March 1, 2010
Contact: Dan Hendrick, (212) 361-6350 ext. 206
Unprecedented closures are threatened
Up to 91 state parks and historic sites are targeted to close if Governor Paterson’s Executive Budget is enacted. That's in addition to 40 parks that will face severely reduce hours and services.
Click above to tell your legislators not to close our state parks!Please take action right now by telling your state Legislators that enough is enough -- save our state parks by restoring $11 million to the parks budget.
And if you are able to join NYLCV for a special parks lobbying day in Albany on Wednesday, March 3, please click here.
By sheer numbers, Central New York would take the biggest hit, with at least eight state parks closed completely, followed by the Thousand Islands Region, at seven, the Finger Lakes Region, at six, and Long Island, at five. The Saratoga-Capital Region, which will experience the complete closure of four state parks, also will suffer the most in terms of shuttered historic sites -five. The Palisades Region ranks next, with four to close.
Along with total shutdown of facilities, the state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation will, at various locations around the state, close swimming pools and swimming areas, eliminate classes, sports programs and cultural events, shorten seasons and/or close facilities a few days a week.
Click here for the complete list of proposed closures.
NYLCV strongly opposes the closures, as well as significant staff cuts at the Office of Parks, not least for economic reasons. According to a 2009 report, state parks and historic sites generate $1.9 billion annually in economic activity statewide. Visitors from outside the community account for about 40% of that activity -- visitors and money communities will lose if parks are forced to close.
Additionally, state parks and historic sites account for 20,000 non-park jobs statewide. These are longterm, sustainable jobs that will last as long as our state invests in its parks system. The investment in State Parks is a good one; for every dollar the state spends on parks, it gets back $5 dollars in economic activity.