For most rural areas, this statement could not have been further from the truth than if you were standing in another galaxy while saying it Boon.
Who drives the groomers? Who maintains the trails in the preseason? Who is on the local search and rescue? All volunteer by the way.
In case you are stumbling for the answer on this one, it is the local business owners that benefit from the snowmobile trail system.
-John
I have no beef and agree completely with the last statement. While it is not the only sustainable income for these businesses, we need to remember as we have read on this site over and over again, that once you get folks to the beautiful U.P.....they often come back in other seasons. So if a place like Krupps....does a great job in the winter, they are all along hoping to turn that customer into more than just a sledding customer but a 4 season customer.
This is why the higher fee can hurt Michigan. Boldly upping the fee hoping that it won't damage the tourist trade is blindly shallow and it will have consequences, just like shutting down the roadside privies in November tell tourists in winter, stay home.
My point was that businesses stand to gain the most from a winter tourist trade, and therefore they should contribute the most too. Hotels, Motels, cabins, eateries, bars, gas stations, and sled sales places all reap the rewards of having Joe Lunch-bucket show up and spread his money around. This then is the economy of God's country. Live and or hurt based upon how many tourists show up. Do we really want to thumb our nose at that prospect and say...hey, your money is peanuts....we want the big spenders only???
And while my intent was not to step on toes of those who volunteer to run groomers, many of those folks are NOT the business guys who will benefit from a $200 nite at the pool table, or steak dinner, or a 4 nite stay in a cabin.
Frankly there are tons of ways to gain the monies needed to groom and maintain trails. Just like there are ways to collect from those who use the roads in Chitown....with those godforsaken toll booths....which Michigan up until now at least, has not seen a need to duplicate. We still can fix the roads, but we use other methodology to collect the funds.
Adding a 1/4 tax on beer at the bar, or motel room, or even sleds sold in Michigan won't kill anyone, and will help support the tourist trade which will in turn, keep the establishments open because they are relatively cheap places to visit and have fun....4 seasons. Divvy up that money where it will do the most good and you help those businesses stay open, year around, and keep Michigan in the tourist businesses, which is exactly what those trails are designed for in the first place.
When you buy gas for your boat at a marina, you are paying a special tax that helps to build marinas all over the country. Yep, it costs more but as long as it doesn''t get robbed by someone needed school loans or other handmedowns....it is a good thing and won't put the load on just one place or thing.
Right now it is a set fee and use tax....purely designed to hit everyone exactly the same who owns and wants to use their sled in Michigan. We could spread that fee out a bit and give one time use people a break. What about those who use the trails every weekend all year long. Are they really paying their fair share compared to the guy headed up one time and paying the same fee? Seems not only unrealistic, but completely unfair...and that is what this thread is about.
We all know that there are businesses who are benefiting from the flow of tourist traffic who don't do a darn thing. Others are shouldering the load...It isn't evenly spread is it?
I think it should be spread out collected from all beneficiaries and keep a business like mind on who to not only bring the tourists, but to keep them through 4 seasons....and upping the fee to $45 won't be helping that process...as many have pointed out.