Sides From 2014-2015 Season Presentation at Annual NYSSA
Transcription
Sides From 2014-2015 Season Presentation at Annual NYSSA
Slides from the NYS OPRHP Snowmobile Unit 2014-2015 Snowmobile Season Presentation Christopher Fallon, Director James MacFarland, Senior Natural Resources Planner Bennett Campbell, Administrative Program Aide OPRHP / DMV / Comptroller 54 Local Government Sponsors Over 200 Trail Maintenance Entities (Snowmobile Clubs) - $100 full registration: - - $5 to DMV $5 to General Fund $90 to Trail Fund $45 club member registration - $5 to DMV $5 to General Fund $35 to Trail Fund Trail maintenance & grooming (grant program) Safety education program Law enforcement (SLE grant program) Capital projects (OPRHP & DEC) Trail insurance Program administration • • • • • • • • • • Trail grant administration - ~$5,000,000 grant, 10,000 + trail miles Law enforcement grant administration Law enforcement training Safety education program Office of record for accident reports Special event permits Advise OPRHP commissioner/agency on snowmobile related issues Coordination with other states, federal agencies, associations, manufacturers, & user groups Promotion of snowmobiling & the state funded trail system Public outreach (NYS Fair, snowmobile shows, etc.) The snowmobile unit is limited by law to a maximum of three staff ! Registrations Trail Miles 10440 10317 9860 90,433 10517 10497 10417 10360 10290 11213 10667 121,539 115,982 116,725 134,442 131,664 136,471 128,283 130,502 149,610 155,000 163,635 172,164 151,287 146,662 126,041 117,823 108,463 101,933 94,607 10161 9539 8968 8753 8703 8142 7412 7412 6285 7300 Program Overview: Registrations & Trail Miles Program Overview 2014-2015 Registrations by County (High to Low) Erie Oneida Onondaga Monroe Oswego Saratoga Herkimer St Lawrence Chautauqua Wayne Madison Fulton Jefferson Albany Niagara Lewis Suffolk Warren Washington Cayuga Wyoming Orange Rensselaer Cattaraugus Ulster Delaware Genesee Montgomery Clinton Broome Dutchess Ontario Otsego Schenectady Franklin Chenango Essex Cortland Steuben Sullivan Livingston Schoharie Hamilton Allegany Orleans Nassau Tompkins Columbia Westchester Greene Tioga Seneca Putnam Rockland Schuyler Chemung Yates Richmond Queens Kings New York Bronx 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 Program Overview Year Over Year Registration Statistics Total Registrations 2013-14 2014-15 Change % Change 115,982 121,539 5,557 4.57% Total Receipts $4,802,695 $5,175,115 $372,420 7.20% Total Club Regs Total Non-club Registrations 102,467 104,789 2,322 2.22% 13,515 16,750 3,235 19.31% Total Renewals 89,403 88,889 -514 -0.58% Total Originals 26,579 32,650 6,071 18.59% Total In-State 99,342 104,166 4,824 4.63% Total Out of State 16,640 17,373 733 4.22% Program Overview Year Over Year Registration Revenue 2009-2010 Registrations 2010-2011 Registrations 2011-2012 Registrations 2012-2013 Registrations 2013-2014 Registrations 2014-2015 Registrations $5,515,850 $5,552,582 $3,661,485 $4,839,535 $4,802,695 $5,175,115 Snowmobile Projected Annual Budget FY 14/15 Cash Projection: 102,467 registrations x $35 = $ 3,586,348 13,946 registrations x $90 = $ 1,255,140 Total Revenue Projection: $ 4,841,488 Projected Based FY13/14 Actual Registrations: 116,413 (plus 431) Projected Expenditure Plan: PS (attach backup with people charging to the fund) NPS (attach backup listing NPS needs) Fringe & Indirect (50% of PS number) DEC & Regional Allocations (project list needed for release of funds in the Fall) Local Law Enforcement (by law max of $150,000) Insurance (projection derived from working with Insurance Agent-yearly cost) Local Grants - 30% prorated depending on multiple variables Local Grants - 70% (the balance of the cash projection after all of the above) If the cash projection is high - 30% can be adjusted Amount $ 159,000 $ 46,752 $ 90,407 $ $ 145,248 $ 316,596 $ 1,225,046 $ 2,858,439 $ 4,841,488 State Operations Approp: PS $ 159,000 NPS $ 45,000 Fringe & Ind. $ 97,000 DEC & Regions $ 332,000 Local Law Enforcemt $ 150,000 Insurance $ 316,596 Local Grants $ 4,083,485 Corridor A = 5,937 miles x $315 = $1,870,155 Corridor B = 721 miles x $245 = $176,645 Secondary A = 3,237 miles x $315 = $1,019,655 Secondary B = 545 miles x $245 = $133,525 High Snow = 2,827 miles x $315 = $890,505 $4,090,485 70% Grant Payment $2,861,355 30% Grant (expected) $1,229,130 Insurance (incl. NYSSA admin fee) $316,596 Stateside Capital Projects $0 Administration $296,159 Law Enforcement $145,248 The legislature hereby finds that it is in the public interest to register snowmobiles as recreational vehicles for the purposes of enforcement of reasonable provisions concerning their use and control; to encourage the sport of snowmobiling as a family activity; to promote the proper and safe use and operation of snowmobiles; to provide an adequate safety educational program for youthful operators; to limit the operation of snowmobiles upon public highways and private property without the consent of the owner; to protect and preserve the state's natural resources, including its wildlife, wild forests, waters and scenic and wilderness character; to reduce the effect on the environment of excess noise; to insure privacy of remote areas; to afford opportunity for compatible enjoyment of various recreational activities on the state's lands and open spaces. to promote the safe and proper use of snowmobiles for recreation and commerce in this state by encouraging their use and development and minimizing detrimental effects of such