Skip to main content

People want more Wyoming trails. Lawmakers ponder ways to pay for them. 

News Letter Journal - Staff Photo - Create Article
By
Katie Klingsporn with WyoFile, via the Wyoming News Exchange

FROM WYOFILE: 

Legislators to pursue bills to raise non-motorized-trail-building money through lottery funds, state park fees.

A growing body of hikers, mountain bikers, cross-country skiers and backpackers clearly want more non-motorized trails built in Wyoming, Deputy Director of Wyoming State Parks and Cultural Resources Chris Floyd told lawmakers Thursday. What is not so clear is how to pay for them. 

“We have more requests for non-motorized trails — summer or winter, warm weather, cold weather trails — than any other types of requests that we received through the Office of Outdoor Recreation,” Floyd told the Legislature’s Joint Travel, Recreation, Wildlife & Cultural Resources Committee meeting in Dubois. “That has been true for quite a few years.”

As outdoor recreation continues to grow as a core economic pillar in Wyoming and innovations like ebikes get more varied users outside, Floyd said, the state should strategize for how it can pay for those trails. He suggested Wyoming take a page from its motorized trails systems — designated for snowmobiles, side-by-sides and other vehicles with motors — and implement a pay-to-play fee. 

“We have a motorized program that’s great for motorized trails, and what you might look at is using that model for non-motorized trails as well,” Floyd said. 

Motorized users pay a fuel tax that helps fund projects through Recreation Trails Program grants. Snowmobilers pay a permit fee for a decal they affix to their machine. With that decal, they can ride a huge variety of groomed and ungroomed terrain across the state. Wyoming recently increased its decal fee for the first time since 2014 — a move supported by snowmobilers. Those fees help pay for the establishment and maintenance of trails, including grooming. 

Applying that model directly to non-motorized trail users, however, could be tricky in light of federal public lands jurisdiction and other factors, lawmakers said. 

Rather than pursue a straight-ahead user fee, the travel committee opted to draft bills that could help raise trail-building money through lottery funds and state park fees.

How we got here 

Outdoor recreation has been growing in popularity in Wyoming for decades, and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated that trend as it spurred more Americans to spend time outdoors. 

That uptick brought record visitation to national and state parks in Wyoming and generated significant revenue. In 2023, the outdoor recreation industry contributed $2.2 billion to Wyoming’s economy, according to the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis.

In response to the increasing crowds, Wyoming created a trust fund specifically to pay for outdoor recreation infrastructure. Those too have constituted an economic boon, according to a new report from the University of Wyoming’s Jay Kemmerer WORTH Institute. 

However, the trust fund will take some time to mature, Floyd said Thursday, which will limit the amount of money that can be spent in the near term on the expensive endeavor of trail building. 

Wyoming’s Office of Outdoor Recreation has received $47 million in requests for non-motorized trails in the last five years, Floyd said. Federal American Rescue Plan Act money enabled Wyoming to fund $24 million of that, but those were one-time expenditures that won’t be refreshed. The federal Recreation Trails Program does provide for reliable funding for non-motorized trails, he added, but it only amounts to about $400,000 annually. 

“And I have to tell you, for a state our size, that does not go very far,” Floyd said. That’s where user fees could come in, he said. 

A Wyoming mountain-bike specific user fee was floated in 2022, but failed to gain traction. But outdoor recreation’s growth, Floyd said, hasn’t slowed down. Wyoming is already lagging behind neighboring states in the mileage of non-motorized trails it provides, he said. 

“So we’re going to just see more population, more people out there on the ground,” he said. “And we’ve got to figure out where we’re going to put them and how we’re going to manage all this. And a lot of those users, of course, are going to be non-motorized users. So we need all the tools that we can at our disposal to handle that kind of growth.”

If the state isn’t proactive, he said, it will lead to user-created trails and other detriment to the landscape. 

Policy mechanisms

Committee members weren’t wild about a straight-ahead user fee, however. There are questions about how to enforce the fee, track it and whether it’s workable across federal agencies like the Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service, which manage the majority of Wyoming’s public lands.

Floyd furnished the committee with a list of if and how other states generate funds for non-motorized recreation. At least 10 other states have user fees in place. They range from winter recreation parking fees in Washington to horse and off-road cycling permits in Indiana. Colorado doesn’t have a user fee, but instead pulls lottery revenue through a program known as Great Outdoors Colorado. That program generated $69 million in 2024.

Sen. Larry Hicks, R-Baggs, urged the committee to be pragmatic. In 2026, the Wyoming Legislature will convene for a budget session, he noted, which requires bills to have more support to even get introduced. 

“I believe in user fees, but I think that’s a long shot,” Hicks said. “What I’d like to do, if we can, is focus on what we can do” with measures such as allowing existing revenues like lodging taxes to be used on trail building. 

Hicks proposed a bill that would divert money from Wyoming’s lottery proceeds to fund an outdoor recreation program. The committee passed the motion and will consider that bill draft during its next meeting. 

Sen. Brian Boner, R-Douglas, proposed a bill that authorizes Wyoming State Parks to charge extra fees on top of what it currently does. The committee also passed that motion for future consideration at its next meeting. 

Wyoming Pathways’ Executive Director Mike Kusiek supports the user fee for non-motorized trail users. A technical problem prevented him from testifying over Zoom on Thursday, but Kusiek emailed comments of support to the committee. 

“Great demand exists, and we all win when users pay into the development of the system from which they are using,” Kusiek told WyoFile on Friday. “The trails are built professionally and responsibly, quality of life improves, economies grow and land managers can fulfill their missions.”

WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.

This story was posted on June 7, 2025.  

--- Online Subscribers: Please click here to log in to read this story and access all content.

Not an Online Subscriber? Click here for a one-week subscription for only $1!.