User/Agency Trail Field Trips Important Part of Collaborative Process
QWR:
http://quietwarriorracing.blogspot.com/2016/04/useragency-trail-field-trips-important.html
QWR is committed to the collaborative process as a strategy to bring land agency staff and the trail-based recreation community together with a common goal of both protecting resources and providing a high-quality outdoor experience.
Much of the collaborative or stakeholder process is centered on attending meetings where information is shared, values are appreciated, and relationships are formed.
QWR believes that “out-of-the office” field trips where private sector partners invite agency staff to review the development and management history of an OHV area is also an important element of the stakeholder process.
Recently, leadership from the Mendocino National Forest toured the multiple-use recreation program on the Grindstone Ranger District. With one of the largest destination OHV programs in the country, the District is a good case study on how OHV management prescriptions have evolved over the last 36-40 years.
On the Mendocino and several other National Forests/BLM units, managed recreation didn’t start with the 2005 Travel Management Rule. Rather, it has been a multi-decade process where the 1960s-era mining, firebreak, or logging road-based route network was gradually converted to a sustainable trail system that consists of engineered contour trails, soil loss structures, and road-to-trail conversions.
Managed federal OHV trail-based recreation programs are hard to sustain on current (and future) recreation budgets appropriated by Congress. In some regions of the country, the Forest Service and BLM receive grants from state funding sources such as the CA OHV Division Grant Program or OR’s ATV Grant Program.
In the 21st Century, successful OHV trail programs must also rely on partnerships with the private sector such as OHV clubs, conservation groups, and other local stakeholders. Those entities can be the source for the agency’s professional volunteer workforce where users are given chainsaw certification classes or other trail maintenance training.
QWR commends those user groups and agency units where an all-hands-approach has been adopted and implemented. QWR understands that it can take a lot of agency staff time to manage a substantive volunteer program. However, a robust volunteer corps can also play a supportive role in helping the agency obtain non-federal resources/monies (i.e. grants to help manage their trail program, fund projects such as an OHV bridge, or donations for construction labor/materials).
The collaborative process is a two-way street. Don’t wait for agency staff to call for a meeting or workshop. As a private sector partner, looks for ways to engage your federal contacts either at meetings, field trips, or volunteer work parties. Be willing to do some heavy lifting yourself.
QWR believes the quality of our trail future is directly proportional to the quality of the collaborative process/stakeholder involvement on your Forest or BLM unit.