Title: Visitor management frameworks in North America
1Visitor management frameworks in North America
- COST Action E33
- Forests for Recreation and Nature Tourism
(FORREC) - 2nd Management Committee meeting WGs meeting
Workshop in Edinburgh, Scotland 31 Oct. 2
Nov., 2004 - Wolfgang Haider
- School of Resource and Environmental Management
- Simon Fraser University
- Vancouver, Canada
2Goals of presentation
- To briefly present the major North American
visitor management frameworks for forest
recreation and protected areas - To briefly evaluate them
- To initiate a discussion of their relevance and
applicability in Europe
3The Origin Carrying Capacity
The maximum level of use an area can sustain as
determined by natural factors
With tourism / recreation, there is an ecological
capacity, and a social capacity (the impact on
visitor experiences) (Wagar, 1964)
4Carrying Capacity - Limitations
- Impacts on biological and physical resources do
not help establish carrying capacity - Different recreation/tourism experiences have
different carrying capacity - There is no strong cause-and-effect relationship
between amount of use and impacts - Carrying capacity is a product of value
judgements - There is NO magic number
- INSTEAD, IT BECAME OBVIOUS THAT
- With visitor use, change is inevitable
- The question revolves around acceptable change
- Management approaches depend on objectives
5Visitor Management Frameworks
1979 ROS (Recreation Opportunity Spectrum)
1985 - LAC (Limits of Acceptable Change)
1985 VAMP (Visitor Activity Management Process)
1990 VIM (Visitor Impact Management)
1993 VERP (Visitor Experience Resource
Protection)
1996 TOMM (Tourism Optimisation Management
Model)
6The ROS main features
- Acknowledges the diversity of recreation
opportunities - The 3 key components of recreation mgt. are
- Setting (opportunity)
- Activity
- Experience
- 6 land classes
- A tool for landscape / regional recreation
planning ( zoning) - Occasionally used as a research framework
7ROS - classes
Each class is defined with respect to a
combination of setting characteristics
Classes (6) Mgt. factors (examples) Primitive Semi-prim. Non-mot. Semi-prim. Mot. Semi-dev. natural Developed natural Highly developed
8ROS - map
9The ROS discussion
- Suitability for EU
- Additional challenge of large scale homogenous
landscapes - Classes are too coarse
- Most of EU lacks the remote end of the spectrum
- The generic concept itself might be useful
- e.g. TOS (Tourism Opportunity Spectrum)
- if access criterion is differentiated much more
subtly -
- Similar problem has been recognized in the US
- ROS now for private land in NE-US
- The class HIGHLY DEVELOPED has been split into
- Large natural (gt 15 acres)
- Small natural (lt 15 acres)
- Facilities (e.g. baseball field)
10The LAC framework
1 identify areas of concern and issues 2
define and describe management objectives 3
select indicators of resource and social
conditions 4 inventory resource and social
conditions 5 specify standards for resource
and social conditions 6 specify alternatives
7 identify management actions for each
alternative 8 evaluate and select an
alternative 9 implement actions and monitor
conditions
11Indicators (Measures of resource or social
conditions)
- Should be measured cost-effectively and
accurately - Should reflect some relationship to the
amount/type of use occurring - Should be related to user concerns (social
indicators) - Must be responsive to management control
- Examples
- Water quality
- Soil compaction
- Vegetation cover
- Number of encounters
12Standards (A level beyond which change is
unacceptable)
- Standards may vary between opportunity classes
(ROS) or other zoning / regions - May reflect existing conditions or future targets
- Monitoring and evaluation provide means for
revision and improvement
Indicator Standard
Number of encounters with other parties People at one time at selected sites Exposed tree roots No more than 1 6 encounter with another party per day No more than 20 people on a 50m section of trail No more than 4 trees per target campsite
13LAC discussion
- Suitability for Europe
- Positive arguments
- Adequate attention towards management of
biophysical and social conditions - Included monitoring of resource conditions and
effectiveness of management actions - Allows zoning as means of protecting pristine
qualities - Good trackability and explicitness of protected
areas decision making - Encourages innovative approaches to citizen
participation - Critical arguments
- There are cost associated with adapting such a
general fw - Lack of attention to experiential knowledge
- Compartmentalization of functions
- Pragmatism vs. rigid framework (much planning in
EU seems to follow the LAC logic intuitively) - Ability to react timely to newly arising problems
14VIM
- Very similar to LAC - built specifically for the
US Parks Service - More prescriptive, management oriented
- lack of participation
- No successful implementations
- the original publication (1990) contains
- a good catalogue of impacts
- a good catalogue of inventorying and monitoring
tools - Suitability for Europe
- Suitable if public participation is not an issue
- Catalogues as background
15VERP
- Very similar to LAC - built specifically for the
US Parks Service - Attempt to make the framework useful and
efficient for an organization with single purpose
and mandate - Includes crucial components of public
participation (remain for the most part more
formal) - Scoping comments
- Comments on EA and EIS (Environmental Impact
Statements) - General comments
- Stay involved (web-site, superintendent)
- Standards set for zones within the park, or for
special sites - 5 applications
- Suitability for Europe
- Suitable for single purpose agencies (i.e.
