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WOLFEBORO â State Parks and Recreation Director Phil Bryce alerted members of the Mount Washington Commission at their virtual meeting on Friday, Jan. 29, to a major change in the operation of the âstate sideâ of the now permanently financed Land and Water Conservation Fund.
The state no longer determines how this money will be spent; instead, the decisions are made in Washington.
Under this new procedure, land acquisition will be LWCFâs primary goal rather infrastructure projects such as upgrades and replacements, Bryce said.
That said, money to help fund the sewage treatment plant â still in the design phase â in the Mt. Washington State Park likely won t qualify for LWCF dollars, he warned.
MOUNT WASHINGTON â Itâs likely an admission fee will be charged by next summer to visitors entering the Sherman Adams Building located at the summit of Mount Washington.
That was the consensus reached at the virtual meeting held last Friday by the Mt. Washington Advisory Commission, made up of a dozen Mount Washington State Park stakeholders and chaired by state Sen. Jeb Bradley (R-Wolfeboro).
No one disagreed with the conclusion that revenues generated by selling hot dogs and gift shop items cannot cover the cost of running the park.
The commission had last met Aug. 28 in Franconia Notch. Capital projects discussed included a new sewage treatment plant and disposal system.
CONCORD â Itâs very likely that an admission fee will be charged â possibly by next summer â to visitors entering the Sherman Adams Building in Mount Washington State Park.
At least that was the consensus reached by the Mt. Washington Advisory Commission, made up of a dozen state park stakeholders thatâs chaired by state Sen. Jeb Bradley of Wolfeboro, at its virtual meeting on Friday, Dec. 11. No one disagreed with the conclusion that the revenues generated by selling hot dogs and gift shop items cannot cover the cost of running the Park.
Capital projects previously discussed at the commissionâs Aug. 28 meeting in Franconia Notch were updated.