Victory Today for Recreation and Access
House Defeats Amendment Banning Snowmobiles
June 17, 2004
For Immediate Release
Contact Brian Kennedy or Matt Streit at (202) 226-9019
Washington, DC - Today the House of Representatives voted to defeat an amendment
to the Interior Appropriations bill that would have banned snowmobile use in
Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks.
"Common sense and balance between preservation and access won the day," said
Chairman of the Resources Committee Richard W. Pombo (R-CA). "This was an
arbitrary, extreme, and unnecessary proposal that would have locked the public
out of these parks and devastated local economies."
President Roosevelt eloquently stated the intent of the park when he dedicated
the arch to the north entrance by saying, "This Park was created and is now
administered for the benefit and enjoyment of the people...it is the property of
Uncle Sam and therefore of us all."
"Many of the radical environmentalists pushing for this ban want to put the
parks in a museum where we can only view them through a glass wall," said Rep.
Barbara Cubin (R-WY). "People in Wyoming know better. Those parks are there for
all of us to enjoy, and they provide a living for thousands of people. This ban
was a bad idea the first time it came up, it's a bad idea now, and I'm proud
that I was able to help fight it off for another year."
Each winter roughly 65,000 snowmobiles enter Yellowstone and Grand Teton
National Parks for recreation. In fact, 90 percent of Yellowstone's winter
visitors choose to travel by snowmobile. Accordingly, much of local economies in
Montana and Wyoming depend on winter snowmobile recreation. The Wyoming
Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources has stated that banning
snowmobiles from the parks would cost approximately $11.8 million in lost labor
income a year and would cost Wyoming 938 jobs.
For Wyoming, a state with less than 500,000 people (2000, U.S. Census Bureau),
the loss of 938 jobs has a tremendous impact on the economy. To put that in
perspective, these net job losses in Wyoming are equivalent to 67,743 lost jobs
in California, 37, 952 lost jobs in New York, and 12,698 lost jobs in
Massachusetts.
New generation snowmobiles emit 90 percent fewer hydrocarbons, 70 percent less
carbon monoxide and are 50 percent quieter than older, two-stroke snowmobiles.