0596-0110 2017 NVUM Supporting Statement B v08-07-17

0596-0110 2017 NVUM Supporting Statement B v08-07-17.docx

National Visitor Use Monitoring

OMB: 0596-0110

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The 2017 Supporting Statement Part B for OMB 0596-0110

NATIONAL VISITOR USE MONITORING


Note: This request is for the revision and extension of the National Visitor Use Monitoring (NVUM) survey used by the US Forest Service. In a change from the previous collection, USDI agencies are not participating in this collection.


B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods

    1. Describe (including a numerical estimate) the potential respondent universe and any sam­pling or other respondent selection method to be used. Data on the number of entities (e.g., establishments, State and local government units, households, or persons) in the universe covered by the collection and in the corre­sponding sample are to be provided in tabular form for the uni­verse as a whole and for each of the strata in the proposed sample. Indicate expected response rates for the collection as a whole. If the collection had been conducted previously, include the actual response rate achieved during the last collection.


Respondent universe:

Approximately 185 million separate recreation site visits occur on National Forests annually. The exact number is not known. Obtaining credible estimates of visitation is one of the primary reasons for this collection. These recreation site visits constitute the primary sampling universe. In reporting visitation for GRPA and other purposes, the National Forest visit has been chosen as the most appropriate unit. Visits best describe the principal focus for current Forest Service management for recreation, i.e., the National Forest visitor as the customer, and the trips to National Forests for recreation. Visits represent a body of discrete units which can be easily defined both spatially and temporally. Visits are also closely analogous to recreation trips, which is a complete unit of consumption as viewed from the perspective of the visitor. The recreation trip is the most widely used and theoretically correct unit for measuring recreation demand and value.


The most current estimates are for FY2016. The visit estimates by type of site are:

Day Use Sites: 72 million

Overnight Sites: 13 million

General Forest Areas: 91 million

Wilderness: 9 million

Total: 185 million


Change from previous collection: Site visit estimates have been updated.


Sampling:

Sampling of respondents is a multi-stage process. The first stage reflects a site/day combination. This stage places the interviewer in space and time. In the second stage, interviewers are randomly assigned a 6-hour window of the day, to count exiting traffic and sample all possible exiting visitor parties within the identified sampling period. Two different 6-hour periods are used, which jointly cover the daylight hours in which visitors would be exiting the recreation site. This method is unbiased, because the first party exiting through the checkpoint is selected, and upon completion of the interview, the next available exiting party is selected. The number of visitor parties exiting during an interview is not systematic. Impartiality in selection for interviewing is stressed in interviewer training. All parties exiting are counted, and the number of intervening unsampled parties is obtainable. In the third stage, once the party is stopped, interviewers choose a particular respondent from within the party through random selection among persons age 16 or older. These sampling procedures apply to all site types, including viewing corridors.


Expected Response Rates:

The primary contact for all modules in this collection is an on-site visitor survey. Previous experience with this collection shows a response rate of about 82 percent of those contacted, and that response rate is expected in the future.

Change from previous collection: Response rate figures have been updated to reflect current data.

    1. Describe the procedures for the collection of information including:

  • Statistical methodology for stratification and sample selection,

  • Estimation procedure,

  • Degree of accuracy needed for the pur­pose described in the justification,

  • Unusual problems requiring specialized sampling procedures, and

  • Any use of periodic (less frequent than annual) data collection cycles to reduce burden.



STATISTICAL METHODOLOGY

In NVUM applications, categorizing recreation sites and areas is done with five strata:

  • Day Use Developed Sites (DUDS) includes sites with facilities that meet the Forest Service definition for development scales of Moderate, Heavily, or High degree of modification. Generally the facilities provided include visitor comfort, convenience, and education opportunities. Site with facilities provided for health and safety only are not generally considered developed sites. These sites are intended for day (as opposed to overnight) use. This includes boating, picnic sites, fish viewing sites, fishing sites, information sites, interpretive sites, shooting ranges, observation sites, playground‑park sports site, ski areas both alpine and Nordic, wildlife viewing sites, caves, visitor centers, museums, swimming areas, and other winter sport sites.

