An outdoor recreation funding bill sailed out of a Senate committee Tuesday after lawmakers and residents heaped praise on it. High school students, however, testified that several senators appeared initially confused about the bill — and they hope those lawmakers get up to speed before the full body considers it on the Senate floor. 

That task of educating senators could be the biggest hurdle remaining for House Bill 67 – Outdoor Recreation and Tourism Trust Fund Administration-2.

The bill would establish a nine-person board as well as rules for allocating grants from the trust fund that Gov. Mark Gordon signed into law in 2023. 

That fund already has $6 million to generate grants for trail building, camping infrastructure and other such developments. House Bill 67 would simply create the structure for how those funds get disbursed. 

High school student Sunday Schuh is with Cody Youth for Justice, a student group that travels to the Wyoming Legislature to lobby for bills, usually ones that impact youth. She told the committee she had encountered confusion about the facts around the bill, with senators thinking it would actually create a new trust fund and expand the government.  

“I just thought I’d come up and try and clear up some of the confusion that I encountered when I was talking to some of the senators yesterday,” she said. “I just wanted to address that the fund is already there. The money is already in there. … So I just thought I’d come and say what a great bill this is for diversifying Wyoming’s economy and for definitely increasing our recreation.”

The students hope to talk to every senator to help them understand what House Bill 67 does, she said. 

Sen. Wendy Schuler (R-Evanston) during the 2024 legislative session in Cheyenne. (Ashton Hacke/WyoFile)

“I appreciate you educating some of our senators because unfortunately, I think some of them maybe weren’t up to speed on the fact that [the trust fund] bill had already passed,” committee chair Sen. Wendy Schuler (R-Evanston) said. 

How it got here 

Heading into the session, the Legislature’s Joint Travel Committee sponsored an initial version of the bill, Senate File 40. A committee sponsorship is normally a signal that a bill will be prioritized during the session. Despite that, SF 40 failed introduction. 

However, Rep. Sandy Newsome (R-Cody), the joint travel committee’s co-chair, had sponsored a mirror bill in the House as a backup measure. House Bill 67 passed the House easily and has now crossed over to the Senate for consideration. 

The bill would create a nine-member trust account board appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Senate, which would include resident representatives of Wyoming’s judicial districts. Wyoming’s Office of Outdoor Recreation manager would act as secretary. 

The board would consider grant applications, and may award funds under $200,000. Projects exceeding $200,000 would need approval from the Legislature’s Select Committee on Natural Resources. 

Grants could be for planning, design, construction and maintenance of outdoor recreational infrastructure, or for the acquisition of public access easements necessary to enhance outdoor recreational infrastructure. Eligible applicants would include municipalities, tribal governments and nonprofits. 

A climber ascends a route in the popular Powers Wall zone of Tensleep Canyon in July 2022. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

The bill also creates a new biennial $6 million appropriation to the trust fund. 

On Wyoming’s terms

More people are coming to Wyoming to recreate, which gives the economy a boost but also creates concern about users trampling resources, disturbing wildlife or crowding favorite spots. 

“Our outdoor recreation economy in the state of Wyoming is the fourth-fastest growing in the country,” said State Parks & Cultural Resources Acting Director Dave Glenn. “The goal of this is to educate our visitors, disperse them in places where need be and concentrate them when need be.”

The program allows communities to tailor projects to their needs, said Wyoming Office of Outdoor Recreation Manager Patrick Harrington. “I think this is a good opportunity for Wyoming to grow Wyoming’s way,” he said. “It should be able to hit all of our communities big and small, help with those capacity issues in grant writing and really get that money out to the ground and where it’s most impactful.” 

House Bill 67 facilitates economic diversification, said Steff Kessler with the Wyoming Outdoor Recreation Business Alliance. 

“We support this bill because it’s a tool for growth and it’s a tool for managing that growth,” she said. “We need investments in infrastructure to responsibly grow our outdoor recreation and to provide more economic opportunities and to support businesses and their growth … We want to ensure that these investments for infrastructure happen on Wyoming’s terms, and that’s what this bill does.”

Rebekah Burns of the Powell Chamber of Commerce said the bill represents a huge economic opportunity for her region. “This is not just a ‘hey, this is for outdoor rec and it’s a big quality of life and it encourages health and well-being.” All of those things are true, she said, but this bill also takes the long view.  

Supporters also included the Wyoming County Commissioners Association, Northern Arapaho Business Council, National Shooting Sports Foundation, Central Wyoming College, Wyoming Wildlife Federation and Brunton, a Riverton business. 

The Travel Committee unanimously advanced the bill. 

Speaking of growth 

A crowd waits with cameras at the ready for Old Faithful to erupt in May 2019. (Arthur T. LaBar/FlickrCC)

New national park visitation numbers show continuing outdoor recreation growth. Yellowstone National Park tallied more than 4.5 million visitations in 2023 — a 37% increase over 2022, according to the National Park Service. That visitation is just shy of the park’s biggest-ever year, 2021, when it recorded 4.8 million visits.

Grand Teton National Park hosted 3.4 million recreation visits in 2023 — a 22% increase from 2022. 

Both national parks saw visitation dip in 2022, a trend attributed to historic floods that temporarily closed much of Yellowstone.

Katie Klingsporn reports on outdoor recreation, public lands, education and general news for WyoFile. She’s been a journalist and editor covering the American West for 20 years. Her freelance work has...

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  1. Well, shoot. Here’s come the slow chisel that has doomed so many of our surrounding mountain states to high growth, crushed flora & fauna, higher housing costs, rampant airbnbs/short term rentals, etc., etc. In 15-20 yrs, we’ll witness all the scrambling to find solutions to the horrible fallout this will cause. Seems like a small deal, but tourism and rec industries will now have their way. Enjoy the next 15-20 yrs in Wyoming, because when you build and market in this fashion, it ruins these mountain states and towns. Did we not learn this during the pandemic housing crisis in these mountain states?
    Enjoy the last great mountain state while it lasts, spend time on our quiet state lands while they last, spend time in your state parks while they still hold some natural value other than the sweetest sports complex our simple human minds can conjure. At least Lander was able to shut down the incredibly irresponsible via feratta plan— barely. They’ve gone for the jugular with HB 67. Those $9 lattes and $5 organic berry crunch muffins will taste so good after that killer mountain bike ride on land that used to support habitat. You won’t see any wildlife, and barely notice the flowers, but damn, those built up trails will sure fly by on your $100 2.5 WTBs, mounted on your $7000 mountain bike. No wonder Mike and Liz from Teton County sponsored this travesty— their town is already ruined so… why not spread the wealth.
    God speed, Wyoming— the last great habitat of the lower 48 mountain states. Ugh.