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Control Number: 1024-0224
Current
Expiration Date: 5-31-2019
National Park Service
U.S.
Department of the Interior
Programmatic
Review and Clearance Process
for
NPS-Sponsored Public Surveys
The
scope of the Programmatic Review and Clearance Process for
NPS-Sponsored Public Surveys is limited
and will only include individual surveys of park visitors, potential
park visitors, and residents of communities near parks. Use of the
programmatic review will be limited to non-controversial surveys of
park visitors, potential park visitors, and/or residents of
communities near parks that are not likely to include topics of
significant interest in the review process. Additionally, this
process is limited to non-controversial information collections that
do not attract attention to significant, sensitive, or political
issues. Examples of significant, sensitive, or political issues
include: seeking opinions regarding political figures; obtaining
citizen feedback related to high-visibility or high-impact issues
like the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone National Park, the
delisting of specific Endangered Species, or drilling in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge.
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Submission
Date:
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July
15, 2016
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Project
Title: Yellowstone
Backcountry Hikers Perceptions and Experiences
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Abstract
(not to exceed 150 words)
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Backcountry
hikers in YELL will be surveyed summer, 2016. The survey will be
administered through Qualtrics survey software. Questions are
related to hikers’ demographics, knowledge, preparedness,
visitation history, planning, behaviors, trails and backcountry
use, trip characteristics, recreation preferences, and crowding.
Potential adult participants will be solicited at the nine permit
offices July 15 to August 31. Three weeks after providing contact
information, participants will receive a survey-related email
including the purpose, instructions, risks, contact information,
and a link to the survey. This will also update the survey
conducted sixteen years ago (1999).
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Principal
Investigator Contact Information
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Name:
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Ray
Darville and Pat Stephens Williams
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Title:
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Professor
and Associate Professor
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Affiliation
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Arthur
Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture
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Address:
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Box
6109, SFA Station, Nacogdoches, TX 75962-3047
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Phone:
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936-468-2256
and 936-468-2162
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Email:
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rdarville@sfasu.edu
and stephensp@sfasu.edu
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Park
or Program Liaison Contact Information
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Name:
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Tami
Blackford
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Title:
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Deputy
Chief, Interpretive Planning and Media Planning
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Park:
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Yellowstone
National Park
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Address
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Box
168, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, 82190
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Phone:
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(307)
344-2204
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Email:
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tami_blackford@nps.gov
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Project
Information
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Where
will the collection take place? (Name of NPS Site)
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Yellowstone
National Park
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Sampling
Period
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Start
Date: July 31, 2016
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End
Date: September 30, 2016
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Type
of Information Collection Instrument (Check ALL that Apply)
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Mail-Back
Questionnaire
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Face-to-Face
Interview
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Focus
Groups
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On-Site
Questionnaire
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Telephone
Survey
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X
On-line Questionnaire
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X
Other (list)-electronic survey using Qualtrics
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Will
an electronic device be used to collect information?
No
Yes - type of device Computer/server employing Qualtrics survey
software
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Survey
Justification:
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Social
science research in support of park planning and management is
mandated in the NPS
Management Policies 2006 (Section
8.11.1, “Social Science Studies”). The NPS pursues a
policy that facilitates social science studies in support of the
NPS mission to protect resources and enhance the enjoyment of
present and future generations (National Park Service Act of
1916, 38 Stat 535, 16 USC 1, et seq.). NPS policy mandates that
social science research will be used to provide an understanding
of park visitors, the non-visiting public, gateway communities
and regions, and human interactions with park resources. Such
studies are needed to provide a scientific basis for park
planning and development.
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Prior
to Find Your Park and Centennial campaigns, managers/researchers in
Yellowstone National Park (YELL) have observed changes in visitation
patterns and experiences. Second to day-use visitors, many of the
visitors are backcountry hikers. This information collection was
requested by Yellowstone managers because they need up-to-date
information about backcountry visitor behavior as they are in the
process of adjusting backcountry management practices related to
visitor experience and visitor safety. The questions in the proposed
survey are those that managers have requested in order to understand
more about hiker’s perceptions and opinions concerning: safety,
preparedness, level of expertise and expectation while in the
backcountry.
This
justification for this collection is that it will be used to:
• Provide
data on visitor characteristics, activities, and satisfaction with
backcountry experience.
• Provide
data on visitor opinions, perceptions, and use of backcountry.
• Evaluate
the programmatic impact of backcountry preparedness of the visitor
and visitor services.
• Write
recommendations for park managers on backcountry preparedness and
experiences in order to provide positive, safe experiences for
visitors, park personnel, and park resources.
