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California parks: New funding, better accountability needed to stop decline, new report says

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 Monterey Pines and other trees at sunset in Asilomar State Park, which celebrated its centennial in 2013. (Leslie David/KQED)
Monterey Pines and other trees at sunset in Asilomar State Park, which celebrated its centennial in 2013.
(Leslie David/KQED)

California’s venerable state parks — from sunny Los Angeles beaches to towering redwoods in the Santa Cruz Mountains — are under “serious stress” and suffering from declining budgets, shorter hours, higher fees, a $1.3 billion maintenance backlog and outdated technology.

That’s the conclusion of a new report scheduled for release Friday by a blue-ribbon state commission made up of business leaders, government officials and park experts.

The California Parks Forward Commission says the parks system can be fixed but that a dedicated source of new funding must be found. But first, the state parks department has to rebuild public confidence three years after Gov. Jerry Brown and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger before him threatened to close dozens of parks to save money — and former parks director Ruth Coleman resigned after auditors found her staff had not reported millions of dollars sitting in accounts to state finance officials.

Read the full story at the San Jose Mercury News.

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