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The Western Whitewater Association is an organization of jetboating enthusiasts
whose purpose is to foster interest in safe whitewater jetboating, encourage family recreation,
and promote shared access to rivers. Chartered in Boise, Idaho, in 1978, the WWA’s membership
has grown from its eight founders to well in excess of 600 members. Today, WWA membership is well represented throughout the western US. Yet, even with its growth
and the passage of time, the WWA’s purposes and activities hold a course true to the original
charter.
The WWA maintains a full calendar of
Annual Events to encourage and cultivate family recreational jetboating.
The WWA advances the general welfare and safety of whitewater jetboating through its
annual
Skills Day, which provides new jetboaters with hands-on, in-the-field safety and operational
training. The WWA produced and distributes at cost a video entitled
"Whitewater Jetboating Guidelines" - a safety and
operational training video designed specifically for recreational jetboaters.
Every year, the WWA coordinates and organizes
Noxious Weed Control Projects in cooperative efforts with the U.S. Forest Service and the Idaho
Department of Agriculture. The WWA’s participation generally entails active assault projects
along the Salmon River within the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness and along the Snake
River within Hells Canyon.
The WWA organizes Snake River cleanup projects each year to pick up trash along the
river corridor below Swan Falls Dam in southern Idaho. Much of the work is concentrated within
the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area.
The WWA is a staunch advocate of fair and equitable access to rivers for
all users – to include private jetboaters. In its support for this position, the WWA is an
ardent, vigilant, and steadfast proponent. The WWA and its members have committed thousands of
hours and tens of thousands of dollars in an ongoing battle against discriminatory legislation,
invasive and exclusionary regulation, and burdensome taxation. The WWA has carried this fight
to the U.S. Congress, to Executive Branch departments, to state legislatures, and to the press.
Since its inception, the WWA has maintained an unwavering stand in support of equitable shared use
of our river resources and the committed belief that there is enough room on our rivers
for all who exercise responsible stewardship.
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