Nuts wrote:'Doesnt matter who you vote for, a politician will get in'
I mentioned one example just in the hope of narrowing down the crux of the topic but yes, politics and theory can leave it wide open.
I would disagree that maps (perhaps those published through the well known local galah guides) would not play an almost singular role in influencing many new walkers to get themselves into many more difficult areas.
Dont know if the track from PB down to New river was ever on a map but the examples and consequences could be far more extreme (just outside my knowledge).
Also, to assume that the reasons behind All park management decisions are not driven by practical common sense are just wrong!
Might be Often the case, perhaps sometimes but the assumption kinda makes any rant easy to dismiss... even if the general ideas were making some sense
Tastrax mentioned the process and reasons for removing tracks. I imagine that those reasons (from the service point of view) are mostly sound and sincere..
Um? On the Gallah guide I know personally of a few cases where this was the sole guide and also saw the egging on that goes on amoungst elements of the internet backpacking society to push the boundaries of commonsense. Never been to the Arthurs but from this site I understand it to be an area where careful preparation is a very good thing, not to be done by someone who has never bushwalked before

What is missed from the discussion is maps cost money and back packers do not have much so it is one cost saving measure they make.
Hold on, Parks is not the evil empire in my opinion but like any large bureacracy there exists people that hold to certain views and use their power to circumvent due process. I spent way too many meetings caused by a small section of road been mis marked

A bit of background digging indicated such an "error" was not an "error". I have seen a bureacrat in distant Canberra get excited over something and then in correspondences have the proposed thing about fifty kilometres from were it was

I still can not get my head around that the road to Authurs River could not be sign posted at 80 kilometres per hour due to National road standards despite countless requests by the locals but when sealed it was then mandate by some bureacrat in Canberra to be sign posted at that speed

Excuse me if I am more than a little jaded by State and Federal departments and do not see them as perfection. There is no underlying assumption that all Parks decisions are insane, with most likely been sensible once the facts are pased on and understood, but censorship of information is a bad thing as it allows bad decision making to go unquestioned by being unnoticed.
As for processes. The above things had "processes" involved so process by itself does not mean it is the correct outcome and I have been around too long to fall for the bureacratic trick "that due process was established and people consulted". As one person that will remain nameless said, consulting does not mean you need to listern and a process can not be designed to get but one outcome
The right to vote is the only thing that distinguishes our system from a totalism state and you would be surprised what can be undone and set right even with potliticans, suggest you give it a try
Cheers Brett
"lt only took six years. From now on, l´ll write two letters a week instead of one."
(Shawshank Redemption)