A skate skier slides along the groomed track at the Lander Golf Course on a sunny January 2023 day. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

After failing introduction in the Senate, a mirror bill advancing in the House is keeping alive the discussion of how the newly created Wyoming outdoor recreation and tourism trust fund allocates grants to state projects. 

House Bill 67 – Outdoor Recreation and Tourism Trust Fund Administration-2, 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. 

The Senate version, SF 40, was sponsored by the Legislature’s Joint Travel Committee — normally a signal that it would be prioritized for introduction. Despite that, it failed introduction on a vote of 18-13. Lawmakers have rejected more committee bills than normal this session, stoking tensions among the various factions in the statehouse.

However, Rep. Sandy Newsome (R-Cody), the travel committee’s co-chair, had sponsored a mirror bill in the House as a backup measure. On Wednesday, representatives voted 50-10-1 to introduce HB 67 and referred it to the House Travel Committee. 

After an amendment, committee members advanced it 8-0 with one excused. 

Why it matters

More people are coming to Wyoming to recreate. The state’s outdoor recreation economy increased to $2.02 billion, or 4.1% of the state’s GDP in 2022, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. That number is up from $1.5 billion in 2021. 

Advocates say Wyoming should take the steering wheel now to help guide the industry’s growth and ensure crowds don’t negatively impact the state’s wildlife and landscapes. The effort, in the works for years, chalked a major victory in 2023 when the Legislature created a $6 million trust fund to generate grants for trail building, camping infrastructure and other such developments.

This map shows value added as a percentage of state gross domestic products. (Bureau of Economic Analysis)

Lawmakers didn’t, however, provide a way to spend the money, leaving the trust fund idle. 

That’s where HB 67 comes in. It 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 applications, and may award any grant 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. 

What they said 

Many people expressed support for the bill during Thursday’s committee meeting. 

“It’s been a long time coming, and I’m glad it’s here,” said Wyoming Wildlife Federation Government Affairs Director Jess Johnson. 

“We really feel like this is a win with every county,” said Chris Brown with the Wyoming Hospitality and Travel Coalition. 

“We fully support it because we believe this industry, in order to grow and to meet diverse needs across Wyoming, we need to have investments in infrastructure that will help communities design right-sized growth for themselves based on Wyoming’s terms,” said Steff Kessler, representing the Wyoming Outdoor Recreation Business Alliance.

Rep. Sandy Newsome (R-Cody), stands to applaud during the 2024 Wyoming legislative session. (Ashton J. Hacke/WyoFile)

“I’m happy to say that this morning we voted to support this bill wholeheartedly,” said Fremont County Commissioner Mike Jones, who spoke on behalf of the Wyoming County Commissioners Association. 

Joint Travel Committee co-chair Sen. Wendy Schuler (R-Evanston) also stopped in to remind the room that a lot of work went into the legislation during the interim, or off-season. 

“Maybe this side of the house is getting things done in a better fashion,” she said. 

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. Be careful what you wish for. Tourism and tourists are not a free lunch. Overcrowding is a real problem rarely addressed in these sorts of development grants. More tourism means higher housing prices as some percent decide to stay. Many jobs are seasonal and low paying. I’m not saying don’t host tourists but they bring many of the same impacts as commodity development and are often more difficult to regulate.

  2. This is a good bill. Tourism is a important part of our economy here in Wyoming and it will become more important in the future. TOURISIM TAX DOLLARS WILL HELP KEEP PERSONAL TAXES DOWN FOR WYOMING RESIDENTS . Many people from not only from all over the United States, but from around the world come to Wyoming for Our Natural Beauty, Our Great Citizens, Our Abundant Wild Life, and Our Western Culture. As a member of the Wind River Visitor Council (Fremont Counties tourism board), I have seen how, if the money is spent correctly, investment into tourism industry is able to bring in more tourist to our area and the State of Wyoming for the benefit of our citizens.