I am genuinely as open-minded about this as I can be, but doesn't this illustrate that a permit system isn't needed? This is already illegal activity (presumably this group would have needed to request and be issued a
Special Use Permit for a large gathering like this). Park Police could issue citations to the organizers or participants with the laws we have today, right? So what does adding a permit system do to help here? I would really like to understand.
Let's just be clear, the Parks Department and maybe NJDEP are clueless when it comes to communications. They floated a general idea without any specifics, leading people to conclude a worst-case scenario. I among others warned them about much of what has been discussed as downsides on this thread, but I can't help people that don't want to be helped! I also suggested a model that Michigan uses that I think could be supportable because it is cheap, does not create a special user class, and supports park funding state wide. I have no inside knowledge about how they are specifically thinking about that vague permit idea at this point or if it will even happen at all.
Here are the full comments I helped put together for Pinelands Alliance alongside folks from NJ Conservation Foundation for the recent survey. I think they mirror most of the approaches suggested here. We may have specific differences in specific areas, you are free to review the comments and linked files and we can discuss.
"
This link https://drive.google.com/.../1C6eHP0B1SpUuS.../view... contains a GIS file that has suggestions for what areas should be open only to hiking, biking, horseback riding, and other non-motorized uses.This can be uploaded on the Wharton State Forest survey if you so choose. You can view this file on Google Earth or online at Google Maps by using the link at the end of this email.
- Near the end of the survey, there is a section labeled
"
What parts of Wharton State Forest are important to you?"
In this section, there is an option to select " attaching your own data or map" - Select this option and then upload the linked zip file
That selection also opens up a dialogue box with a prompt to "
How could your concerns be addressed?" You can use these recommended comments for this section
"The attached KMZ file depicts areas where only activities like walking, biking, horseback riding, and other non-motorized recreational forms should be permitted. I also enjoy exploring a variety of dirt roads shown on the topographic maps as depicted by the U.S. Geological Survey and use them for sightseeing, accessing specific wildlife areas, paddling, and hiking. However, there are also destructive activities occurring in these same areas such as illegal dumping, poaching, illegal off-road vehicle use, and illegal fires that cause immense damage to natural habitats, historic sites, designated trails, and even the road infrastructure itself. This file depicts areas that contain some of the most sensitive habitats in the State Forest and they must be protected.
I am asking for strict, effective, and steadfast enforcement of existing federal and state regulations. We also need more officers patrolling more areas more often. Warnings should never be issued for illegal off-road vehicle use. The corps of Conservation Officers should be expanded greatly and given the direction to patrol the backcountry in state park areas as well as wildlife management areas. We need effective enforcement.
We need better communications with the public and more front-facing employees like visitor services naturalists and maintenance workers. Naturalists and maintenance workers need full-time hours and better pay. We need to compensate these professionals appropriately for their critically important work.
If a permit system is established for state land, it should be low-cost and cover a broad range of activities. Michigan State Parks has a form of this approach called a “recreation passport” that could be a model for New Jersey. For just $17 a year, one receives a license plate sticker that authorizes access to a variety of state-owned lands and facilities such as camping areas, swimming areas, boat launches, state forest dirt roads, hiking trails, and historic sites."
Note: If you have already taken this survey, you can ask a friend or family member on a different workstation to take the survey themselves. The survey will not let you fill it out again on the same device.
Links:
Wharton State Forest Official Map Survey:
https://survey123.arcgis.com/share/688047d6320a4708841cff9cf47c59db?portalUrl=https://njdep.maps.arcgis.com
Recording of Wharton State Forest Virtual Tour:
https://vimeo.com/764255181
Explore the KMZ with suggested areas open only to non-motorized uses
: https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit...
and finally, join the campaign to Fix Our Parks https://www.fixourparksnj.org/join-the-campaign"