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Progress Updating the 1979 Michigan ORV Plan

Progress Updating the 1979 Michigan ORV Plan. Dr. Chuck Nelson Dept. Community, Agriculture, Recreation and Resource Studies MI State University. DNR’s Mission.

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Progress Updating the 1979 Michigan ORV Plan

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  1. Progress Updating the 1979 Michigan ORV Plan Dr. Chuck Nelson Dept. Community, Agriculture, Recreation and Resource Studies MI State University

  2. DNR’s Mission • Conserve, protect and provide for public use and enjoyment Michigan’s natural resources for present and future generations of citizens and visitors. • Stewardship mission is paramount

  3. An Updated Plan for Tomorrow • Key issues for updated plan • Meet legal mandates • Provide adequate riding opportunity • Minimize social conflict • Maintain environmental integrity • Maximize rider safety and enjoyment • Make most efficient use of ORV funds • Recent new wrinkle – New FS rules • “Closed unless posted open” on all NF • Not just the Huron-Manistee • Forest certification

  4. ORV Plan Requirements • Inventory state forests • Assess their suitability for ORV use • Designate ORV system • Done between 1979 - today • Resource management to maintain system and restore ORV damage • On-going • This effort involves • Partners • Law enforcement • Maintenance • Education • ORV events • ORV technology • Conflicts and other uses of public and nearby private lands • Rider enjoyment • Funding • Safety • Environmental integrity

  5. Maintenance and Restoration Grant Workshop Input • Maintenance • Support for improved signage • Yellow backers from AuSable Pilot Project • Sign plan removing discretion for sponsors • Significant concern about liability associated with maintenance activities • Growing trail use = more trail maintenance • Costs higher than reimbursement for most • Support gas sales tax money to ORV program • Restoration • Engineering requirements are challenging • Need better ID of ORV damage sites off trails • Need more restoration interests involved

  6. Public Information Meetings • S. Michigan (Lansing 10/12/04) • 92 signed attendance sheet • Three distinct user groups represented • Motorcycles, ATV, full size truck/dune buggy • Non-trail oriented users not well represented • Want separate trails to meet differing user needs • More trails in total • Parallel trails,“play” areas for large trucks • Many want NLP forest roads open to MC/ATV • Stated need for trail restoration, relocation • Want direct access from trails to goods/services • Support using gas sales tax $ from ORV for ORV • Support hands on & written youth ORV safety ed.

  7. Grayling Meeting • 63 signed attendance sheet (10/13/04) • Again three distinct groups plus 56” width ATV • Gator, Mule, etc. • Non-trail oriented users not well represented • Want separate trails to meet differing user needs • More trails in total • Parallel trails,“play” areas for large trucks • Many want NLP forest roads open to MC/ATV • Stated need for trail restoration, relocation • Want direct access from trails to goods/services • Support using gas sales tax $ from ORV for ORV • Support hands on & written youth ORV safety ed

  8. Marquette Meeting • 100 signed attendance sheet (10/14/04) • Different character than previous meetings • Three ORV vehicle types represented • Also had vocal non-ORV riders concerned about trespass, property and environmental damage, cross-country use & beach riding • Also had hunt/fish/pick non-trail riders • Keep state/national forest roads open to ORV • Support county road shoulders open to ORV • ORV riders seen as major component of tourism • Want more designated trails for tourists • Support for ORV education focused on written to reach more youth, work through sheriffs • Want sign compatibility with snowmobile prog.

  9. MI County Sheriff Survey • 60 (72%) of 83 responded • Participate in teaching ORV safety using a model similar to marine safety education • 38 (63%) wanted to teach ORV safety education, 2 (4%) maybe, 15 (25%) not interested, 4 (7%) no response to question • 16 participated in ORV enforcement grant program in 2003 • 77% enforcement time on trails • 23% at trail heads • Key violations targeted • operation under the influence of drugs/alcohol, • operation by a non-certified youth without adult supervision, • trespass on private lands, • operation on public lands/roadways where prohibited • lack of an approved helmet/safety equipment • Participated in enforcement because • Public safety need, citizen concerns about trespass, increasing ORV use, illegal ORV use on roadways, enforcement need

  10. Sheriff Survey Results • Of the 16 in ORV enforcement: • 7 (44%) of the 16 also conduct ORV safety education • 16 (100%) do marine safety education • 9 (56%) do snowmobile safety education • 6 (38%) do hunter safety education • More counties interested in ORV enforcement if barriers overcome • Need additional money • ORV equipment • Enforcement personnel • If designated trails were in county • Other barrier may be qualifications of enforcement personnel • Do they need to be a certified police officer? • Potential for year-round recreation officers at local level • ORV, snowmobile and marine enforcement as well as safety education for all three • Strong support for having ORV safety training materials on the internet

  11. County Road Commission Manager Survey • 33(59%) of 56 counties north of Bay City to Muskegon line responded • 17 (52%) no ORVs on county road shoulder • Concerns about safety, liability, increased road maintenance costs • 6 (18%) some county shoulders open to ORVs to connect trails • Maintain balance, connect trails, promote tourism, cooperate with ORV clubs • 10 (30%) all county road shoulders open to ORV • Treat ORVs like snowmobiles, benefits agriculture and tourism, requested by residents/riders, high demand • 15% are reconsidering existing policy • Lots of flux • Looking both at opening and closing

