Thinking about becoming a BWCA guide?
Forget about it!
"Editorial reprinted from the April 14, 2018 Ely Echo"The U.S. Forest Service is up to its old tricks again,

this time
not allowing new fishing guides or any other types of recreational
special uses.

....
The agency is
hiding behind yet another lawsuit that it now
needs to study and while that study is going on, everything and
everybody gets put on hold.
This appears to be directly related to the lawsuit against
towboats in the BWCA and the agreement/settlement that
requires a study be done on Recreation Commercial Services.
Instead of focusing on the towboat issue, the agency has
expanded the impact to include the entire Superior National
Forest and any type of recreational special use permitting.
This is simply ridiculous.

The Forest Service should be able
to study the towboat issue and continue to conduct business
as usual. For businesses that already have a recreational use
permit, including fishing guides, they can continue.
But if a person decided they wanted to start a guide
business this spring, their application would not be considered
by the Forest Service. Another example of government putting
unnecessary, unreasonable and draconian limits on instead of
adapting and being user friendly.

A letter on this decision was sent out to current recreational
special use permit holders last month.
Forest Supervisor Connie Cummins said in the letter
the USFS is currently conducting a Recreational Commercial
Services Needs Assessment.

“
No new permits will be issued, and no new levels of
services will be processed during this time. Exceptions to this
hold will be for permits that were in the process of being issued
at the start of the Needs Assessment…

“If the Forest authorizes new business or the expansion of
services by existing businesses during the analysis period, it will
be necessary to start over as there would be new information to
include,” the letter states.

There is no timeline for this process other than the looming
possibility of the agency having to implement a National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) analysis to evaluate potential
changes. This could literally take years.

Some local guides believe this is the beginning of the end
of commercial uses in the BWCA
(and the Superior NationalForest for that matter). The Forest Service doesn’t want to have to
deal with towboats or ciscoes or guides or truck portages or any
other type of commercial endeavor.
This is their way to shut the
door and keep it shut. 
Existing businesses may believe this is just the Forest
Service stumbling through legal hoops as the result of yet another
lawsuit filed by groups who really
don’t want people to use the
Boundary Waters.
If you don’t believe this is the case, remember this is the
same agency that got all excited about a basketball hoop on
Prairie Portage.

....
We would like to see the agency reverse its position on
this issue and continue to work with people instead of slamming
doors. Start by asking how the agency can help.For instance, there are numerous outfitters who issue
BWCA permits on behalf of the agency which could not possibly
do it without them. Instead of hassling, how about reaching out
and asking what could be done to help private businesses.
We only have to look at the decision to dump the lottery for
motorized permits as an example of a federal agency that is far
from user friendly.