protected areas)
16TOMM main features
- Very similar to LAC, with focus on overcoming
lack of stakeholder support for LAC and VIM in
Australia - The term impact and limits are perceived as
discouraging growth by tourism businesses - Narrow focus on condition of physical environment
and visitor experience - Adapt to tourism needs
17TOMM indicators, evaluation and monitoring
Market Opportu-nities
Experiential conditions
18TOMM indicators, evaluation and monitoring
Social condi-tions for resi-dents
19TOMM indicators, evaluation and monitoring
20VAMP
- Core visitor activity profiles
- Market research focus (connect a particular
activity with the social and demographic
characteristics of participants with the
activitys setting requirements and with trends
affecting the activity)
- E.g. cross-country skiing
- - Recreation day-use skiing
- - Fitness skiing
- - Competitive skiing
- Backcountry skiing
- ? Each specialization requires different levels
of service and has different standards
21(No Transcript)
22VAMP
- To develop a national position regarding an
activity - Influence on criteria selected for Appropriate
Activity Assessment (AAA) - Attempt to tie the framework to already
established processes of Parks Canada during the
dual mandate eara - No successful implementation (despite occasional
other claims)
23Comparing the frameworks
after Newsome et al, 2002
Evaluative criteria ROS LAC VIM VERP TOMM VAMP
Suitable for regional planning (multiple areas)
Provides info on impacts of visitor use needed for mgt
Makes explicit provision for inclusion of stakeholders
Responsibility / discretion for action left to managers
Readily integrated with other forms of planning (e.g. mgt. or tourism plans)
Results in a publishable, stand-alone document
24Summary
- Over past 2 decades, agencies in North America
have experimented with several different
recreation mgt processes - The LAC concept has proven to be a the most
successful concept / formula - Very generic ? flexible
- Participatory (by coincidence rather than design)
- VERP - adaptation to specific agency
requirements - TOMM - adaptation to different use / culture /
administrative setting - Mostly on site-specific and local scales, except
when linked with another framework, e.g. ROS) - ROS a framework for large scale
25Other North American trends in recreation and
landuse management
- Ecosystem (based) management serves as new mgt.
paradigm for most land and/or recreation mgt.
agencies - Established mgt frameworks are frequently
subordinated to it - Introduces the concept of adaptive mgt.
(purposeful research) - Human use management (Parks Canada)
- Ecological Integrity Panel (1999)
- National Parks Act (2000)
- A new process to deal with ALL human uses in a
National Park (i.e. Banff NP) - DOES NOT USE ANY OF THE ESTABLISHED FRAMEWORKS
- Appears to be problem-oriented
- Land and Resource Management Planning (BC)
- example for participatory planning on a large
regional scale (24 mgt units across the province)
26Suggestions
- When thinking about adopting and adapting any of
the visitor mgt frameworks, one should consider
the following - Planning is a process, not necessarily a product
- Challenge keep it as process avoid that it
slips into rigid format of application (cookbook) - Planning is a political process in a politicized
setting - Grounding the process in legislation is critical
- Understanding the institutional context for LAC
processes is fundamental to planning and
implementation - Requires adaptation to European / national /
regional situations - Defending decisions requires a trackable/traceable
process - Learning is an important objective in the LAC
process but not yet well developed - Rethink the frameworks from the current knowledge
base (mgt sciences, social sciences) - see next slide
27Opportunities Challenges
- Be cognizant of the culture (paradigm) driving
these frameworks - Training of future managers and researchers
- Create an international publication platform for
exchange and dissemination of ideas - Rethink these positions periodically
- Adopt the concept of adaptive management
- Particular challenges for research, e.g.
- If the desire is to make trade-offs and values
explicit - Use state-of-the-art research methods (decision
analysis, multivariate trade-off methods) - Data capturing and analysis
- Operate both deductively and inductively
28Thank You !