I think some here are getting a little high horsey on this particular issue. You do realise the remoteness of the location don't you? That is in the domain of the $1000 per day/head of the charter boat operator. If one can afford a $10K, 10 day trip from Darwin to Broome, a $150 access fee is just coinage in comparison. It's not going to affect most of us here.
But there are other issues attached to this worthy of discussion.
I laughed when they stated they will be using the funds to pick up rubbish. What a croc. I've had my boat up in that country and I can tell you rubbish is not an issue. - at least not the sites I've been to. Tourists leaving empty beer cans on remote isolated beaches
. Yeah right. More like discarded commercial fishing gear, fuel drums and other flotsam and jetsom, none of it the domain of the charter boat tourist. I'm not going to touch the indigenous being the custodian of their cultural lands....and treating it like the town tip.
Damaging "sacred sights" is an issue and it's no wonder they get pissed off. Unfortunately, there are a lot of tools that live among us, and unless its permanently occupied, you wont stop that happening. Guaranteed the tools wont be paying for access.
The bigger issue here is the issue of copycat fee's. Once one group is successful implementing a user pays fee, the others will jump on board too. I'm not disagreeing with a user pays system, but when this is splintered over multiple traditional owners down the coast, each charging their own fee, it will become cost ineffective for a lot of tourists. Getting all the groups together and setting a single, affordable access fee is the only way to go if a fee system "needs" to be introduced. Then you have the land council and admin issues as discussed above.
"ït's a beautiful landscape and everbody is welcome"
Just leave your money on the fridge.