Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

Common Misconceptions about the State Park Access Pass program

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

While I wait for the California State Park Foundation to publish an updated FAQ, I would like to tackle some misconceptions about the proposed State Park Access Pass.

First we visit the Mono Lake Committee staff blog who tell us, “If the new funding source does not survive that process, then 80% of the parks close.” This is false, both the elimination of the state park system from the general fund and the SPAP must be voted on. Tell your legislator to continue funding the state parks from the general fund, not through yet another vehicle fee. How many legislators will vote to defund the parks without a replacement funding source?

Many people on Facebook think the issue here is whether all Californians should support the state park system. In support of the SPAP Debra Brittain says, “The parks are there for future generations, not only for those who choose to use the parks now. It is not unfair to ask everyone in the State to maintain the parks.” Currently the general fund as well as usage fees support the state park system so currently everyone in California does support the park system. That is not the issue.

There are two real differences between supporting the state park system through the general fund and via a vehicle licensing fee. First the vehicle license fee is a new tax that would increase the total state budget. Second the vehicle license fee is a regressive tax, putting a disproportionate tax burden on the poor.

Update:

Modern Hiker incorrectly offers, “And, of course, because it takes a tremendous stride toward democratizing the state park system.” This is the stereotypical view of the current park user. Fearful of losing access to the park and grabbing on to any funding mechanism to support them they fail to look at the proposal critically. Removal of usage fees, and conversion of funding from the general fund to a vehicle licensing fee is not democratization. A regressive tax is, if anything, anti-democratic. The California State Park Foundation has done a wonderful job of selling their agenda of funding before accountability to the park loving masses.
Update:

Pete Thomas of the LA Times Blog Outpost parrots the California State Parks Foundation’s press release with his Good News, Bad News post.  To avoid the term tax hike, he uses terms like surcharge to note that the increased VLF is simply replacing funding from the general fund. He thinks opposition will be from non-park users but who, after reviewing this proposal, would support a $143 million dollar tax increase with no accountability and no long term solution to the problems of how the state parks are managed?

Why I oppose the State Park Access Pass

Monday, June 15th, 2009

The State Park Access Pass program creates a new tax. As a State we can not spend our way out of the current financial crisis. If every program threatened with cost reduction seeks a dedicated source of funding we will double the State budget not halve it.

The State Park Access Pass funding source is not logical. It is not any more reasonable to think that the State Parks should benefit from vehicle license fees than emergency services who respond to vehicle accidents or education that relies on vehicles to transport students and staff to schools. Also consider the case of the two car family who has paid $30 in vehicle license fees to access the State Parks and who will have an additional fee to pay when they rent an RV to visit the State Parks.

The State Park Access Pass program removes entry fees as a way of moderating park traffic. Certain high traffic parks have entry fees that can be used to discourage casual visitors and encourage repeat visitors to visit less crowded parks. Removing this tool from the State Park system will cause additional crowding at the most popular parks.

The State Park Access Pass program is a regressive tax. It shifts the burden for the State Parks away from the wealthy, who typically bear the largest burden of the State Budget. It places an additional burden on the poor.

In conclusion, no matter how strongly we support individual State programs, the time has come for us to stop letting special interests of any kind drive the State budget. We need a well thought out budget that allocates a reasonable amount of revenue between the necessary programs and accept the cuts that will inevitably follow.

I feel stupid for staying at Holiday Inn Express

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

As an IT professional I look for hotels with Internet access when I travel. Sure, clean sheets are nice and the free breakfast is delicious, but what I really need is a solid, high speed connection. One DSL line for 200 rooms doesn’t count.

This week when I was on personal business in Santa Rosa, California I chose to stay at the Holiday Inn Express. Sure it would cost more, but it wasn’t the award winning shower head or the heated pool that interested me. It was the high quality Internet access, both wired and wireless, supported by 24 hour, professional technical support. And that is what I got,  at least until I really needed it.

Tuesday morning I woke up unable to get an IP address. Since I had had two laptops previously connected I suspected that their router was the cause. This has happened to me before and typically a call to tech support gets the router rebooted and everything it great. Occasionally they have to call the front desk and get them to unplug the vacuum cleaner and plug it back in or some other trivial solution. Today was different.

After a 20 minute call with the technical support agent, during which for some odd reason I was asked to supply my MAC addresses, I was told I would recieve a call back when the problem was corrected. I bet you already guessed that call never came. So after an 40 minutes of suffering through my GPRS connection I called the front desk who escalated the issue. I received a call back from the technical support company almost immediately. After about 15 minutes of recreating all of the work of the first call I was once again placed on hold and several minutes later informed that they would need to send someone out to the hotel to fix the problem.

We have gotten past the time where Internet access is a luxury. It is a necessity for many people who travel, it is as important to me as water or lights and more important that phone or TV service. I would not complain if I thought that Holiday Inn was doing everything they could and the situation was out of their hands. So what should they be doing?

First, stop relying on guests to tell you when your Internet connection is not working. Any corporation of any size running a complicated network monitors the network for outages and responds before the outage impacts the business mission. This function can be outsourced. If the companies supplying your Internet access and technical support can’t do it, and can’t provide instant support when the problem occurs (not business hours) find someone else.

Second, measure and publish your Internet reliability. If you want me to pay extra, prove to me that you have the 9’s to justify it.

Third, have a policy that offers a cash refund if the Internet goes down, and an backup Internet agreement in place so that guest can go to some other local establishment (FedEx Kinkos, Starbucks, etc.) and access the Internet for free. I honestly don’t care about the refund, but if it doesn’t cost you anything to have an outage then you won’t work to prevent them from happening.