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The State Parks & Wildlife Conservation Trust Fund Act of 2010. Bay Area Open Space Council March 18, 2010. Help Save Our State Parks!. How Did We Get Here?. Feeling the Effects. $1.2 Billion deferred maintenance backlog De facto freeze on acquisitions through Public Works Board
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The State Parks & Wildlife Conservation Trust Fund Act of 2010 Bay Area Open Space Council March 18, 2010
Feeling the Effects • $1.2 Billion deferred maintenance backlog • De facto freeze on acquisitions through Public Works Board • Park closure proposals in 2008, 2009 • General Fund elimination proposals in 2009, 2010
Putting Solutions On the Table • Since 2005, CSPF has looked at tools for fiscal sustainability for state parks • Endowment • Objective criteria for General Fund allocations • New public funding revenue streams • Increased public-private partnerships & philanthropy
Criteria for Solutions • Consistency with Park Values • Sustainability • Political Feasibility • Adequate Scale • Access • Supplanting
Our Solution • State Park Access Pass • Attempted through legislative budget process in 2008, 2009 • Filed the State Parks & Wildlife Conservation Trust Fund Act of 2010 on Nov. 3, 2009 • Received Title & Summary December 29, 2009
SPWCTF • Institutes $18 surcharge on vehicles • Raises ~$500 million annually • Creates new State Parks & Wildlife Conservation Trust Fund • Free day-use access for Californians • Frees up $130M General Fund for other budget priorities
Funding Breakdown: State Parks • 85% to DPR for “operation, planning, management,development” of state parks • 5% to local entities managing state park units for backfilling fee losses, grant funds for additional M&O costs • 4% to operate, manage, restore urban river parkways with recreational benefits and access to open space/wildlife areas for underserved urban communities
Funding Breakdown: Other Conservation • 7%: Dept of Fish and Game for wildlife refuges & reserves • 4%: Ocean Protection Council for marine wildlife conservation • 2%: state conservancies for park/ wildlife habitat • 2%: Wildlife Conservation Board for grants to local agencies for wildlife conservation
Accountability Provisions • Trust Fund $$ used only for state park and wildlife conservation purposes in the initiative • No loans to state General Fund • Annual audit by State Auditor • Citizen’s Oversight Committee to be established to review the audit, issue annual implementation reports
Current Endorsers • Over 170 endorsing organizations & entities • State & regional conservation organizations • Park-supporting associations • Businesses & business groups • Local governments & elected officials
Key Endorsers • CA Lodging Industry Association • CA Parks Hospitality Association • CA Travel Industry Association • Sonoma County Chamber of Commerce • Patagonia • Republicans for Environmental Protection, California Chapter • City of Sonoma • Santa Cruz County
Next Steps • Now through mid-April: Signature-gathering effort • Summer: officially qualify for the November 2010 ballot • Summer-early Fall: grassroots field campaign in effect • Fall 2010: field campaign and GOTV!
Ways to Help • Endorse the initiative – visit www.yesforstateparks.com • Help collect signatures – contact CSPF at advocacy@calparks.org to volunteer • Include news about the initiative on web, social media, in newsletters, emails, etc. • Get organized & ready for a field campaign in late summer/early fall!
Bridging to Excellence • State Park Excellence Project – joint project of CSPF and STRL • GOAL: Public engagement in a statewide vision for excellence in CA’s state parks • Web survey live through March 31 http://www.calparks.org/takeaction/parkexcellence/ • Stakeholders’ Roundtable in Summer • Final Report: Late Summer 2010
Contact Information Traci Verardo-Torres, VP, Gov’t Affairs traci@calparks.org 916-442-2119 www.calparks.org Initiative Web Site: www.yesforstateparks.com