Okay, gang... write or call your Senators... there is a bill up before the Senate, and supported by California and five other Western States, that
will, once and for all, repeal the "double taxation" of charging fees for public lands usage, and roll back the BLM's fee structures to the former
state, before the FLREA was enacted, illegally.   You paid your access fees to El Mirage and all other BLM-"managed" public lands, on April 15th of
every year!!!  It's called "taxes", and "taxation without representation", well, you know how we dealt with the first "King George".
Here's the language from the Western Slopes No-Fee Coalition:
Dear Public Lands Supporter: 
 
FYI the following press release was sent out today. Please copy it to 
your local media. 
 
The Fee Repeal bill has been given a number: S2438. You can read the 
text at 
www.thomas.loc.gov <http://www.thomas.loc.gov/>. Type in the 
bill number then click Search by Bill Number. 
 
It can be tricky to understand since it refers to several other laws and 
has language repealing previous repeals, which works like a 
double-negative, i.e. the repeal of a repeal is a re-instatement. 
Essentially, the bill restores the rules under which the Forest Service, 
BLM, Fish & Wildlife Service, and Bureau of Reclamation operated for 
over 30 years under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act. They will 
be able to charge for developed campgrounds, swim sites, and boat 
launches. No more fees for trailheads, scenic overlooks, roads, parking, 
toilets, or picnic tables. 
 
National Park entrance fees are retained, but the National Parks Pass is 
reinstated at $50 and the planned NPS increases every 3 years using the 
Consumer Price Index are stopped. The America the Beautiful Pass ($80) 
goes away. 
 
Please contact your U.S. Representative and both of your U.S. Senators 
and ask them to support S2438. 
 
Kitty Benzar, President Western Slope No-Fee Coalition 
 
 
    December 18, 2007 
 
 
    For Immediate Release 
 
 
      More information: Kitty Benzar 970/259-4616 wsnfc@earthlink.net 
 
 
          Bill Would Eliminate Recreation Fees 
 
 
        No-Fee Coalition Hails Proposal, Calls For National Public Lands 
        Initiative 
 
 
 
DURANGO CO A bill introduced by three western Senators on December 10 
would repeal the Federal Lands Recreation Act and restore free public 
access to millions of acres of federal public lands managed by the 
Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and Bureau of Reclamation. 
 
Montana Senators Max Baucus and Jon Tester joined with Idaho Senator 
Mike Crapo as original co-sponsors of S2438, the Fee Repeal and Expanded 
Access Act of 2007. Baucus and Tester are Democrats, Crapo a Republican. 
 
The Western Slope No-Fee Coalition, which has championed the effort to 
end the user fees that began as an experiment in 1996, hailed the bill 
as the first step in a national initiative to restore public lands to 
public control. 
 
"The Fee Repeal Act will bring an end to a failed experiment that has 
for 10 years burdened Americans with a double tax and kept them away 
from public lands they have always enjoyed," Benzar said. "I applaud 
this bipartisan effort and call on all public lands supporters to 
mobilize in support of it." 
 
S2438 would allow National Parks to continue to charge Entrance Fees, 
but would return all other federal land management agencies to the 
provisions of the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965, which 
governed recreation use fees for 32 years. Fees would be allowed only in 
developed campgrounds and swim sites, and at specialized boat launch 
facilities. Fees would be specifically prohibited for the use, either 
singly or in any combination, of drinking water, wayside exhibits, 
roads, overlook sites, visitors' centers, scenic drives, toilet 
facilities, or solely for the use of picnic tables. Fees would also be 
prohibited for dispersed, undeveloped camping and recreation. 
 
The 1965 rules were repealed in late 1996 by the Recreational Fee 
Demonstration Program that came to be known as Fee Demo. Originally 
limited to a 2-year experiment at no more than 100 sites, Fee Demo was 
repeatedly expanded and extended, but met increasing public resistance. 
By 2004, there was so much opposition to Fee Demo that another extension 
was unlikely to pass, and the program was set to expire. Instead, 
Representative Ralph Regula (R-OH) attached the Federal Lands Recreation 
Enhancement Act to a must-pass omnibus appropriations bill, which went 
into effect on December 8, 2004. 
 
FLREA, known to its detractors as the Recreation Access Tax, or RAT, 
replaced Fee Demo with a permanent fee program. It was never debated on 
the floor of the House and was not even introduced in the Senate. Under 
FLREA, access fees have multiplied, visitation has declined, 
recreational facilities that cannot pay their own way in fees have been 
closed, and fee revenue has replaced public funds at the local level. 
 
"Recreation user fees were originally sold as a way for the agencies to 
raise supplemental funds to address their backlogged maintenance," 
according to Benzar. "Instead, fee revenue was used for day-to-day 
operations and to build facilities that have only added to long-term 
maintenance needs. And now we are facing thousands of site closures and 
being told they are necessary because there is still no money for the 
backlog." 
 
Appropriated funding for recreation has increased by 22% over the past 
10 years, but administration and overhead costs have skyrocketed, and 
fewer dollars are making it to the ground. Some local areas saw budget 
cuts of up to 60% last summer, even though appropriated funding was the 
same as the prior year. 
 
Even as local managers were facing huge cuts, a 2006 audit of the 
recreation fee program by the Government Accountability Office (GAO 
06-1016) found that $296 million in unobligated fee receipts was being 
held by the four federal land management agencies that are authorized to 
levy fees. A full 93% of National Forests were carrying unobligated fee 
accounts, and 58% of Forests had more than a year's fee revenue in their 
unobligated fund. 
 
Benzar sees the policy of Fee Retention at the heart of the problem. 
"Fee Demo and RAT allowed the local land managers to keep whatever 
recreation fee revenue they could raise, instead of returning it to the 
Treasury," she said. "Congressional oversight was lost, and appropriated 
funding was diverted to other uses. Local managers were left to raise 
their own budgets, and their incentives changed from land stewardship to 
revenue generation. They began looking at citizens as customers, instead 
of as the owners of public lands." 
 
After ten years of increasing reliance on fee revenue, the program will 
not be easy to uproot. Benzar is calling on public land users and 
supporters to rally behind the fee repeal bill as the first step in a 
new National Public Lands Initiative. 
 
"Numerous state legislatures, county commissions, city councils, and 
civic organizations have passed resolutions opposing Fee Demo and RAT," 
said Benzar. "We will be asking all of them, and additional groups as 
well, to support S2438. 
 
"For a decade, the agencies have been acting as if they own our public 
lands," she concluded. "It's time for the real owners - the American 
people - to step up and assert our rights. This bill offers us a golden 
opportunity to take back our precious public lands."
Mike \"Lack-O-Slack\" Dooley
\"Nothing is foolproof, to a sufficiently talented fool!\"