  12. Road Commission Managers • Where illegal, citizen comments heard • Causes damage to roads/shoulders • ORVs travel at excessive speed, fleeing law • ORV fatalities occurred on county road • Leads to trespass • Where legal, citizen comments heard • Reduced speeding, not trying to flee law • Benefits service businesses • Leads to trespass • More road/shoulder damage • ORV traffic confuses motorists, safety concern

  13. Road Commission Managers • Three noted total of 4 ORV fatalities on roads • Tend to lack data on ORV accidents on roads • Similar lack of knowledge about citations for illegal ORV operation • When asked about MCCCT connectors on county roads for DNR licensed ORVs • 27% support, 39% oppose, 34% unsure/not applicable situation to them • Much more supportive of DNR/FS acquiring or designating trails/routes on public lands • 70% support, 3% oppose, 27% unsure/not applicable situation to them

  14. State Trail Coordinator Survey • State Trail Coordinators • 26 (52%) of 50 states respond • 6 (23%) have current state ORV plan • 25 (96%) of 26 reported some public land riding opportunity • 77% had federal land opportunities • 73% had state land opportunities • 46% had local public land opportunities • 52% “closed unless posted open”, 48% “open unless posted closed” • Survey was pre-Forest Service policy announcement • 80,658 trail miles reported • 79% open to all types ORV • 17% ATV/cycle only • 4% cycle only • <1% truck only • 42% states had one or more designated scramble areas

  15. Trail Maintenance/Damage Restoration for other States • Trail maintenance done by many • 69% used non-profits • 35% used for-profit contractors • 58% states did some/all maintenance • 62% had federal maintenance • 23% had some local gov. maintenance • Trail restoration done by fewer • 27% states had damage restoration prog. • Used all the above sources to implement

  16. Law Enforcement and Fatalities • Few states track ORV citations • Only 15% of states provided numbers of ORV citations • Few provided data on fatalities • 40% of states provided data on ORV fatalities, 60% stated they had no info • US Consumers Product Safety Commission (2003) reports that 1982-2002 • 224 people died in ATV accidents in Michigan • 5,239 people died nationwide • 33% of deaths nationwide were to persons <16 • Michigan State Police Office of Highway Safety Planning (2004) reported that during 1994-2003 • 2,528 ORV/ATV accidents on Michigan roadways • Resulted in 77 fatalities • Data available not comparable in quality to snowmobile fatality data which DNR LED investigates and compiles

  17. 2005 National OHV Program Managers Data – Thanks to Chair Bob Walker (MT) for compiling • Education requirement for ORV use • 17 (35%) of states require for some • Typically youth • 32 (65%) have no educational requirement • 26 (53%) have minimum age requirement to operate ORV • 23 (47%) no minimum age requirement • All states without a minimum age requirement also lack an educational requirement

  18. Michigan Trail Assessment 2004 • Fall 2004 DNR and FS personnel assessed Michigan’s ORV system • Special thanks to three MI DNR trail analysts • Wayne Wheeler (UP) • Paige Perry (E NLP) • Katie Campbell (W NLP) • Also, good participation by FS ranger districts in the Huron-Manistee NF

  19. Condition of the Designated System – Fall 2004 • 2,639 miles evaluated • 1,777 (68%) rated good (meets standards >95%) • 854 (32%) rated fair (meets standards 75-95%) • 8 (<1%) rated poor (meets standards <75%) • Key goal is bring all up to good • 7 cycle trails, 11 ORV trails, 3 routes need significant improvement • Improved brushing, signage, re-routes or boardwalks for wet areas • Comparison to 1996 system assessment where 2,097 miles were reviewed • 61% good, 27% fair, 13% poor

  20. Illegal Uses • 44 (54%) of trails/routes have reported illegal use • Main problems are non-designated spur trails • Access hunt, fish, private lands, hill climbs • Other concerns include • Illegal hill climbs • Illegal scramble areas • Riding in wetlands or on lake/river shorelines • Road riding on roads open to SOS vehicles only

  21. Conflicts • 20 (25%) of 81 trails/routes had reported conflicts • Conflicts reported include • Between ORV users and others using trail/route system • Non-motorized uses • Logging vehicles • Cycle and ATV users on the same trail • ORV users and neighbors to system • Dust, noise, trespass • Conflict with oil/gas service personnel

  22. ORV Damage to Public Lands • Considerable amount away from designated system • Many photos submitted with GIS info from DNR field staff • Serious concern of forest certification evaluators during MI visit • Want to see best management practices fully implemented • Current Operations Inventory not well suited to ID such damage • Much done during snow cover • Many land managers believe damage away from the designated system exacerbated by some LP counties opening all county road shoulders to DNR licensed ORVs • Provides access to illegal, environmentally sensitive sites

  23. Plan Action Steps, Rationale and Fiscal Implications • First set submitted to DNR 12/21/04 • DNR now reviewing 5th draft • Internal review process through FMFM • Then by DNR wide team • Then out to the public • Full review takes time, longer than I planned • Still compiling supporting material on trends, etc. during internal review

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