Friday, May 29, 2009

Broke California keeps OHV Parks

Being an Off-Highway Vehicle advocate, I found it interesting that a very broke California won't be closing OHV Parks because they are self-funded. That is how the OHV Program in TN is supposed to work if government and public officials would do their job and quit playing politics.


May 28, 2009 - The Sacremento Bee

Details are still being worked out, but early indications are that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to defund state parks would be particularly bad news for day hikers and birdwatchers.
Schwarzenegger's Department of Finance is predicting that around 80 percent of California's 279 state parks could close because they don't take in enough user fees to be self-sustaining. The ones that would survive fall into three general categories, according to Finance spokesman H.D. Palmer.
The first category that would stay open would be Off-Highway Vehicle parks popular among off-road motorcyclists and users of ATVs and 4x4s. Those parks have their own dedicated funding stream separate from the state's general fund.
The second category would be state reservoirs, which receive funding from watercraft users and gas tax revenues. Folsom Lake likely would be spared under this category, according to State Parks spokesman Roy Stearns.
And the final category would be state beaches and any other park popular enough to generate more revenue than it costs to operate. Seven of the top 10 state parks by attendance in 2005-06 were beaches, while two of them were for off-road users.
The San Francisco Chronicle compiled its own list today of Bay Area parks that could close. That list includes some of the most popular parks for hikers, like Mount Tamalpais and Henry W. Coe.
Now, you might ask, couldn't hikers just venture onto state park property through a trailhead? They would do so at their own risk, it seems. Park access would be prohibited for most of those properties, according to Palmer.
In the end, this might be another version of the Washington Monument strategy, as incoming Assembly Republican leader Sam Blakeslee outlined on Flash Report during Schwarzenegger's 2008 proposal to close 48 state parks. The closures would save only $70 million in 2009-10 and $143 million in 2010-11.
Then again, the summer of 2009 makes 2008 look like an easy walk in the park.

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