I am grateful to all who give their time to preserve off-highway access.
Off-highway recreation on public land is not a right, it is a privilege. Your off-highway recreation privilages are protected by the (too) few who participate in the process.
Public land does not belong to YOU, nor does it belong to ME. It belongs to US, which means we have to share.
The important things most of us already do include volunteering to maintain trails, being a good steward of the lands we play on, cleaning up after ourselves and others, and respecting closed areas regardless of how wrong we feel it is.
We all can and need to do more. We need to write our government representatives at all levels and tell them our concerns. We need to show up at the many hearings regarding land use and deliver our comments.
Land managers tend to manage by closure if they don't have resources to patrol and enforce. Consider giving up a weekend a month to your local forest or BLM area's volunteer patrols.
Managing by lawsuit is a wasteful method which works well for the very organized anti-access groups. Consider giving to pro-access groups which fight for your access, such as Blue Ribbon Coalition, CORVA, CA4WDC. Lawsuits are expensive. Give generously.
Don't be a jerk. Try to understand the concerns of the anti-access folks, instead of just demonizing them. As soon as the mudslinging starts, our credibility sinks. By understanding their concerns, you can explain how we are taking steps to address them at hearings and in letters to your congress person.
If your club is hosting an off-road event, invite the media, and take pains to show them how we are using the land responsibly. Our story should be that we are environmentalists as well.
Be a role model, not a whiner. Whining is like rocking in a chair -- it's something to do, but it gets you nowhere.
Off-highway recreation on public land is not a right, it is a privilege. Your off-highway recreation privilages are protected by the (too) few who participate in the process.
Public land does not belong to YOU, nor does it belong to ME. It belongs to US, which means we have to share.
The important things most of us already do include volunteering to maintain trails, being a good steward of the lands we play on, cleaning up after ourselves and others, and respecting closed areas regardless of how wrong we feel it is.
We all can and need to do more. We need to write our government representatives at all levels and tell them our concerns. We need to show up at the many hearings regarding land use and deliver our comments.
Land managers tend to manage by closure if they don't have resources to patrol and enforce. Consider giving up a weekend a month to your local forest or BLM area's volunteer patrols.
Managing by lawsuit is a wasteful method which works well for the very organized anti-access groups. Consider giving to pro-access groups which fight for your access, such as Blue Ribbon Coalition, CORVA, CA4WDC. Lawsuits are expensive. Give generously.
Don't be a jerk. Try to understand the concerns of the anti-access folks, instead of just demonizing them. As soon as the mudslinging starts, our credibility sinks. By understanding their concerns, you can explain how we are taking steps to address them at hearings and in letters to your congress person.
If your club is hosting an off-road event, invite the media, and take pains to show them how we are using the land responsibly. Our story should be that we are environmentalists as well.
Be a role model, not a whiner. Whining is like rocking in a chair -- it's something to do, but it gets you nowhere.
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