Survey
Methodology
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Respondent
Universe: All
adult backcountry hikers (age 18 or older) in Yellowstone
National Park during summer2016 sampling period (July
31-September 30). According to the NPS 20145 Visitor Statistics
profiles approximately 3,337 permits were issued by Yellowstone
National Park between May 1 and August 15; and during July and
August, 2015, approximately 27,228 backcountry recreational
visitors were recorded in the backcountry
(https://irma.nps.gov/Stats/).
Sampling
Plan/Procedures: Given
the numbers listed above, this study will attempt to survey
approximately 3,000 backcountry permit seekers during the
sampling period. These potential respondents will be seeking
permits at the nine permit offices located in the park. All
backcountry hikers are required to obtain a backcountry trip
permit. Adults will be solicited at each of the nine backcountry
permit offices Table 1 below)
between
July 31 and September 30, 2016.
Sampling
Location
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Targeted
Number of visitors approached
per
day
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Number
of visitor approached per hour
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Total
Number of Visitors Approached during sample Period
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Expected
on-site
Acceptance Rate
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Expected
number of
People
Agreeing to Participate
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Bechler
Ranger Station
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7
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1
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315
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60%
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189
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Bridge
Bay Ranger Station
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7
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1
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315
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60%
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189
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Canyon
Visitor Center
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8
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1
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360
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60%
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216
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Grant
Village Visitor Center
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7
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1
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315
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60%
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189
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Mammoth
Visitor Center
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8
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1
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360
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60%
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216
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Old
Faithful Ranger Station
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7
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1
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315
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60%
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189
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South
Entrance Ranger Station
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8
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1
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360
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60%
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216
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Tower
Backcountry Office
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7
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1
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315
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60%
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189
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West
Yellowstone Visitor Information Center
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8
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1
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360
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60%
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216
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Approximate:
TOTAL
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67
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3,015
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1,809
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Solicitation
to participate in the survey will take place at the time they
request their permit. This will be a complete census survey –
all visitors requesting permit during the sampling period will be
asked to participate in the study. Once the permit holder has
completed the application process and before the exit the
station, they will be asked to participate in the study by the
ranger at the station. At this time the permit holder will only
be asked to participate in the study. If they agree, they will
only be asked to provide their name and email address. They will
be told that their name and email address will only be used to
send them a link to an electronic version of the survey that they
should complete only at the end of their trip or backcountry
experience at Yellowstone.
Below
is a sample script that will be used during the initial contact
with the permit holder:
Hi,
my name is ________________. Today we are asking permit holders
to participate in a study that we are conducting to better
understand the perception of visitors that backcountry hike here
in Yellowstone. We have stopped you today because you are one of
a small sample of visitors we are asking to participate in this
survey. Would you be willing to participate in 10 minute survey
that you would complete electronically at the end of your trip
after you have returned home?” Your participation is
completely voluntary and all responses will be anonymous.
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If
YES
–
then ask, “have you already been asked to participate
in this survey?”
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If
“YES”
(previously agreed to participate) then, “Thank you for
agreeing to participate in this study, we hope that you will
complete the survey once you receive it at home. Thanks again
and have a great day.”
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If
“NO”
(have not previously agreed to participate) then,
“Thank
you for agreeing to participate. Although this will be a
survey that you will complete once you return home, I do have
two questions I need to ask you now.” [The surveyor
will start the process by asking them to answer the
non-response bias questions].
Did
you watch the video on backcountry safety before beginning
your trip?
Before
you were issued your backcountry permit, did you know where
you wanted to camp?
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If
NO– (soft refusal) then, “That’s fine; we
won’t bother you with asking you to complete the
electronic survey, however, would you be willing to take one
minute and answer a couple of questions for me now? This will
help us learn a little something about all of the visitors we
approach today? [The surveyor ask them to answer the
non-response bias questions and then thank them for their
time].
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If
NO– (hard refusal) – “Thank you for your
time. Have a great day.”
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Three
weeks after the initial on-site contact, all visitors that agreed
to participate will receive a letter via email reminding them of
their willingness to participate in the study. The letter will
contain a link to the survey in Qualtrics, brief instructions to
complete the survey, assurances of anonymity and additional
contact information.
Instrument
Administration:
Approximately
three weeks after on-site participants agree to participate and
provide their contact information they will receive
survey-related email, which will describe the purpose of the
survey and instructions for completion and contain the URL link
to the survey. The participants will click on the link to begin
their survey. Once the survey has been completed, the data will
automatically be stored in Qualtrics and then downloaded by the
research team for analysis. A reminder letter will be sent to all
non-respondents 10 working days after the initial mailing.
