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Arizona to Close 13 Parks by June due
to Budget Woes
PHOENIX (Associated Press)
January 16, 2010 ― An oversight board voted unanimously Friday to close
13 of Arizona's state parks in response to budget cuts, leaving
two-thirds of the parks shut in the most aggressive cuts to such
facilities in the nation.
The Arizona State Parks
Board is closing some of the state's iconic Old West landmarks,
including the Tombstone Courthouse in one of the West's most storied
towns, and the Yuma Territorial Prison, which housed hundreds of Old
West outlaws and was portrayed in the film "3:10 to Yuma."
The decision also closes
parks such as Red Rock State Park near Sedona that draw tens of
thousands of tourists a year.
The Legislature has cut 61
percent of the state parks budget since July.
"This board has done
something that is very tough, very hard," said parks board chairman
Reese Woodling. "I think most of us probably haven't slept for a while,
at least not soundly."
The board closed five
parks last year in response to budget cuts. The plan approved Friday
closes three parks in February, five in March and five in June.
Mayors, city officials and
residents from communities near state parks pleaded with the board not
to close their local parks, saying the facilities are critical to the
towns' economies and heritage.
Some made proposals to
chip in money that might keep their parks open.
"We're not looking for a
handout. We're not here to complain," said Bob Burnside, mayor of Camp
Verde, near Fort Verde State Historic Park. The town will put up money
to keep Fort Verde operating until March while officials look for a
long-term arrangement for the park.
The parks board voted to
ask the Legislature for a temporary exemption to use for operations $1.7
million earmarked for land acquisition and $3 million earmarked for the
state forester's office.
The board also gave parks
staff the authority to seek a loan and try to get an extension on a
$374,000 lease-purchase payment for Tonto Natural Bridge State Park due
in August.
The Parks Department's
budget is now $7.5 million, down from $19.3 million in July and $27
million in fiscal year 2008. Lawmakers raided revenue from entry, tour
and event fees, as well as camping permits and cabin rentals. The agency
now needs cash to replenish the drained account so it can continue
operating in the next fiscal year.
Doing so requires closing
most of the unprofitable parks, officials said.
The plan spares the
system's six profitable parks and three others that generate significant
revenue in the spring and summer. The nine parks that will remain open
generate 75 percent of the system's revenue, said Jay Ream, assistant
state parks director.
Popular parks including
Kartchner Caverns, Slide Rock and Lake Havasu will remain open. But
others including Tonto Natural Bridge near Payson and Lost Dutchman east
of Phoenix will close.
Officials have said they
may need to close more parks if they can't raise $3 million by June,
which is the end of the fiscal year.
Dale Sinquah, a Hopi
Tribal Council member, said his tribe has accepted that Homolovi Ruins
will close. The park is the site of an ancient Hopi civilization that
was threatened by artifact thieves until Arizona State Parks bought it
in the 1980s.
"The Hopi way is strong,"
Sinquah said, but it's held together by a vulnerable collection of
ancient ceremonies, songs and dances passed between generations.
"The state park has been
protecting the culture and land and tradition of the people, and I hope
this will continue," he said.
Arizona is not the only
place where lawmakers are targeting parks, but it is taking the most
aggressive action, said Phil McNelly, executive director of the National
Association of State Parks Directors.
Jerry VanGas, of Phoenix,
said voters should hold legislators accountable for the cuts made to
state parks.
"My vested interest is
that my daughter, her friends, the next generation - I don't want them
to miss out on what I experience with state lands," he said.
Cindy Sherman, of
Flagstaff, asked the board why all the historic parks were on the
closure list, saying parks that protect and share history are worthy of
protection.
"History is our DNA," she
said. "Once that is gone, we're not going to get it back."