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$180 Seasonal Snowmobile Permit Returns

News Release ************** 2015 Seasonal Snowmobile Trail Permit Offers 30% Savings if Purchased on or before November 1 (Barrie, ON – October 1, 2014) – Last year, the Old Farmer’s Almanac forecast a snowy, cold winter for Ontario
News Release
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2015 Seasonal Snowmobile Trail Permit Offers 30% Savings if Purchased on or before November 1
(Barrie, ON – October 1, 2014) – Last year, the Old Farmer’s Almanac forecast a snowy, cold winter for Ontario and it was 
right. Now, with the Old Farmer’s Almanac predicting another good, old-fashioned Ontario winter for this season, 
snowmobilers can catch a big savings break by purchasing 2015 Seasonal Snowmobile Trail Permits in October. After a 
21% permit sales spike last winter, the not-for-profit Ontario Federation of Snowmobile Clubs (OFSC) is selling 
Seasonal Permits again for a special pre-season fee of $180 when purchased online at www.ofsc.on.ca on or before 
November 1, 2014. 
“The $180-Nov. 1 option we introduced last winter represents a 30% saving off the regular Seasonal Permit fee of 
$260 and Ontario snowmobilers responded by purchasing many more permits, ” said OFSC President Remi Sauve. “A 
year over year sales increase of 21% is phenomenal in any business, and that, plus a very snowy winter has generated 
a considerable momentum for snowmobiling heading into 2015.” 
According to recent consumer surveys undertaken by the OFSC, 93% of respondents said they were planning to buy as 
many or more permits for the coming season as they did last year. Noting that the $180-Nov. 1 option also attracted 
over 18,000 new permit buyers last winter, the OFSC is confident that with this incentive in place again, even more 
new participants and former riders will discover the fun of today’s snowmobiling at a very affordable cost for the 
coming season.
Available on or before November 1, the $180 Seasonal Permit spearheads the success of a new business model for 
trail operations by the OFSC that debuted last winter. Known as “A Framework For Change”, the new plan is a 
comprehensive approach, including more permit types with varied fees, allocating more money where it snows each 
winter, and promoting more efficient trail operations across the province.
“We think it’s important to keep OFSC snowmobiling as accessible as possible for Ontario families as well as for visitors 
from outside the province. That’s why the OFSC is very pleased with the success of A Framework For Change and a survey 
response from this past spring showing that 95.8% of snowmobilers believe that Ontario snowmobiling is enjoyable, very 
enjoyable or extremely enjoyable,” said OFSC Executive Director Paul Shaughnessy. 
The Ontario Federation of Snowmobile Clubs is a volunteer led not-for-profit association, which through strong 
leadership, provides a wide range of quality programs and services to, and on behalf of, its member organizations. Our 
provincial network of organized snowmobile trails connects Ontario communities providing responsible riding 
experiences that are safe, enjoyable and environmentally sustainable.
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