New York State Off-Highway Recreational Vehicle Assn., Inc.
NYSORVA
PO Box 90 www.nysorva.org
Camden, NY 13316 www.nyatvsafety.net
Please take a few minutes to help get an ATV Trail System established in NY!
NYSORVA, New Yorks statewide advocacy group focused on issues that affect the off-highway motorcycle and ATV user community since 1993, continues to work tirelessly on behalf of the 1.9 million (or 13.1%) of New York citizens 16 and over who pursue wheeled-OHV recreation in New York State.
Building on the support of the Governors proposal to establish an ATV Trail Program as contained in the Executive Budget, NYSORVA has met with key policy makers in state government to secure the establishment of a true ATV Trail Program in New York State.
As you remember, last years budget included an ATV registration fee increase from $10 to $25 [learn more here], with a dedication of the increase to a Fund set apart for an ATV Program. But the end of the regular session came and went, and the ATV community saw yet another year without necessary legislative action to enact a true ATV Program.
The Executive Budget proposal put forth by Governor Pataki this year offers NYSORVA and ATV enthusiasts statewide new hope. The proposal directs the DEC to develop and implement a program of state assistance payments for municipalities and not-for-profit all terrain vehicle associations for all terrain vehicle safety, education, and training; and the development and maintenance of all terrain vehicle roads and trails which are open to the general public.
But now we need your help! For us to be successful, every OHV club and every OHV user must take a few minutes to call and write to their Senator and Assemblymember supporting this program. Even then it wont be easy. Environmental groups opposed to ATV access are well funded, well organized, and seasoned in fighting progress of pro-OHV issues. But this year gives us the best shot weve ever had of getting a true ATV trail system in New York State. So, take a moment right now and write or call your Legislator and ask them to include an ATV Program in the State Budget.
Senate: 518-455-2800 Assembly: 518-455-4100
Hello, my name is __________ and I live in the Town of ___________. Im an ATV enthusiast and a member of {local club name}. Im calling to ask you to work to include an ATV Trails Program in the State Budget. My ATV registration fee was raised 150% last year to fund this program. Please make sure that this year my hard earned money can be spent on ATV trails and not swept away into the General Fund. Thank you.
For help determining who your Legislative Representatives are, including their direct phone numbers and mailing addresses, see the web site
http://www.vote-smart.org/index.htm and search by your ZIP code.
The successful creation of a true Trail Fund, and the funding of a DEC ATV Program, will finally recognize the 1.9 million New Yorkers that comprise the wheeled-OHV community as a legitimate recreational group. Moreover, a true ATV Program will facilitate safe, legal and environmentally conscious recreation, reduce trespass, and increase rider safety.
NYSORVA is committed to continuing its work on behalf of the OHV user community towards achieving these goals and are now looking to you, the rider community, to help us to enact this program.
THANK YOU!
Team NYSORVA
______________________________________________________________________________________
The New York State Off-Highway Recreational Vehicle Association (NYSORVA) is New Yorks statewide advocacy group focused on issues that affect the off-highway motorcycle and ATV user community, such as land-use issues and legislation. NYSORVA is recognized for its relevance by national organizations such as the American Motorcyclists Assn. (AMA), National Off-Highway Vehicle Conservation Council (NOHVCC), The Blue Ribbon Coalition (BRC), and the Motorcycle Industry Council (MIC). NYSORVA is the organization designated by a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Dept. of Environmental Conservation (DEC) as the state's conduit for communication with the wheeled off-highway vehicle (OHV) user community. This community of recreationists is estimated by the US Forest Service to include 1.9 million enthusiasts in the state of New York alone, the third largest of such groups in the entire nation.
NYSORVA's mission is to work with all interested parties for increased safe and environmentally conscious OHV recreational opportunities on both public and private lands in NY State. NYSORVA is a nonprofit corporation that endorses safe and environmentally conscious riding on legally registered and insured machines, and has adopted tread lightly practices.
