I too attended the meeting and will follow up with Guy's comments; the plan for now is to "work to address the hemorrhage first" (ie 1/4 mile, J mount, sandy causeway pond, etc) with the use of advisement notification, education and group law enforcement. The group in attendance was informed that no further action will be taken without stakeholder input (another meeting of the same people invited to attend). It seems the placement of advisement signs, which the Director stated "no one likes more signs in a forest", are necessary teeth for the enforcement/court initiative and will assist in having fines stick. This from local judges and the State DAG office. There will be (65) 30" x 24" signs at more popular access points into the forest which inform you that there are MV regulations in effect. There will be the typical small tyvek signs posted indicating areas of environmental concern.
The state plans to coordinate a volunteer day in the future to assist with posting the advisements. Many groups and people at the fall meetings inquired publicly about the ability to assist. Guy is correct. According to the SPP Lt., the man who drove his jeep into the river on Sunday was issued 6 summonses and had his vehicle impounded. In my mind that's a great message, hope he shares it with his friends from the city.
There are plans for an information pamphlet to be developed so that people are aware why areas are labeled as "environmentally sensitive", as well as the impact that illegal activities have on the environment as a whole. This is not the final on the Wharton issue, it's just the start and we were assured that any further action will happen with stakeholder input. The 4 main topics that were heard/recognized from last fall's meetings were (in no specific order) 1. road maintenance 2. enforcement 3. protection of environmentally sensitive areas 4. Volunteer opportunities.
The meeting was kept strictly on topic and seemed really well-received.