Shenandoah National Park Changes Entrance Fee to Address Infrastructure Needs & Improve Visitor Experience
Luray, Virginia: The National Park Service (NPS) announced today that Shenandoah National Park will modify its entrance fees beginning June 1, 2018 to provide additional funding for infrastructure and maintenance needs that enhance the visitor experience. Effective June 1, 2018 the park entrance fee will be $30 per vehicle, $25 per motorcycle and $15 per person. These fees are good for 7 days. An annual park pass will cost $55.
In October 2017, the NPS proposed a plan to adopt seasonal pricing at Shenandoah and 16 other national parks to raise additional revenue for infrastructure and maintenance needs. The fee structure announced today addresses many concerns and ideas provided by the public on how best to address fee revenue for parks.
Revenue from entrance fees remains in the National Park Service and helps ensure a quality experience for all who visit. Here in Shenandoah National Park, 80 percent of entrance fees stay in the park and are devoted to spending that supports the visitor. We share the other 20 percent of entry fee income with other national parks for their projects.
The additional revenue from entrance fees at Shenandoah National Park will allow us to address deferred maintenance projects such as rebuilding deteriorating rock walls on Skyline Drive, replacing picnic tables and fire rings in campgrounds and picnic areas, repairing masonry structures and drainage culverts along Skyline Drive, repaving and repainting the lines on Skyline Drive and other park roads, clearing vistas at overlooks, maintaining hiking and horse trails, preserving historic buildings, improving signs and exhibits, providing upgrades to our public water and wastewater systems and providing accessibility modifications.
Superintendent Jennifer Flynn stated "The additional fees will enhance all aspects of the visitor experience in Shenandoah. Visitors will directly see improvements at our contact stations, on Skyline Drive, on trails, in our campgrounds and picnic areas and at our visitor centers. We are committed to providing a safe and rewarding experience for all visitors."
National parks have experienced record breaking visitation, with more than 1.5 billion visitors in the last five years. Throughout the country, the combination of aging infrastructure and increased visitation affects park roads, bridges, buildings, campgrounds, water systems, bathrooms, and other facilities. Maintenance deferred on these facilities amounts to an $11.6 billion nationwide backlog.
Entrance fees collected by the National Park Service totaled $199.9 million in Fiscal Year 2016. The NPS estimates that once fully implemented, the new fee structure will increase annual entrance fee revenue by about $60 million.
Shenandoah National Park has had an entrance fee since 1939. The current rate of $25 per vehicle, $20 per motorcycle and $10 per person has been in effect since 2017. The park is one of 117 in the National Park System that charges an entrance fee. The remaining 300 sites are free to enter.
The price of the annual America the Beautiful National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Annual Pass and Lifetime Senior Pass will remain $80.
The National Park Service has a standardized entrance fee structure, composed of four groups based on park size and type. Shenandoah National Park is one of the sites in group 3. A complete list of park entrance fees may be found here.
The complete fee schedule will change according to the following:
Shenandoah National Park
Per Vehicle
Per Motorcycle
Per Person
Park Specific Annual Pass
Current
$25
$20
$10
$50
June 1, 2018
$30
$25
$15
$55
On Saturday, November 4, 2017 at 11:58:55 AM UTC-4, Jeff Cook wrote:
The determination seems to me that the $70 entrance fee is as high as they could go before hitting the the $80 annual fee for entrance to all parks. Why didn't they raise the annual fee also? Can't imagine why they'd want to push people to annual fees, but there might be something there.https://www.nps.gov/planyourvisit/passes.htm So, apparantly they just used the same numbers as last year and increased the revenue from those parks to meet the need. They said we are short x amount of money. How much would we need to raise the money coming in from the highest visited parks in order to meet the gap, using the numbers from last year. They didnt account for less visits from what I have heard.--Brian McGoughOn Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 10:43 AM, Yambag Nelson <northstreet...@gmail.com > wrote:I would just love to know how the determination was made to do this. Did they actually do some sort of analysis on the elasticity of demand for visiting national parks or was this completely arbitrary/more sinister in nature?--
On Saturday, November 4, 2017 at 9:36:44 AM UTC-4, Aden wrote:From the Village Voice of all places
But that additional $70 million would be a pretty poor offset to President Donald Trump's $300 million cuts to NPS announced in his 2018 budget plan earlier this year. And it would be an even feebler response to the Park Service's reported $12 billion maintenance backlog.
Apparently a big portion of that backlog is the concessionaires needing to update their hot dog stands.
Full article:
http://flip.it/oFqHWR
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