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Entrance and campground fees at Cedar Breaks National Monument have increased/NPS file
Editor's note: This updates the date the new rates take effect, a correction made by the park.
Entrance and campground fees have increased at Cedar Breaks National Monument in Utah.
Under the old system, the park charged a flat $10 per person fee, which was good for seven days. Under the fee structure that takes effect May 24, a seven-day vehicle pass covering everyone in a rig runs $25. Bicycle passes are $15, motorcycle passes $20, and an annual Cedar Breaks pass is $40.
Point Supreme Campground sites with showers but without electricity are $30/night, while Point Supreme walk-in sites, with showers but no electricity, are $20/night.
A park release said the new fee structure will provide additional revenue to fund operations and deferred maintenance projects.
Comments
Well fees have drastically increased under the Biden admin.
Does anyone thing the NPS has improved their visitiation services to justify such rate increases across the board
Other than privatizing the parks- what benefit has this been for the American people who OWN THIS PUBLIC LAND?
With the push to cashless entrance and fee payments at more and more NPS units, one might also ask what NPS employees are doing instead of collecting and transporting the cash.
Let's see the documentation of the effects of these changes.
And still the amount of fees collected is invisible to the public. How much more is collected in fees today then say 10 years ago?