Legislative Fallout: Days, Services Cut at State  Parks
 
 
August 26, 2011 6:13 PM

_Kate Galbraith_ (mailto:)  
Texas Tribune

 
Throughout the month of August, The Texas  Tribune is featuring 31 days of 
articles addressing the ways Texans' lives  will change come Sept. 1, the 
date most bills passed by the Legislature —  including the dramatically 
reduced budget — take effect.  
Day 26: To cope with big budget cuts, some  Texas state parks reduce 
services, close earlier or are open fewer  days. 
AUSTIN -- Visitors to _Kickapoo  Cavern State Park_ 
(http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/spdest/findadest/parks/kickapoo_cavern/) , 
southwest of San Antonio, 
can visit any day they please  to stroll the 1,400-foot length of the cavern, 
observe the formations and watch  bats. Soon, however, the park will pare 
back its schedule to open only five days  a week.  
Cutbacks in days, hours and services are coming  to parks across the state, 
after the Legislature slashed the _Texas Parks & Wildlife_ 
(http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/) 's budget by  21.5 percent. _Wyler  Aerial 
Tramway_ 
(http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/spdest/findadest/parks/wyler_aerial_tram/)  in El 
Paso, 
which is part of the park system, will now  operate three days per week 
(plus holidays), instead of five, after losing the  equivalent of a handful of 
full-time staff. 
"Twenty-three of the 94 state parks in Texas  will experience some 
reduction in staff, operations or both," said Tom Harvey, a  spokesman for the 
parks 
agency, though he noted that no parks are expected to  close,_ as had been 
originally feared_ 
(http://www.texastribune.org/texas-environmental-news/environmental-problems-and-policies/texas-parks--wildlife-agency-faces-big-cuts/
) . One park system holding,  the_  Sebastopol House State Historic Site_ 
(http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/spdest/findadest/parks/sebastopol/)  in 
Guadalupe County, is being  transferred to local authorities and will now be 
run by 
the city of  Seguin. 
Some parks, said Harvey, will cut back their  hours during "non-peak" 
months, when fewer people tend to visit. And some parks  will be accessible by 
"self-pay" stations during certain hours that would  previously have been 
staffed. The cutbacks are already in effect at some parks;  others will see 
them 
phased in later. 
"It's very sad, when people have less access to  the outdoors and less 
access to state parks, but I think TPWD has done a  remarkable job of 
allocating 
the resources they were given," said Janice  Bezanson, executive director 
of the _Texas  Conservation Alliance_ (http://www.tcatexas.org/) . Texas 
parks, she said, have historically been badly  underfunded, and the state is 
"always near the bottom of the list" relative to  other states in terms of 
percentage of acreage devoted to public  lands. 
Other cuts at Texas Parks & Wildlife will  mean fewer fish get produced at 
hatcheries, and thus there will be less to stock  in lakes, and less money 
to combat invasive species like the giant salvinia, a  water weed. Hunter 
education should see relatively little impact, Harvey  said. 
All told, the agency — which employs about 3,100  people — has laid off 
111 employees. However, a bill in the legislature will  make it possible for 
Texans renewing their annual vehicle registration to donate  $5 (or more) to 
the parks system. The measure is forecasted to bring in $3.2  million for 
the biennium — far less than the $150 million biennium reduction  imposed by 
the Legislature. 
_http://www.themonitor.com/news/featuring-54197-bills-texas.html_ 
(http://www.themonitor.com/news/featuring-54197-bills-texas.html)

Reply via email to