2, Purple Book).

*Objective 7 - Encourage and sustain collaborative partnerships, volunteers and citizen-centered public service:* Expand opportunities to participate in cost sharing initiatives, engage in long-term volunteer agreements, sustain and increase partnerships and cooperation in recreation and visitor services, and emphasize and support collaborative public outreach that promotes public service and stewardship. Every
partnership and its projects must be consistent in supporting management plan prescriptions for recreation settings, marketing actions, and facilitate delivery of targeted experience and benefit opportunities (Goal 3, Objective 2, Purple Book).

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Scott Silver
Wild Wilderness
248 NW Wilmington Ave.
Bend, OR 97701

phone: 541-385-5261
e-mail: ssilver@wildwilderness.org <ssilver@wildwilderness.org>
Internet: http://www.wildwilderness.org



Mike \"Lack-O-Slack\" Dooley
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[*] posted on 2-3-2007 at 08:18 PM


Looks like doom and gloom for our future.

Susan

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[*] posted on 3-3-2007 at 10:30 AM


is this trying to be implemented only in the state of the people republic of California.....


frickin Caliban terrorist.....:evil:
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[*] posted on 5-3-2007 at 01:32 PM
Not just Californica...


If this were just a "California Thang", it would be bad enough, but as the essays and documents Mr. Silver has gathered will attest, this is a national policy shift, being slowly and carefully implemented, that will move outdoor recreation into a "commodity space" that can be doled out to private corporations to "develop" into "edu-tainment" venues, relegating undeveloped wilderness experiences a total thing of the past.

As we've seen with the over-use and over-crowding at El Mirage Dry Lake, BLM's answer is... MORE DEVELOPMENT! Pave the access road, fence off the dry lake playa, start allowing concessionaires to occupy space on public lands, (did anyone besides me notice the tires/batteries/motorcycle parts vendors beside the El Mirage access road, last year, operating out of mobile motorcycle shop trailers?).

The American Recreation Coalition, Walt Disney Corporation, AOL/Time Warner, and others are drooling over this new philosophy from all five major land-management agencies, who are charged with preserving, conserving, protecting and managing our public lands. That's OUR public lands, folks... every American citizen has a stake in this, NOT just the gearheads, motorhome cruisers, and drive-by recreationists, who consider a two-hour automobile ride through a national forest as "outdoor recreation".

Soon, (and this is NOT doom and gloom, it's a stated, documented target of these so-called "management" agencies), our outdoor recreation will ONLY come in managed, supervised, clinical doses, handed to us by private concessionaires, with every exposure to natural scenic wonders and open public lands having a price tag attached, and the prices will guarantee elimination of the poor and elderly from the equation.

Unprofitable events and participants, like NABX and NALSA, and any other under-represented populations of public lands users will be pushed out and ignored, as the deserts and mountains are taken over by private corporations charging fees for everything from taking a walk in the woods, to parking beside a public highway. If you don't believe this, park your car beside any road which passes through a National Forest, take a walk in the woods, then pay the ticket you'll get upon returning to your car to find that you're required to purchase an $80-per-year pass just to drive through YOUR national wilderness heritage.

Now, picture a venue like El Mirage, with motorcycle shops and food and beverage vendors lining the access road, and a fee of $20 per vehicle per day just to park and camp. Then, if you want to buggy, that'll be another $15 per day, "use permit". Oh, and the porta-potties? Yep, tack on another $10 per day for a hole in the ground to poop in. Wanna throw boomerangs? Oops... gotta pay that special "Aviation Usage Permit", another $5.00 per day, per person, please. Cha-ching!

Ask yourself this: Does Disney have ANY inexpensive facilities? Is a walk in the desert "entertainment"? Do "public lands" belong to the American people, or to the American Recreation Coalition?

It's way past time to write letters, send faxes, make phone calls, and vote carefully on these issues... in fact, it may just be too late.

At least, thanks to our gracious hosts on this web forum, none of us can say we weren't aware of the problem. If we all do nothing, we'll end up with exactly what we deserve.

-Dooley :moon:



Mike \"Lack-O-Slack\" Dooley
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