NYSORVAs primary mission is to facilitate the development and maintenance of legal and sustainable riding trails and areas in New York state for the sizeable constituency that engages in this activity. NYSORVA believes the lack of legal riding areas in the state of New York directly contributes to the problem of unmanaged riding on the private property and farmland of landowners in rural communities. We continue to hope that the passage of a true Trail Program will change this situation and enable an environmentally sensitive trails network to be developed by utilizing riders registration fees already being collected.
More information at: http://www.nysorva.org/
4/13/05: State Budget now Law, Includes ATV Trail Fund, but no ATV Program-- More to Do
3/17/05: DEC Draft ATV Policy for Public Lands Released
NEWS
Point-of-Sale Registration Now Required in New YorkNYS DMV has now released the details on the POS ATV Registration program.
Dealers may now order temporary registration certificates from DMV. Established, registered dealers may apply to stock
ATV plates. Registration Exemption forms are 3-part and only available on paper from DMV, contact your local DMV office.
From the original notice dated April 5, 2005: - DMV dealer program in development, otherwise requires Dealers to visit DMV offices
-Applies to all ATVs including off-highway motorcycles, MX exemption overlooked in the law (DMV said to be incorporating the exceptions administratively) - POSR requirement effective April 1, 2005 With the passage of legislation to re-establish an ATV Trail Fund, the State Budget included a surprise for Dealers of ATVs and trail bikesa new requirement to register any such vehicle before the machine leaves the dealership. POS registration of "ATVs" is the Law of NYS effective April 1, 2005. (An ATV registration fee increase, from $10 to $25 to fund the Trail Fund, will be subsequently effective June 29th.) Immediate effectiveness of POSR, no implementation language in the Law, and no policy precedent, gives the NYSDMV no guidance on how to establish a program
that requires a special form for exemptions, nor is a stocking plate program addressed. DMV has requested NYSORVAs help in spreading the word to dealers and industry contacts. They will produce a mailing to Registered Motorcycle Repair Shops and a general press release to news agencies, while they develop the working details of the POSR program. In the absence of a stocking plate program, the only option for response of the dealers islike many dealers already doto go to the local DMV and process the registration transaction on behalf of the customer. The glaring error in the POSR law, which has been reported to the Legislature
and DMV policy officials is the matter of Registration Exemptions: the law ignores agriculture/plowing and competition exemptions
resident in the existing V&T law as valid grounds for allowing a machine out the door without an ATV plate. This problem will confront your MX and hair scramble customers (quad and bike) and farmers too. (Recall that in NY, MX and other types off-road motorcycles are ATVs by legal definition unless such bike has a highway plate, then it is a "motorcycle" under NYS V&T.) We have no information
on whether there is a punitive response for dealers failing to comply with this new POSR requirement. Enactment details on the
POSR law, and the trail fund law can be read under Part D of Budget Bill
S.3669/A.6843.
This notice was provided as a service to the OHV Community by Team NYSORVA.
ATV/OHM NY LEGISLATIVE UPDATE 1/19/2006
Governor Pataki has introduced his 2006-2007 State Budget proposal to again include provisions to create an ATV Trail Program. See the Legislation Page for NYSORVA's Legislative Position Statement, details on the ATV Trail Program proposal, plus background on the failure to deliver a Program in 2005 as promised in the State Budget Law -- despite the registration fee increase to $25 imposed in that Budget.
None of the estimated $2.5M registration revenue in 2005-2006 was ever returned to trails ($12M and counting since 1986).
Now is the time to tell your State Senator and Assembly Member to GET ON BOARD (find out how here) and support the creation of an ATV Trail Program and Trail System.
Along with the increase of our registration fees approved in 2005, from $10 to $25, we were promised in Law the delivery of an ATV Program in 2005 but it never materialized. Now is our Legislatures opportunity to approve the Program proposed by the Governor and give us what we have been asking for since 1985 our own money to support our own properly-managed ATV trail system.
