Spaceman Spiff
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- Apr 5, 2014
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Why should anyone who makes money off of our National Parks NOT pay a fee?
I have no problem paying a small fee. I do have a problem with paying a small fee, the time spent waiting and then a denial of permit.Part of the problem is National Parks have not been funded well enough for years in order to deal with the huge crowds that have been created by the “free advertising” of the internet. Parks depend on anonymity to protect certain areas where they don’t have the money to protect. Funny story, while in a remote area of the park a visitor found some perfect artifacts and turned them into the Park Headquarters. They were asked where they were found so they could be reburied exactly as they were found! Yes there is a problem! Lol!!!
I think part of the issue is that popular videos increase visitation to the parks where there hasn't been a reciprocal increase in budget...Certainly it should be a case-by-case or common sense basis...I would think.
If a youtuber is set up in a campsite, he or she is already 'occupying' that space.
Suppose they set up a camera and tripod 10 feet from their RV, a couple of reflectors, maybe a table and a couple chairs, and film an hour long 'talking heads' or 'explainer' video....I see no harm or wear-and-tear or disruption to the park or forest, even if the background is visible in the video.
Of course if a bunch of adrenaline charged and rowdy athletes and sports enthusiasts blast in to the park with 10 loud fast dune buggies or turbo-charged ATVs and each with multiple go-pro cameras and powerful LED driving lights and a huge entourage of cast and crew, a food trailer, support vehicles, and lots of extras and plans to make the next youtube viral mega-block-buster, then we have a different situation.
Or so it seems to me.
I tend to agree with you on that, and it's both a bad and good thing. The rangers say about three out of ten clean up after themselves, and you can see that if you hang around any of the popular areas. Back in the fall, before I parked for the winter, I was in one of my favorite ares near a state park and there was trash everywhere. If folks would just pick up after themselves it would be a different world.I think part of the issue is that popular videos increase visitation to the parks where there hasn't been a reciprocal increase in budget...
Still needs to be an increase in budget though since generally facilities and infrastructure will degrade more quickly with increased usage. Roads develop more potholes more quickly, pit toilets need to be pumped more frequently, septic may need to be upgraded and increased, may require more first-aid or rescue personnel... Just a few things that would necessitate a bigger budget while not necessarily being the result of people behaving badly.I tend to agree with you on that, and it's both a bad and good thing. The rangers say about three out of ten clean up after themselves, and you can see that if you hang around any of the popular areas. Back in the fall, before I parked for the winter, I was in one of my favorite ares near a state park and there was trash everywhere. If folks would just pick up after themselves it would be a different world.
If it's a public space where you are legally allowed to be, (national park, state park, national forest, BLM desert, city park, public road, highway, sidewalk, etc) and if the activity such as filming is a 'low impact' activity, I see no legal or credible reason to impose an additional fee and have to wait days or weeks for a permit.Why should anyone who makes money off of our National Parks NOT pay a fee?
A few thoughts from another perspective:It's a public space where you are legally allowed to be, (national park, state park, city park, public road, highway, sidewalk, etc) and if the activity such as filming is a 'low impact' activity, I see no legal or credible reason to impose an additional fee and have to wait days or weeks for a permit.
Slippery slopes go both ways...... Hey it sounds unlikely....but once you start sliding down a slippery slope, where does the practice end?
The same as for any copywrited work. There are companies that look for and prosecute illegal use of copywrited material. The laws and mechanism is already in place, just add NPS permits. You probably hardly even notice Used by Permission at the end of an attribution of some work.So how do you enforce or even determine 'making money' vs 'not making money'...this seems arbitrary to me .....
Land of the fee.https://www.nps.gov/aboutus/news/commercial-film-and-photo-permits.htm
A YouTuber I watch was talking about how this can impact people with a YouTube channel that films in national parks and BLM land.
I know some nomads make extra funds by doing this.
Have you seen this and could it effect you?
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