use upon the environment. Education Youth age 10-13 must pass safety course & may operate within 500’ of supervising adult Youth age 14-17 may operate within 500’ of supervising adult -or- after passing safety course may operate with no age restriction 8 hour classroom-based course Over 400 certified volunteer instructors For More Information on Snowmobile Safety Course Availability Please Visit : www.nysparks.com Education Students Completing OPRHP Snowmobile Safety Course 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 Reported Accidents 667 507 448 310 317 235 323 285 300 294 207 189 196 104 31 19 13 19 26 14 14 10 14 19 14 12 10 20122013 20132014 20142015 3 20012002 20022003 20032004 20042005 20052006 20062007 20072008 20082009 20092010 20102011 Year Fatalities Number of Reported Accidents 20112012 Number of Snowmobile Accidents Per 1000 Registrations Average 4.50 0.50 0.00 1.61 1.78 1.65 2.23 2.37 2.46 2.05 1.12 1.00 2.25 1.50 1.57 2.00 3.10 2.50 2.09 3.00 3.13 3.50 2.89 3.86 4.00 Law Enforcement NYS SLEDS‐ NYS Snowmobile Law Enforcement Development School ‐Basic Course ‐20 Students from 13 Agencies ‐Instruction includes basic and evasive operation, equipment maintenance, accident reports & scene investigation, Local Law Enforcement Grant Assistance $150,000 patrols, checkpoints, snowmobile laws, etc. ($12,500 maximum per County) 50-50 grant – 50% of documented, allowed expenses reimbursed up to $12,500 13 Participating Counties and 2 City/Town/Village Departments Documented $ 246,173 in expenses Examples of allowed expenses: snowmobiles and snowmobile equipment, clothing, operation and maintenance, training costs, patrol payroll, etc. Program Overview Special Event Permits Applications must be submitted 15 days before event Exempt from registration, speed lights & mufflers but NOT underage operation NYSSA insurance does not cover competitive events Special Event Permits Issued 2005-2015 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 136 113 99 74 74 62 37 47 42 81 Groomer Operator Training Trail Groomer Training DVD sent to every Club in 2009. Textbooks available on OPRHP website. Hardcopy textbooks and PowerPoint presentation available for any class of 30+ students. OPRHP Completion Certificates can only be issued for OPRHP led (or approved) instruction. We will try to honor any requests for OPRHP led instruction of 30+ students. We are working closely with the IASA to continually update and improve this training. Review of Snowmobile Trail Grant Phase I: Prior approval process for developing and maintaining trails within the State Trail system. Phase II: The formal grant application from Local Sponsors to OPRHP. Phase III: Post Project submission and documentation submission. Post season audits by the Counties and OPRHP. Overview of Snowmobile Trail Grant New Trails Previously Funded Trails to be Reclassified, Rerouted, or Removed Corrections Using GPS Data Reopening Closed Trails Transferring Trail Maintenance Responsibility to Another Club Overview of Snowmobile Trail Grant The current requirement states that projected GPS derived GIS data no older than 2008 is required for ALL TRAILS to continue receiving funding. This means any trail data that was collected before January 1, 2008 and any data not collected via GPS must be resubmitted. Each trail’s GPS collection date is listed as an attribute in the trails GIS database and included in a mileage table provided to the local sponsor with the prior approval application determination. Local Sponsors can also request their GIS database information by using the attached request form. A copy of the statewide GIS database is provided to the NYSSA Trail Coordinator annually. Our website also has a KMZ file of the funded snowmobile trails that can be viewed in Google Earth, available to download free of charge. As of June 1, 2016 (expected 2016-2017 Phase I due date), all trails must have GPS derived GIS data no older than January 1, 2011. This will be the next required update. The current 2015-2016 project year has no new requirement. Note that all trail proposals must be accompanied by current GPS derived GIS data. As of June 1, 2020 (expected 2020-2021 Phase I due date), all trails must have GPS derived GIS data no older than January 1, 2017. Thereafter, each and every trail must have GPS derived GIS data no more than three years old. It is recommended that clubs stagger their GPS data collection efforts beginning in 2017 so they are not collecting data for all of their trails in the same year going forward. Data no more than three years old will be the minimum requirement; clubs are encouraged to collect data more often if they are able and local sponsors may set more stringent requirements. Trail Classifications Established as part of the State of New York Snowmobile Trail Plan adopted in October 1989. Classification includes Corridor Trails are the major connecting routes between communities and between major points of interest Secondary Trails connect snowmobilers to local services and points of interest from Corridor Trails. Trails are further classified as: Class A, (> 12ft wide) and Class B (<12ft and > 8ft ). Trails within the Adirondack Park are evaluated separately. OPRHP designates and assigns all trail classifications as part of the approval process. Snowmobile Unit Phone: (518) 474-0446 Fax: (518) 486-7378 www.nysparks.com [email protected] Chris Fallon: Director of Snowmobiling Jim MacFarland: Senior Natural Resource Planner Bennett Campbell: Administrative Program Aide