Highlights of the Governors ATV Program proposal include:
· Places ATV Program Jurisdiction with the Department of Environmental Conservation
· Places the 92-o registration-based ATV Trail Fund, created in 2005, under joint custody of DEC and the Comptroller
· Funds the Program with a minimum of $850,000 for startup
· In addition to focusing funding on private land trail access, funding of access to Recreational Easements under DEC jurisdiction is also promoted
· ATV access to wildlife management areas to be prohibited
· Guidelines for determining fitness for ATV access to public property under DEC jurisdiction to be codified in EnCon Law
Details at http://publications.budget.state.ny.us/fy0607artVIIbills/TEDConsBMwtoc.htm#partGsum
Full Transportation/Encon bill at http://publications.budget.state.ny.us/fy0607artVIIbills/TED.HTM
Entire State Budget Web site: http://publications.budget.state.ny.us/executive.html
New York remains the third-largest in sales and in riders-by-state in the US for ATVs and off-highway motorcycles. Its high time we get to develop a trail system that lifts NY from its status of dead-last for provision of riding opportunities to a recreational community that the USFS estimates includes 1.9 million souls. Like NYs lauded snowmobile tourism industry, the economic benefits of promotion of ATV tourism should go without saying.
This Legislative Update was provided to us as a service of
TEAM NYSORVA
Thank You Team
Point-of-Sales Registration Now Required in New York
11/21/05: NYS DMV has now released the details on the POS ATV Registration program. Dealers may now order temporary registration certificates from DMV. Established, registered dealers may apply to stock ATV plates.
Links to program forms:
PD-3 Request for MV53 Temporary Registration forms
MV-463 Application to stock ATV plates (registered dealers only)
MV-464L Order form to obtain plates (must be accepted in stocking dealer plate program)
Registration Exemption forms are 3-part and only available on paper from DMV, contact your local DMV office.
From the original notice dated April 5, 2005:
- DMV dealer program in development, otherwise requires Dealers to visit DMV offices
- Applies to all ATVs including off-highway motorcycles, MX exemption overlooked in the law (DMV said to be incorporating the exceptions administratively)
- POSR requirement effective April 1, 2005
- - - FOR IMMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION TO ALL ATV/OHM DEALERS IN NY - - -
ALBANY, NY With the passage of legislation to re-establish an ATV Trail Fund, the State Budget included a surprise for Dealers of ATVs and trailbikes a new requirement to register any such vehicle before the machine leaves the dealership.
POS registration of "ATVs" is the Law of NYS effective April 1, 2005. (An ATV registration fee increase, from $10 to $25 to fund the Trail Fund, will be subsequently effective June 29th. [Click here for more information on Trail Fund.]) Immediate effectiveness of POSR, no implementation language in the Law, and no policy precedent, gives the NYSDMV no guidance on how to establish a program that requires a special form for exemptions, nor is a stocking plate program addressed.
DMV has requested NYSORVAs help in spreading the word to dealers and industry contacts. They will produce a mailing to Registered Motorcycle Repair Shops and a general press release to news agencies, while they develop the working details of the POSR program.
In the absence of a stocking plate program, the only option for response of the dealers is like many dealers already do to go to the local DMV and process the registration transaction on behalf of the customer.
The glaring error in the POSR law, which has been reported to the Legislature and DMV policy officials is the matter of Registration Exemptions: The law ignores agriculture/plowing and competition exemptions resident in the existing V&T law as valid grounds for allowing a machine out the door without an ATV plate. This problem will confront your MX and hair scramble customers (quad and bike) and farmers too. (Recall that in NY, MX and other types off-road motorcycles are ATVs by legal definition - unless such bike has a highway plate, then it is a "motorcycle" under NYS V&T.) We have no information on whether there is a punitive response for dealers failing to comply with this new POSR requirement.
Enactment details on the POSR law, and the trail fund law can be read under Part D of Budget Bill S.3669/A.6843.
July 11, 2005:
ATV Registration Fee Increase Now In Effect, State Keeping the Money
With the end of the regular Session in the NYS Legislature on 6/23/05, there are no signs that an "ATV Program", nor spending authority of the enacted "Trail Fund" will be passed into law, barring a miracle. The promise made to us in the State Budget for Program/Funding legislation has therefore been broken. We encourage you to discuss this severely disappointing outcome with every politician you can find. This marks the thirteenth year straight that ATV Program/Funding legislation has been thwarted by anti-recreation interests.
