NJ Outdoor Alliance Slams McGuckin-Catalano Plan That Would Fine You $10,000 for Going to the Park

Shore News Network
Greg McGuckin,John Catalano

TRENTON, NJ – The New Jersey Outdoor Alliance is calling the McGuckin-Catalano bill that seeks to drastically increase fines for violating Governor Phil Murphy’s executive orders from $1,000 to $10,000 preposterous.  The bill introduced by New Jersey Assemblymen Gregory P. McGuckin, Toms River and John Catalano, Brick seeks to give Governor Phil Murphy’s bark against assembling in parks and open spaces some financial teeth.

The bill was not only written by Ocean County Republicans but championed by Jackson Township Mayor Michael Reina, a political subservient to McGuckin in the Ocean County GOP and the Jackson Township Council.

The NJOA said the McGuckin-Catalano bill seeks only to shred the constitution and impose a financial burden upon the residents of New Jersey.

Here’s what they had to say.


The New Jersey Outdoor Alliance on Wednesday released a statement calling a proposal penalizing park goers with a $10,000 fine “preposterous” and instead released a counterproposal to re-open the state’s parks with responsible social distancing measures and public education factors in place.


“There are already plentiful enforcement options available to law enforcement, adding a $10,000 fine for walking in a park is a preposterous, absurdly overzealous attempt at pandering to people’s worst instincts in a time of crisis.” said NJOA spokesman Cody McLaughlin, “Frankly the rush by legislators and the Governor to shred our constitution and compete for who can propose the most draconian measure is an additional infectious disease we should be fighting as a society along with our efforts to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.”

The group, which represents the state’s 794,000 hunters, anglers and fishermen, has repeatedly called on the legislature to do the right thing, support park re-openings and with the same set of commonsense social distancing and occupancy guidelines that have worked for New Jersey thus far so that sportsmen and other outdoor recreation enthusiasts can continue to practice healthful activities that are a boon to mental and physical health in a time when morale is critically important to our state.

The NJOA’s proposed plan to re-open parks responsibly follows:

General Considerations

  • Outdoor activity is a key component of maintaining morale at a time when our state desperately needs to keep our spirits up.
  • The intrinsic right to harvest one’s own food cannot continue to be marginalized and criminalized when grocery stores are a hotbed of contagion.
  • Emergent studies suggest that sunshine and outdoor activity are key to fighting this public health threat.
  • In re-opening state and county parks and forests, the state will be reopening over a million acres of public recreation that will help people maintain distance from one another.
  • Closing parks was an overreaction that actually harms public health, adding to stressors and exacerbating conditions such as depression and anxiety and caused an uptick in “underground” gatherings such as so-called “coronavirus parties”.
  • Education: an uninformed populous is bound to be noncompliant. Without proper education on the “how’s” and “why’s” of outdoor social distancing, citizens are playing a game of which they are ignorant of the rules.
  • Enforcement: strict but reasonable enforcement is the key to both encouraging voluntary compliance and effective enforcement. Law enforcement should focus on egregious violators (such as group gatherings) and high traffic areas to remind citizens of rules in real-time.
  • Sufficient resources should be made available to park facilities to implement these recommendations, including PPE for law enforcement, reallocating signage and advertising budgets toward emergent efforts, and other supplies and resources.
Related News:   Biden Recalls Memories of Train Travel Over Collapsed Bridge That Had No Train Tracks

Education:

  • Similar to efforts by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife, an outdoor and digital advertising plan should be implemented to educate the public about social distancing rules at parks – focusing on not just the “how” but the “why”.
  • A robust outdoor signage program focused on points-of-entry, common traffic pinch points, parking areas and boat ramps.
  • Outdoor signs should stipulate rules such as the CDC’s “6-foot-guideline” and suggestions for tackling social distancing in trails and parking lot areas.
  • Digital advertisements should use a multimedia mix of display and video advertising to reach park goers.

Enforcement:

  • In coordination with local public health and government officials, evaluate the incidence and trends for COVID-19 in the areas and mitigate the spread through control of park usage by out-of-state residents.
  • Evaluate the necessity of enforcement actions. Law enforcement should prioritize large group gatherings and high traffic areas by stationing personnel at key points (parking lots, picnic areas, etc) to ensure compliance with social distancing and leave alone solitary recreators and cohabitating families that are in compliance with guidelines.
  • Recommended safe activities for outdoor recreation include hunting, fishing, hiking, biking, kayaking, wildlife watching, wildlife photography and in-household picnicking.
  • Recommended activities to prohibit include group sports, group gatherings, the usage of high-touch surfaces (like picnic tables, an example of why education is key, park goers could be directed to picnic with their own supplies, such as blankets).
  • In response to the Governor’s concerns on out-of-state park usage, consider establishing residents-only zones that would screen license-plates, etc. for out-of-state park users. Enforcement personnel would routinely screen plates for New Jersey residents, and would politely ask non-residents to consider recreation options in their own state.

Facility Considerations:

  • As before the park shutdown, care should be taken to keep closed park facilities with high-touch surfaces; such as bathrooms, nature centers, basketball and tennis courts, gazebos, and other structures.
  • Sanitation protocols by park staff should remain in place to prevent spread by casual violators.
  • Consider hand-sanitizer stations or other options to promote public health.
  • Consider educating the public about mask or eyeglass usage to prevent infection by droplets.

About the New Jersey Outdoor Alliance: New Jersey Outdoor Alliance’s mission is “preservation through conservation.” NJOA serves as a grassroots coalition of outdoorsmen and outdoorswomen dedicated to the conservation of natural resources and environmental stewardship that champions the intrinsic value of fishing, hunting and trapping, among opinion leaders, policy makers, and the public at-large. To learn more about the organization, please visit: https://njoutdooralliance.org/.

You appear to be using an ad blocker

Shore News Network is a free website that does not use paywalls or charge for access to original, breaking news content. In order to provide this free service, we rely on advertisements. Please support our journalism by disabling your ad blocker for this website.