We have such a jewel in the Current and Jacks Fork yet it seems that we are bound and determined to degrade it. Every time I go there (for 25 years now and hundreds of days on those waters) I'm awed by how wonderful our rivers are. But basically every trip I've taken the last decade or show is just further demonstration of why it is simply time to crack down on the b.s.
Our trip this weekend is a great illustration. My wife and I did a short overnighter on the upper river with my with our 2 year old and 5 year old. It was the 2 year old's third Current River overnighter and the 5 year old's, well, I've lost count, but he has been on the river a lot and apparently enough to recognize what too many adults either will not or cannot; i.e., the ONSR is beautiful, but good god, can people not bury, burn, or haul out their freaking toilet paper; can they not see that after 4 passes of a jet boat they single handedly made the entire river murky for a half mile and left a 10 fit strip of Mississippi mud along both shorelines - but of course, there is no way that there could be any bad impact on the river from doing so - it is after all, apparently an inalienable right to blast repeatedly up and down the river at low water right below Cave Spring so that the whole river - save a strip in the middle - goes from crystal clear to a murky green. There is no other National Park in the entire country - at least that I'm aware of - that permits such extensive and obviously damaging motorized use to the very resource that motivated the creation of the park in the first place.
It seems entirely reasonable to allow a few primitive drive up locations every few miles. It also seems reasonable to allow motor boats - but there is absolutely no need whatsoever to allow a 40 horse jet anywhere above Two Rivers or any jets at all above Pulltite. The argument that such restrictions would "lock" people out are facially silly - one can walk, float a canoe, or in some stretches, motor up the river, albeit at a slower speed - and, gasp, sometimes when the water is low it means you might not be able to use your motor boat - well, wait 'till it rains. The present state of things means that 4 jets running up and down a 5 mile stretch of river basically means that 8 people dictate the experience for dozens of other users while simultaneously causing disproportionately bad effects on the river via eroding the banks and river bottom disturbance. I've for a while to keep an open mind on these issues, but the last few years just make the case tha something needs to change - I've yet to hear a factual, logical, practical or plausible argument to the contrary, so if anyone has one, I'd like to hear it. Ultimately, it seems to be just a value issues - some people appreciate the remaining natural attributes of the rivers and others want a playground on which they can pretty much do as they please irrespective of demonstrable negative impacts on the resource.