We are often asked by our membership, "What can I do to help?"
Well, since you asked, here is one thing this week and two more things! 1. Help keep trails rad and come to our clean-up day on February 22nd beginning at 9:30am. Your RADmins are working hard behind the scenes to cut through all of the red tape and orchestrate the many moving parts to make this day come together and run smoothly and successfully. Check in with Lacey, our chaos-coordinator, first thing when you get there so that she can ensure that all of our rad volunteers and your extremely valuable time are properly documented. You know – that paperwork crap that she has a weird fetish for. Richie, your Vice President, will delegate specific tasks to make sure each element of this cleanup is adequately addressed. Please wear sturdy shoes, pants and warm layers. There will also be videographers there, so bring your good side! When: February 22nd at 9:30am Where: Trailhead at the end of Kiowa Way Directions from Reno: Take 395 North to the Lemmon Drive exit. Turn left on Lemmon Drive, and right on N. Virginia Street. Take a left on Seneca Drive. Take another left on Kiowa Way, which will turn into a dirt road leading to the OHV staging area, where our tent and dumpster will be. 2. Contact our district House Representative and tell him to support H.R. 5797: Recreational Trails Full Funding Act of 2020. The federal Recreational Trails Program (“RTP”) has directly funded more than 25,000 trail projects nationwide since 1991, using a "user-pay, user-benefit" model of the Highway Trust Fund to apply taxes on gas used by off-highway vehicles to support trails of all types. RAD can to apply for RTP grant funding for future projects. If you want to dive down a rabbit hole learning about RTP, you can find more information here: www.rectrails.org. Last year, trail enthusiasts of all types celebrated when Congress instructed the U.S. Department of Transportation to develop a best estimate of the fuel used for off highway vehicles, the basis for funding the RTP. Earlier this month, H.R 5797 was introduced in the U.S. House to build on that success and, if passed, will improve and secure the future of RTP. It would require:
Mark Amodei is our local representative, and we want him to support (aka: cosponsor) this bill. As his constituents, it’s our job to let him know that this is what we want him to do. How to comment: Call his office at (775) 686-5760 or send him an email: https://amodei.house.gov/email-me/ . If you send an email, you do have to put in your contact information (this is required because they verify that you live in his congressional district). Select “public lands” under the drop-down menu for Topic, and put H.R. 5797 in the subject line. What to say: You are of course encouraged to come up with your own personal comment with regard to this bill. But if you’re not looking to reinvent the wheel and need a generic template, we suggest something along the lines of this: “I am your constituent, an OHV trail user and supporter of the federal Recreational Trails Program. I am writing to ask you to support the Recreational Trails Full Funding Act of 2020, H.R. 5797, introduced earlier this month. Please get in touch with Rep. Welch's office ([email protected]) or Rep. Curtis's ([email protected]) to add your name to H.R. 5797 as a cosponsor. And be sure to vote in favor when this bill comes to the House floor. As your constituent, I'm counting on you to see that the RTP has every opportunity to flourish in the future.” 3. Sign up as a member, and get your friends to do the same! If you haven’t done so already, you can also renew your RAD membership for 2020 or sign up as a new member! Or you can donate here. **Disclaimer: we are a tax-exempt non-profit under IRC Sec. 501(c)7 - we are not a charitable entity – therefore, donations are not tax deductible to you.** Membership dues and other monetary donations really, really help us build funds to support costs of maintaining and growing the club and putting on events like this, for which there are so many indirect costs. Additionally, grant funding is a reimbursement-based program, which means that RAD must first come out-of-pocket to cover project expenses for which we are eligible to receive reimbursement. When you’re a brand-new club running on hopes, dreams and an itty-bitty bank account, stuff like this is challenging. Also, as a heads up, we are going to start holding regular member meetings at 6:30pm on the second Wednesday of every odd number month, beginning with Wednesday, March 11th. Location TBA – stay tuned.
1 Comment
8/20/2020 02:37:17 am
Perfect ways you can help RAD this week and making the essential techniques for great house representative funding. The resume buildings and preparing for automotive value for essential reviews.
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