果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

LAWSUIT: Videographers sue to overturn National Parks Service arbitrary permit scheme

Alexander Rienzie and Connor Burkesmith

FIRE plaintiffs Alexander Rienzie and Connor Burkesmith

JACKSON HOLE, Wy. Dec. 18, 2024 鈥 Picture three people standing next to each other in Yellowstone National Park. One鈥檚 an ordinary tourist, one鈥檚 a news reporter, and the third鈥檚 a documentary filmmaker. They鈥檙e all filming Old Faithful, using the exact same iPhone, and without disturbing anyone around them.

Under federal law, the tourist and the reporter are doing nothing wrong. But the documentarian could face heavy fines 鈥 even jail time.

That鈥檚 why the FIREtoday filed a lawsuit on behalf of nature and sports photographers and filmmakers Alexander Rienzie and Connor Burkesmith. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 suit aims to overturn the National Park Service鈥檚 onerous, arbitrary, and unconstitutional permit-and-fee scheme that charges Americans for the right to film in public spaces.

鈥淭he national parks belong to the American public,鈥 said FIREChief Counsel Bob Corn-Revere. 鈥淚f you have a right to be there, you have a right to film there. The federal government can鈥檛 tax Americans to exercise their constitutional rights.鈥

Joining 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 lawsuit as co-counsel and co-plaintiffs is the , which represents thousands of visual journalists, including Alex and Connor. Although the NPS  filming for 鈥渘ews-gathering鈥 from its permit scheme, the NPPA has for years argued that the law imposes an unfair burden on photographers and filmographers, who can鈥檛 always know ahead of time who they plan to sell their work to, or even if they plan to sell it at all.

鈥淔or decades, the National Press Photographers Association has been working to support the rights of visual journalists and other photographers to document the beauty of our natural resources and the people who visit and care for them in our national parks,鈥 said NPPA President Carey Wagner. 鈥淚t is unfortunate that the actions and policies of the National Park Service have never fully respected the First Amendment rights of photographers, and it鈥檚 even more disappointing that it has become necessary to take the Park Service to court in order to resolve our members鈥 concerns. NPPA is enormously grateful to FIREfor taking on this case on behalf of all photographers.鈥

Alex and Connor wanted to film in Grand Teton National Park in September to document an attempt by an athlete to break the record for the fastest climb up the Grand Teton. They planned to have only two or three people, using small handheld cameras and tripods, on the 16-mile route for the shoot. In fact, to keep up with the fast pace of the speedrun, they would carry less gear than the typical climber going up the mountain.

But under , whether a filmmaker needs a permit to film in a national park doesn鈥檛 depend on the amount of gear they bring or how disruptive filming might be. The only thing that matters is whether their purpose is 鈥渃ommercial.鈥 The rule could apply to filming a big blockbuster movie near the Grand Canyon (where the scale of the project might justify a permit requirement), but also to a small-time YouTuber who posts a video of their jog through the National Mall.

鈥淐ongress wanted to keep big Hollywood productions from taking over the parks and keeping others from enjoying their natural beauty,鈥 said FIREattorney Daniel Ortner. 鈥淏ut the current law wasn鈥檛 written for a world where anyone with a smartphone has a film studio in their pocket.鈥

Alex and Connor knew they might use the footage to produce a documentary film, so they filed for a permit and explained how small their impact would be. But NPS employees have wide and unquestioned discretion under the law to deny permits. NPS denied the permit on the grounds that it could turn the speedrun into a 鈥渃ompetitive event鈥濃 and pocketed the non-refundable $325 application fee.

鈥淚ndependent filmmakers don鈥檛 have the resources of the big production companies,鈥 said Connor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a gut punch every time we throw down hundreds of dollars, only to be denied permits for reasons that are vague, arbitrary, and unfair. As someone who needs to film outdoor sports where they happen, it鈥檚 a threat to my livelihood."

COURTESY PHOTOS OF ALEX AND CONNOR FOR MEDIA USE

Alex and Connor were forced to choose between risking prosecution, or letting a potentially historic event go undocumented. For dedicated documentarians like themselves, it was an easy choice: They filmed without the permit in September.

鈥淚n the entire time we were up there, we didn鈥檛 get in the way of anyone else鈥檚 enjoyment of Grand Teton,鈥 said Alex. 鈥淭o us, the Grand is a very special mountain that we鈥檝e spent countless hours exploring.鈥

An NPS spokesperson later  they had determined that Alex and Connor鈥檚 actions didn鈥檛 meet all the criteria for charges鈥攂ut if their work had been featured 鈥渋n a commercial or a catalog or something like that,鈥 it would be 鈥渓ess of a gray area.鈥 Far from settling the issue, the NPS statement effectively signaled that Alex and Connor could still face charges if they ever sell or use their footage.

FIRE and the NPPA are seeking an injunction in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming to prevent that outcome, and to put a permanent end to a system where individual park employees can deny Americans their First Amendment rights on a whim.

鈥淚 chose this line of work because I love the national parks,鈥 said Connor. 鈥淧hotographers and videographers are the best advocates the parks have; the more people see and understand their unique value, the stronger their desire to protect them. It鈥檚 time for the Park Service to stop throwing up roadblocks and work with us, not against us.鈥


The FIRE(果冻传媒app官方) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought 鈥 the most essential qualities of liberty. FIREeducates Americans about the importance of these inalienable rights, promotes a culture of respect for these rights, and provides the means to preserve them.

CONTACT:

Alex Griswold, Communications Campaign Manager, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share