http://www.medfordcentralrecord.com/WebApp/appmanager/JRC/Weekly?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=pg_wk_article&r21.pgpath=%2FMED%2FOpinion&r21.content=%2FMED%2FOpinion%2FTopStoryList_Story_1512244#
This was from my local newpaper...
Time to Protect From ORV Assault
To the editor:
Illegal riding of off-road vehicles (ORVs) is assaulting our public lands throughout the country. The unique and fragile ecosystems in New Jersey are under assault as well. A new book Thrillcraft captures the problems caused by illegal and sometimes legal off-road vehicle use and asks all state and federal leaders to address die environmental assault on all conservation lands. These vehicles cause soil compaction, erosion on stream banks, destruction of plant and animal habitat disturbance to wildlife and disturbance to low-impact recreationists, such as birdwatchers, hikers, and fishermen.
The uncontrolled operation of Thrillcraft such as All Terrain Vehicles (ATVs) and Personal Watercraft (PWCs) here in New Jersey kill and injure people, damage land, water, and property, create noise, air, and water pollution, reduce property values, discourage passive/quiet recreation, and harass and displace people and wildlife.
Assemblyman Reed Gusciora introduced a bill last year that would help reduce the illegal riding by increasing fines and penalties for these riders on public lands, and implementing a mandatory tagging and registration program so that the riders could be more easily identified.
As property owner of the temporary Chatsworth ORV facility, New Jersey Conservation Foundation has learned firsthand that parks are not the solution for illegal-riding, but rather strict penalties and fines for deterring illegal riding. This legislation is needed to curb illegal ORV riding that is damaging conservation land and creating public safety problems.
The citizens of New Jersey and beyond deserve to have the right to quality and quiet public lands. Wildlife deserves to be protected from motorized recreation. It is the responsibility of state lawmakers and agencies to give these rights back to the public and back to nature. Action is needed now to end the damages that have occurred for over a decade. Legislation is the only answer, and Pinelands Preservation Alliance commends the sponsors of the bill for recognizing this need and coming up with a plan to address it.
Jaclyn Rhoads
Pinelands Preservation Alliance
This is the link to the bill she speaks of and the PPA are in support of...
http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2008/Bills/A1000/823_I1.HTM
And a response to this opinion in the same paper.....
http://www.medfordcentralrecord.com...ntent=/MED/Opinion/TopStoryList_Story_1623659
In defense of Off Road Vehicles
To the editor:
What are the real goals of the Pinelands Preservation Alliance? After reading Jaclyn Rhoads' Time To Protect From ORV Assault, it is clear that she and the Pinelands Preservation Alliance seek to deny use of and access to New Jersey State Wild lands, for ORV use. What is an ORV or Off Road Vehicle? I am confused. Ms. Rhoads states, illegal and sometimes legal ORV “use must be stopped.” Legal ORV use could only mean registered and insured vehicles, cars, trucks and motorcycles. Unregistered vehicles cannot legally be operated in state wild lands. The penalties for doing so are severe; fines, loss of license, etc.
In her Jan. 21 letter, Ms. Rhoads lists activities approved of by her on state lands; bird watching, hiking and fishing. These are referred to as “passive, quiet recreation.” I wonder if driving a 4 by 4 truck down a dirt road, in Wharton State Forest will be passive and quiet enough. How about hunting Ms. Rhoads? Will that be OK with you?
Ms. Rhoads' portrayal of ORV use reads like a horror story with hordes of outlaw bikers arriving in our state woods, killing and destroying everything in their paths, with no respect for people, property, or wildlife. She refers to off road vehicles as “thrill craft” and says that they are harassing peaceful and quiet recreation, causing soil erosion and soil compaction and are “injuring and killing people.” These claims are insulting to me personally and I think unfair to a large group of people who care deeply about our states forests and parklands. For more than 25 years I have spent much time in our pineland woods, riding motorcycles, hiking, hunting and fishing. Now I wish to pass on the enjoyment of these activities to my two sons and will teach them to appreciate and respect the woods as I do.
The majority of ORV riders is responsible and law abiding. They ride their vehicles primarily on roads and firebreaks that were established long ago. Our ecosystem in the Pinelands is not fragile and badly damaged from ORV use. I view the ecology of the pines to be rugged and resilient with sandy soil, not prone to erosion or soil compaction.
With the vast amount of acreage available in South Jersey's State Pinelands, there is enough space for the thousands of people who ride and drive vehicles off road, to be given the same consideration as other outdoor enthusiasts. Responsible use of street legal vehicles on state land should continue to be allowed, as it is now. An area of a few thousand acres, in a remote location, should be established for non street legal motorcycle and ATV use. Other states have done this successfully. It would work in New Jersey as well.
If Ms. Rhoads and other extremist groups are successful in banning ORVs or any other group of people, from state wild lands they may cause the very thing they are trying to prevent. If people are denied use of public lands, for the recreational activities they choose, they will cease to fight the battles that will come in the future, to save the pinelands.
(name removed)
Medford
This post will be edited with additional info later...