(d)
Expected Response Rate/Confidence Levels:
Given
the numbers listed above for the 2015 visitor use statistics this
study will attempt to contact approximately 3,015 backcountry
permit seekers during the sampling period as the population for
this study. We expect that 60% will agree to participate in the
study (n=1,809), however we anticipate the 50% (n=904) of those
who agree will actually complete and return the survey at the end
of their trip. This will be significant enough to provide the
information that managers have requested. This information will
only be used to generalize the population survey and not beyond
the scope of this study.
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Location
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Number
of agreeing to participate in the study
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Expected
Response
Rate
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Expected
Number of Responses
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Margin
of Error +/- %
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Confidence
Level
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Yellowstone
National Park
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1,809
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50%
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904
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1.8%
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95%
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Strategies
for dealing with potential non-response bias:
During the permitting process the following data will be
obtained: (1) date, (2) size of party, (3) gender, (4) age, (5)
number of previous trips in Yellowstone’s backcountry, and
(6) location of permit station (this information is required by
Yellowstone National Park in order to hike into the backcountry).
The following two non-response questions will also be added to
the demographic information provided to determine any potential
for non-response bias:
1. Did
you watch the video on backcountry safety before beginning your
trip?
2. Before
you were issued your backcountry permit, did you know where you
wanted to camp?
Description
of any pre-testing and peer review of the methods and/or
instrument (recommended):
The survey instrument has been reviewed by the manager of the
backcountry in Yellowstone (Ivan Kowski) as well as by
researchers with experience in backcountry recreation and human
dimensions research. It is similar to a questionnaire used by
Oosterhous, Legg, and Darville during the summer of 1999 with
modifications as requested by the park. The survey instrument has
been reviewed by appropriate managers in Yellowstone National
Park, including the research sponsor, and approved pending OMB
approval. A research permit awaits final approval by OMB.
Questions were drawn from the NPS Pool of Known Questions
(1024-0224). Upon consultation with the NPS Information
Collection Coordinator these questions were considered
appropriate for the purposes of this survey and were granted
provisional NPS approval to be submitted to OIRA/OMB for final
review and consideration. The survey instrument was pretested
using Qualtrics for demonstration purposes with six volunteers
from the general public. Editorial corrections were made based
upon the review to improve the flow of the questions.
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Burden
Estimates
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Overall,
we plan to approach at least 3,015 individuals during the
sampling period. Among which, we plan to obtain verbal agreement
to participate in the survey from approximately 1,809(60%)
individuals. We expect of those who will agree to participate in
the survey, we will receive a total of 904 (50%) completed
surveys for this collection.
We
expect that the initial contact time will be one minutes per
person (3,015 x 1 minute = 503 hours). This includes the initial
contact time for all individual contacted at the permit station.
Based upon similar on-site studies, it is expected that at least
50% (n=1,809) will agree to participate in the study when
approached. With that we anticipate that at least 2 minutes will
be needed to complete the initial contact, explain the study, and
provide contact information and answer the nonresponse questions
(1,809 x 2 minutes=60 hours). Of the all of the visitors
contacted, we expect that 1,206 visitors will immediately decline
to participate without any interaction with the researcher. For
those individuals we have not included their burden.
We
expect that of the 1,809 visitor that agree to participate 50%
(n=904) will complete and return the on-line survey, with that,
an additional 10 minutes will be required to complete and return
the questionnaire (904 responses x 10 minutes = 151 hours). The
total annual burden for this one-time collection is estimated to
be 1,456 hours.
Total
estimated respondent burden for this collection will be 713
hours
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Estimated
Total Number of Initial Contacts
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Estimation
of Time (minutes)
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Estimation
of Burden (hours)
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All
visitors
All
Participants
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3,015
1,809
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Initial
Contact
Non-response
questions
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1
2
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Initial
Contact
Non-response
questions
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503
60
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Responses
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904
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To
complete response
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10
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Completed
responses
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151
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l
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Total
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713
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Reporting
Plan
Data
will be analyzed in SPSS and results and recommendations will be
provided in a final report to the sponsoring administrators.
An
oral and written report will be provided to appropriate staff at
Yellowstone National Park, including the backcountry manager and
research sponsor. An initial report will be sent to appropriate
Yellowstone staff for their review and intermediate reports will be
provided as needed or requested. In addition, the authors may seek
other presentation and publication opportunities to disseminate the
study to other natural resource professionals.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | CPSU |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-24 |