  • Overnight Use Developed Sites (OUDS) meet the definition for development scales of Moderate, Heavily, or High degree of modification. These sites include campgrounds (family & group), fire lookout & cabins, hotels, lodges, resorts, horse camps, organization sites (both publicly and private owned), and any other overnight developed sites on agency lands whether managed by the government or by concession.

  • Wilderness Areas (WA) include agency lands and waters that are part of the National Wilderness Preservation System.

  • General Forest Area (GFA) includes all of the residual part of the agency’s lands not included in any of the above categories. The sample points will generally be either on roads with speeds of 40 mph or less or at trailheads. Most dispersed types of use such as hiking, hunting, and dispersed camping will be captured here. These sites represent portals through which the public can access undeveloped portions of the land base (not including Wilderness Areas).

  • Viewing Corridors: This is a fifth type of site that is not on the agency’s lands. This type of site is a sightseeing corridor, which includes travel corridors that permit travel through or adjacent to the agency’s lands. These corridors provide visitors the opportunity to view the natural scenery on agency-managed lands, but the viewing locations are not usually on the agency’s lands. Because this category potentially includes a very large volume of recreational activity, it is included in this study. Use of cruise ships that travel waters off the coast of Alaska is included in the definition of a viewing corridor activity. For most locations, the viewing corridor interview form collects the information needed to obtain an estimate of the magnitude of this sort of use. Due to the nature of cruise ship activity and visitor patterns in Alaska, a sampling form specific to that type of viewing corridor activity has been developed. For visitors to be included in this strata they must meet the following definition:

    • The use of highways or roads on or through the agency’s lands should be reported only when the primary purpose of the trip is recreational. Do not count commuter, commercial or other incidental non‑recreation traffic. Stops at other developed sites, or time spent in more specific types of activities should be reported for the site or area on which they occur. Do not count use for commercial planes, trains, buses, boats, etc unless these are scheduled as scenic tours with informational services.

Defining Site‑days. Some sites are open and available for public recreation use every day of the year; others are open only part of the year. Any day that a site is open defines a spatial and temporal combination within which the amount of recreation use can be measured. In this study, the combination of a site open for a calendar day is called, quite simply, a `site‑day'. Site‑days form the primary sampling unit for the first stage of the study design.

A second level of stratification is based on the expected volume of exiting recreation traffic for the site-day. The stratification is developed in comparison with all site-days on the forest in that site type. Five stratification levels are used: Very High, High, Medium, Low, and None. The ‘None’ category includes site-days outside of the managed use season, as well as site-days that may be technically open, but there is zero expected exiting visitation.

At some sites, the agency obtains a count of some measure that is directly related to recreation visitation, such as fees, mandatory permits, reservations, permanent traffic counts, or site usage reports from concessionaires. At these sites, the type of site and type of visitation proxy information define the sampling stratum.

Change from previous collection: Text referencing types of sites for USDI agencies has been removed.

ESTIMATION PROCEDURES

For NVUM applications, the following table describes the information needs and statistical procedures used to estimate them:


Information needed

Technical Procedures

Statistical Procedures

Profiles and characteristics of visits and visitors

Descriptive arrays, frequencies, weighted means

Means, medians, modes, cross-tabulations, confidence intervals

Demand models and Economic Values

Travel cost models

Count data regressions

Economic Impacts

Input/Output analysis

Weighted Means, ANOVA

The NVUM module uses standard statistical procedures for its stratified random sample to develop estimates of total recreation visits per Forest, and estimate associated confidence intervals. The sampling design for the site visit estimate is based on a stratified random sampling design. Thus, the estimator is calculated using the typical equations in Cochran for a stratified random sample and we do not need to use probabilities of selection. We do not do any adjusting for frame error, sampling error, nonresponse bias (unit and item) or measurement error and, therefore, no calibration or adjusting weights are used. We derive the probabilities of selection for each sampled item from the stratified random sampling equations (which are simply nh/Nh for items in stratum h). Then we use weights that are the inverse of the probabilities of selection to compute the estimates.

