upnorthman
New member
Consider it your toll booth payment and be happy.
I think I like this one the best!!
Consider it your toll booth payment and be happy.
Yes but the frustration is for us multiple state riders..I have multiple sleds and I ride(rode) in 3 states...once it gets this high its not worth it to ride another state...won't get rid of mn or mi...so gotta decide if the one possible weekend in with is worth it..prob not..just go north shore or push on UP..its a shame cuz I rode hayfield first time this year..dropped 3 $35,tags..for just 3,days...mentally can't justify 150 for it on top of...50 gal oil..150 belt..4$ gal gas..12k sled...food lodging etc as earlier poster said..works both ways
Maybe its more about getting people to join clubs and become more active in the sport that they claim to love so well. The trail system was built on the sweat of volunteers. The average age of the ACTIVE club member is getting older and wishing some young bloods would help take over some of their duties. And its just not happening. Instead people are getting on the internet and threatening to spend their money elsewhere if they raise the trail fee, including their own home states. I just can't help thinking at some point in their future, when the local trails are gone, they're going to wish they helped out. (Taking your grandkids for a ride near home comes to mind.) On top of marking and grooming the trails that people tear up, someone has to repair the damage, as well as clean up the beer cans, plastic snomo pieces and blown belt debris people leave on the trail. Think how high the cost of snowmobiling would be if the volunteers actually got paid a working wage for their time. That includes the property owners that allow the trails across their land. Eventually, if we don't get more people active in the sport, the only place we'll have left to ride will be north of highway 8 where snowmobiling is big business. And if you think its crowded and expensive now.......
Its hard to reply to your points when you keep editing them. But I hear what you're saying, and I would GLADLY pay, even $100 per sled. But who is going to do all the work when the current aging workforce calls it quits? How do you recomend getting more people involved in the sport?The membership numbers will skyrocket in this new more complicated system and it will look good on paper.
Forced membership/volunteerism never works....it is nothing more than a warm feel goodism for the AWSC even if it does get a few more ppl active once they join a club for the discount. We HAVE had new members get involved in club functions in my local club, but they did it because they wanted to....not for some sorta discount.
I just don't like the link to club membership ...sounds way too much like some liberal came up with the whole idea.
Raise the registration fee and lets move on....it doesn't take a convoluted "bill" to do that....i'd rather see my state legislature concentrating on other things like lets say making sure companies look to Wisconsin as a great place to open or move a business to.
On a side note, I just heard that with this great snowy season, sled registration is up over 4000 units!
That will help trail maintenance alot!
To get an equal amount a funding to cap/step vs. a simple registration hike it would take the fee to approximately $30.00- $35.00 per sled per year along with the proposed non-resident trail pass hike. AND >ALL< of that money would go towards trail maintenence without additional administration costs! The trail fund would be flush with cash!
I would gladly pay that on a yearly basis and forget alla the fluff this bill is about.
Exactly. I'm 52, and I'm a youngster at some of the club meetings I attend.You hit the nail on the head!! While the money is a very important part of it, if we don't start getting some new volunteers that are under 60 years old, the trail system will decline very fast! While we owe a lot to the many guys over 60 still working hard on our trails, they won't be able to do it forever. I went to a county club meeting a month or so ago, and almost everyone there was 60 or older. I kept thinking "What's going to happen when these guys are gone?"
Please get involved in your clubs today, you will be happy you did.
If you're an active club member, then you know other clubs in our area are having a hard time finding help to work their trails and the surrounding clubs have needed jump in to fill the void. So we should both be in agreement that there is a growing problem? So again my question to you is, how do we get more members to join clubs and become ACTIVE in the sport of snowmobiling. Most clubs have fund raisers and trail side events and try to draw new people that way. If your club is growing with active younger members just by word of mouth, what's the secret?I edit because i am a slow typer and have to occasionally insert a point I lost track of....LOL...my edits don't change my op.
IMO, as I stated in my posts, I think the new members under cap/step will be members in name only and will join for the discount.
I also stated that our club has grown through word of mouth and some of the new members we have are younger and are willing to do the work.
They joined without some sort of "discount" as proposed in cap/step on there own because they wanted to help.
The membership numbers will skyrocket in this new more complicated system and it will look good on paper.
Forced membership/volunteerism never works....it is nothing more than a warm feel goodism for the AWSC even if it does get a few more ppl active once they join a club for the discount. We HAVE had new members get involved in club functions in my local club, but they did it because they wanted to....not for some sorta discount.
I just don't like the link to club membership ...sounds way too much like some liberal came up with the whole idea.
Raise the registration fee and lets move on....it doesn't take a convoluted "bill" to do that....i'd rather see my state legislature concentrating on other things like lets say making sure companies look to Wisconsin as a great place to open or move a business to.
On a side note, I just heard that with this great snowy season, sled registration is up over 4000 units!
That will help trail maintenance alot!
To get an equal amount a funding to cap/step vs. a simple registration hike it would take the fee to approximately $30.00- $35.00 per sled per year along with the proposed non-resident trail pass hike. AND >ALL< of that money would go towards trail maintenence without additional administration costs! The trail fund would be flush with cash!
I would gladly pay that on a yearly basis and forget alla the fluff this bill is about.