The Rising Influence of the Hispanic Vote: A Growing Force Shaping America’s Elections
  Whether you are celebrating or mourning the results of Tuesday’s election, one thing is for certain. The Hispanic vote continues to be an ever-increasing driving force influencing final election outcomes.  There’s Strength in Numbers Accordin...
Californianos Quieren más Seguridad: Aprueban Prop 36 para Endurecer Sentencias
Los californianos apoyaron abrumadoramente la Propuesta 36 para alargar las sentencias penales por ciertos delitos de robo y drogas, y para dirigir a más personas a tratamientos contra las drogas después de las condenas. Las opiniones de los votant...
La Influencia del Voto Hispano: Fuerza Creciente que Moldea las Elecciones Estadounidenses
  Tanto si estás celebrando como lamentando los resultados de las elecciones del pasado martes, una cosa es segura: el voto hispano sigue siendo una fuerza impulsora con una influencia cada vez mayor en los resultados finales de las elecciones.  ...
Latinos’ Views of and Experiences with the Spanish Language
Over half of U.S. Latinos who do not speak Spanish have been shamed by other Latinos for it. Language plays a foundational role in shaping human experience, connecting people to their heritage and offering a sense of pride. However, for many U.S. ...
Perspectivas y Experiencias de los Latinos sobre el Idioma Español
Si bien la mayoría de los latinos en EE.UU. hablan español, no todos lo hacen. El 24 por ciento de todos los adultos latinos dicen que solo pueden mantener un poco o nada una conversación en español.   Más de la mitad de los latinos en EE.UU. que...

California needs to step up park maintenance with a 2018 bond measure

Information
14 July 2017 Robert Doyle, EBRPD general manager Print Email
"The opportunity to generate new jobs and revenue by fixing our parks and increasing park use — whether state, regional or local open spaces — is significant. We need to reinvest in these places, which contribute so greatly to our overall health and quality of life." -Robert Doyle, general manager of the East Bay Regional Park District.

 

Once considered a “best in the nation” system, California’s parks and open spaces have suffered in recent years from a lack of adequate funding to meet the backlog of unseen or aging infrastructure at many of the state’s most beautiful places.

Additionally, parklands are on the front line of climate change, affected by severe storms and sea-level rise, drought and fire — increasing the backlog. Deferring maintenance is akin to taking on more debt — it costs more to fix things as their condition worsens. Gov. Jerry Brown used this same analogy with regard to the Legislature’s transportation measure: “If the roof on your house is leaking, you better fix it, because it gets worse all the time.” We agree — the time to fix our parks is now.

Two park bond bills, AB18 and SB5, are moving toward the governor’s desk for his signature before placement on the 2018 ballot. Both outline funding for disadvantaged communities, increased preparation for, and resiliency to, climate change and per capita distribution to every community in the state. The combined leadership of Senate Pro Tem Kevin de León, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon and Assemblyman Eduardo Garcia, D-Coachella (Riverside County), in championing these bills toward a bond to tackle the $25 billion of deferred maintenance in parks throughout the state is commendable. It has been 15 years since a legislative park bond made it to the ballot; it’s parks’ turn.

Furthermore, the opportunity to generate new jobs and revenue by fixing our parks and increasing park use — whether state, regional or local open spaces — is significant. We need to reinvest in these places, which contribute so greatly to our overall health and quality of life.

An example is given in a recent study that found the value of the East Bay Regional Park District in Oakland to the state’s economy to be $500 million annually. As the land managed by the district is a minor share of the state’s 47 million acres of open space, imagine how much greater this effect of parks throughout the state is to California’s economy.

How can we afford not to take action to stabilize and return our state’s parks to the national model they once were?

Deferring maintenance diminishes public interest in visiting parks and compounds our long-term debt. Approving a park bond is an urgent necessity and can be done in 2018. It’s a good investment. It’s good for the economy. It’s good for jobs. It’s good for the environment. And it’s good for our health.

For all his measurable accomplishments, the governor has one more enduring legacy to fulfill — a secure future for California’s parks and open spaces and the hundreds of thousands of jobs the great outdoors supports in the state. Share the importance of parks and open space with your legislators and with the governor today.

Robert Doyle is the general manager of the East Bay Regional Park District, the largest local park district in the United States, with 15 million visitors per year to its 65 parks and 1,250 miles of trails on 120,931 acres of open space.