LANDER â The city attorney in Lander is advising the town against charging people to camp in the City Park, saying that would be unlawful government competition against private business. Â
But for the town to allow campers in City Park for free is not competition â itâs providing a service, said Adam Phillips, who was asked to answer the legal question for the city. Â
The lawmaker who crafted a law on government competition said he disagrees with Phillipsâ interpretation. Â
Phillips told the Lander City Council last week that if the city were to charge campers fees to stay in City Park, it would raise âbigger issues,â such as âwhether we can use taxpayer money to compete with other local businesses.âÂ
People have been allowed to camp for free in Lander City Park for as long as many locals can remember.
To Charge, Or Not To Charge
City Council members recently have looked at the possibility of charging camp fees as a way to raise money to fix up ailing or aging town facilities. Â
Phillips advised against that, citing Wyoming statute 9-2-3220, which created a website where Wyomingites can complain when they feel governments are competing unfairly with the private sector. Â
Some City Council members pushed back against Phillips, saying that allowing free camping competes more with private businesses than charging fees would.  Â
âFree is actually the greater competition,â said Councilwoman Julia Stuble.Â
Phillips said the free campout comprises a service, not competition. Â
âIf weâre operating something for free, the law more or less says itâs not free, itâs a service,â Phillips said. âThatâs essentially the difference between creating competition and providing a service to the citizens.â Â

Lawmaker BamboozledÂ
State Sen. Cale Case, R-Lander, was surprised when he heard Phillipsâ analysis incorporate the law he sponsored.  Â
Case proposed the bill in 2010, but then-Gov. Dave Freudenthal vetoed it. The state Senate rejected Caseâs bill the year after that. It became law in March 2012 when Gov. Matt Mead signed it.
Even then, it wasnât perfect by Caseâs standards. It established the complaints website, but it didnât directly outlaw government competition. Â
âThereâs really no good law on whether (government can compete) or not,â Case told Cowboy State Daily on Thursday. âI tried to fill in a hole in that, letting people complain, hoping it would create a groundswell and get people thinking about what government should do, and what they shouldnât.âÂ
The website didnât take off. Â
Phillips also bemoaned a lack of definitive laws on government competition during his presentation to City Council. He said heâs done a deep dive on the issue multiple times. The Wyoming Constitution âalludesâ to the idea that government shouldnât butt into business, but the law allows government to compete in specific instances, like with hospitals, education and prisons. Â
âThatâs about all I could find,â he said. Â
Approached Wednesday at his office, Phillips declined to comment to Cowboy State Daily. He cited attorney-client privacy constraints. Â
Fix It, ThenÂ
The way Case sees it, Lander City Park competes against campgrounds with its free parking. Â
âOf course they do,â he said. âIt very realistically competes with at least four campgrounds close to Lander â in town or around.â Â
Regardless of the debate, the city must defer to its attorneyâs advice, Lander City Councilwoman Missy White told Cowboy State Daily. Â
She also said that if Case has issues with the way people are interpreting state law, he can make those laws clearer.
âIf Senator Case believes itâs being interpreted wrongly, then Iâd love for him to amend the current statute so itâs clearer and we can all â not just Lander but all municipalities â avoid that misinterpretation,â said White. Â
White said the debate first surfaced while city leaders were assessing Landerâs revenue streams and hunting for a way to upgrade the aging City Park bathrooms. Theyâre old, outdated and not accessible by federal disability-access standards, she said. Â
âIâm not a lawyer, nor am I a legislator,â White said. âTheyâre the crafters and interpreters of state statute. So, if thereâs a loophole, letâs get that closed.â Â

Great Resource ThoughÂ
Ann-Marie OâMalley, manager and owner of the Sleeping Bear RV Park in Lander, didnât seem to mind the competition. Â
âIt doesnât really change things for us either way, whether itâs free or not,â said OâMalley, adding that state parks also offer camping. Â
Often, there are different types of customers attracted to each kind of place. Customers who want the amenities the Sleeping Bear has to offer will go to the Sleeping Bear regardless, she said.Â
âWeâre just glad weâve got Lander City Park here because itâs a great resource for the community.â Â
Tooth-Brushing On A BridgeÂ
Maverick RV Park owner Scott Ross, on the other hand, said he doesnât favor the free camping in City Park â and his concerns are from both the perspective of a taxpayer and of a private businessman. Â
Maverick offers RV and tent spots.Â
âBut we hardly do any tent spots anymore, because people stay at the park for free,â Ross told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday. Â
That's because camping at the park has increased dramatically in the past three years. The COVID-19 pandemic drove more people into outdoor recreational hobbies and boosted those numbers, Lander Assistant Mayor Rajean Strube-Fossen told Cowboy State Daily.
When locals walk through the park they often trudge through a busy neighborhood of campers. City staffers have to keep up with any refuse or damage the campers leave in their wake, Ross said. Â
Charging a fee could help the town recoup its losses and keep its facilities clean and updated, he said. Â
White empathized with Rossâs concern over the parkâs recreational attractiveness. Â
The Lander City Park abuts a scenic bridge and pathway on a woodsy hillside. Â
â(Iâve) been through there when Iâve counted 50-plus vehicles, and people spilled over on to the pathway â and theyâre brushing their teeth, cooking breakfast, with the dogs sitting there simply sleeping on the sidewalk,â said White. Â
No Crime NexusÂ
Lander Police Chief Scott Peters, however, told Cowboy State Daily that other than a few instances, thereâs not a crime problem from the park camping.
Occasionally, he said, Riverton-area vagrants will get out of the jail in Lander and hang around town for a while, but Lander and the public bus lines will help those people get back to their homes in Riverton or the Wind River Indian Reservation for free. Â
Case and White agreed that the campers seem well-behaved. Â
White said sheâd like to see more containment, possibly limiting RVs and campers to the areas north of the bridge abutting the park. Â
She said her solution could spawn other concerns, however, including the possibility that âunhousedâ people will seek out free camping in other, inconvenient parts of town and won't have places to stay.
White also would be in favor of assessing camp fees, she said: âIf it were legal, yes.â  Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