An overriding factor in this year's legislative failure, at a time that has seen no greater momentum and potential for success of our issues, has to do with the control of ATV legislation being hijacked from the Assembly Tourism Committee by the more powerful Environment Conservation Committee. Though we have welcomed a re-establishment of dialog, the Assembly EnCon Committee shows no signs of interest in working with the ATV community, only in controlling - apparently by stalling - related legislation initiatives. This is not only a setback for those interested in the social and economic benefits of ATV tourism, but ironically serves to negate the interests of environmental advocates who agree with us that properly-located and managed trails will benefit the environment. Without legislation to enable comprehensive ATV management, enforcement, and funding programs, both "sides" are suffering.
The Legislature estimated that it would gain $2.5M in revenue in Fiscal 2005-2006 by raising the ATV fee from $10/yr to $25/yr, when factoring in the institution of mandatory Point-of-Sale registration at the dealers (see article for explanation). The ATV community was supposed to accept this as a "compromise" since a proposed increase to $45/yr was thwarted. But the payoff to us was to be an ATV Trail Fund and Program. Alas, instead we have another $2.5M to add to the almost $10M taken from ATV riders to date with no return in the form of trails (see article). And this is Registration Fees alone, never mind sales taxes, etc. In other words, the scam continues.
April 13, 2005:
An ATV Trail Fund has been enacted in the State Budget!
- DOES NOT CONTAIN NECESSARY PROVISIONS TO USE THE FUND
- $850,000 MADE AVAILABLE IN 2005 FOR A YET-TO-BE-CREATED ATV PROGRAM
YOU are still needed to advocate for legislation to establish the PROGRAM needed to distribute funding for ATV/OHM trail development, maintenance, and insurance.
See this page for a print-friendly version of the NYSORVA Position Statement and Talking Points to get an ATV TRAIL PROGRAM bill passed necessary to spend our new Trail Fund!
See this page for more details on the new Trail Fund Law
You are requested to contact your State Senator and Assembly Member NOW to insist that legislation be passed as soon as possible to establish the needed Trail Program using the $850k available funding THIS YEAR before we lose another season without managed trails!
Need help determining who your Legislative Members are and how to contact them? Try these online resources:
January 2005:
An ATV Trail Program and Fund are proposed in the Governors Budget!
[The following is retained for historic reference, some of which is superceded by the current situation as of April and July 2005.]
TIME TO WRITE THOSE LETTERS IN SUPPORT OF SAFE, LEGAL TRAILS
Find out how YOU can advocate to re-establish a user-based funding source for ATV/OHM trail development and maintenance.
YOU CAN HELP GET THE TRAIL PROGRAM BILLS PASSED INTO LAW
What you need to know and how you can help:
A Trail Fund and an ATV/OHM Trails Program to be coordinated by the Dept. of Environmental Conservation are the things at stake for us. In a long-awaited act of recognition of our interests, Governor Pataki has proposed these in his Executive Budget Bill. Your help is needed RIGHT NOW to make sure we get the best deal as Budget negotiations proceed in the Legislature. Read NYSORVA's Position Statement on the proposal so you will understand what is at stake.
Advocate for your own rights as a trail rider! Contact your State Legislative Members to tell them to create the ATV Trail Program and Fund through inclusion in the 2005 State Budget! The advancement of responsible riding opportunities in New York relies on your participation! Without a funding source and a program to administer trails statewide, riders will continue to face the historic lack of legal riding in NY for ATV and off-highway motorcycle recreation.
Your participation in the process is absolutely essential. Heres how you can help:
1) Write those letters/make those phone calls/visit your Legislators!
Mail, fax or e-mail a statement of your support for ATV Trail Program & Funding to your NYS Senator and Assembly Member. Better yet, ask for a meeting in person! Your letter does not have to be long, it just needs to clearly state your support of an ATV Trail Program and Funding and why it is important to you and your local community. The most effective communications come from your own personal creativity as opposed to a form letter.
See the link under #3 below for a handy search engine to find your members and their extended contact info (phone/fax/local offices address etc.).