DEGREE OF ACCURACY

The NVUM project has a statistical goal of providing estimates of National Forest visits, at the national, regional and forest levels that are sufficiently precise so that the upper and lower bounds of the 90% confidence interval are within 20% of the point estimate of visitation. No degrees of accuracy have been set for any of the visit characteristics, satisfaction, economics, or other results.

UNUSUAL PROBLEMS

The Alaska region and some other undeveloped Forest Service areas contain a number of remote recreation cabins in or near Wilderness areas that are only accessible by float plane or long hikes. In order to reduce staff time and travel costs in sampling usage at these areas, phone interviews are conducted after the visit has ended. All of these cabins require the user to make a prior reservation by phone or e-mail. The phone number listed on the visitors cabin reservation is used to call them. In these cases, the same interview is conducted, but the method of contact is different. Phone numbers are not retained as part of the NVUM data.

PERIODIC DATA COLLECTION

NVUM has a five-year period for a sampling cycle that covers all national forest units, rather than attempting to monitor recreation use on each Forest each year. This level of frequency is considered sufficient to capture emerging recreation trends, and places recreation monitoring on a frequency equal to that of other forest resource outputs.

    1. Describe methods to maximize response rates and to deal with issues of non-response. The accuracy and reliability of information collected must be shown to be adequate for intended uses. For collections based on sam­pling, a special justification must be provid­ed for any collection that will not yield "reli­able" data that can be generalized to the universe studied.

Experience has shown that non-responses most often occur from language barriers with non-English speaking visitors. Discussions with interviewers have shown that the most common language for non-English speakers is Spanish. In applications in the South and West, interviewers are sought who are fluent in both English and Spanish. The NVUM survey form is available in a Spanish version as well as English version, to reduce this source of non-response.

Interviewers are well-trained, wear official hats, vests, and/or name tags to identify themselves, and characteristically proceed with the interview process courteously and quickly. Interviewers are trained to elicit responses from traffic exiting the site. To further facilitate a high response rate the interviewer provides the respondent with information about the survey, its uses, and its importance. Since the overall response rate is approximately 82 percent, bias resulting from non-response is not expected.

    1. Describe any tests of procedures or methods to be undertaken. Testing is encouraged as an effective means of refining collections of information to minimize burden and improve utility. Tests must be approved if they call for answers to identical questions from 10 or more respondents. A proposed test or set of tests may be submitted for approval separate­ly or in combination with the main collection of information.

During this collection approval period no testing will occur. However final preparations for implementing the results of tests done over the past five years will be made. Implementation will occur with the beginning for the fourth NVUM national cycle at the start of FY2020.

Change from previous collection: Text referencing testing activities has been removed.

    1. Provide the name and telephone number of individuals consulted on statistical aspects of the design and the name of the agency unit, contractor(s), grantee(s), or other person(s) who will actually collect and/or analyze the information for the agency.

Principal design and analysis consultants include:

  • Dr. Stanley J. Zarnoch:(828) - 529 – 0515; USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station

  • Dr. J.M. Bowker: (706) - 559 – 4271; USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station

  • Dr. Eric White: (541) -750-7422 ; USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station

  • Dr. Robert Burns: 304-293-6781; West Virginia University

  • Keith Brown: 303-236-5396; USDOI Bureau of Land Management


The principal scientist in charge of sample design, data collection, analysis, and reporting is:

Dr. Donald B. K. English

(202)-205-9595

WO- RHVR

USDA-Forest Service

201 14th Street, SW

Mailstop 1125

Washington, DC 20250

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