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Dateline: April 10,
2003
Greenbelt
recreational fees increasing
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Boaters
and sportsmen will soon be paying a little more to enjoy beautiful Lake
Greenbelt as fee increases go into effect.
Greenbelt
General Manager Bobbie Kidd said the water authority board approved the
higher fees at its February meeting.
“This
is only the third increase in 35 years and the first increase in about 20
years,” Kidd said.
Annual
permits will cost $30 and daily permits will cost $3. That’s up from $20
and $2.
The
biggest change will come in the form of a new $100 annual permit for
personal watercraft such as WaveRunners. No daily permits will be
available for personal watercraft, and the annual permit will require
applicants to sign a waiver and agree to certain rules and restrictions to
lessen the water authority’s exposure to lawsuits.
“We
thought we would be overrun with personal watercraft since we understand
they are going to be prohibited at Lake Meredith,” Kidd said. “I think
the new rules will also cut down on the horseplay. If it doesn’t, we can
change the rules any time.”
Kidd
said the new prices will go into effect as soon as the current supply of
permits is exhausted. As of Tuesday morning, only 20 old permits were
left, and those will probably be gone by the time most readers get this
issue.
Revenue
from lake permits go to pay for salaries and wages of several lake
personnel, lake vehicles, maintenance, insurance, and expenses associated
with vandalism.
“The
recreation at the lake has to pay for itself,” Kidd said. “We even
have two separate budgets [at the water authority] – one for recreation
and one for the sale of water.”
Kidd
said he hadn’t heard the specifics of increases for state fishing and
boating licenses, but he understood the need.
“We
have to have Game Wardens, and the people doing the hunting and fishing
ought to be the ones to pay for it,” he said.
The
water level did rise at Greenbelt over the winter but has started
dropping, Kidd said. It is currently at a depth of about 60 feet.
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