America’s landscape, be it urban or rural, is
renowned worldwide for its parks and open spaces.
Names such as Yellowstone, the
Everglades,
Big Sur and
the
Adirondacks, conjure up images that
inspire awe and wonder. Urban parks such as Central
and Prospect Parks in New York or Chicago’s Grant
Park along Lake Michigan are prized for the respite
they provide to city residents and visitors alike.
Our parks are, indeed, treasures.
New
Jersey has its own set of treasures with beauty that
takes no back seat to any of the above. Though the
names may not be as well known, anyone who has
watched the sun rise on the beach at Island
Beach
State Park, taken in the fall foliage from atop High
Point, gone birding at Cape May Point or watched the
Fourth of July Fireworks from Liberty
State Park
knows this is not hyperbole. These are our
treasures, and they need our help.
For
far too long, regular maintenance and desperately
needed capital improvements at our state parks,
wildlife management areas and historic sites have
been deferred in the state’s annual budgeting.
Today, the inventory of projects needing attention
has an estimated cost of approximately $250
million. They range from a $2 million bulkhead
repair project at Liberty
State Park,
where a section of the waterfront walkway has
collapsed to $1.5 million for structural repairs and
restoration work at the
Batsto
Mansion
in Wharton
State
Forest. In Warren
County,
the Hackettstown State Fish Hatchery has been closed
to the public since 1985 because deferred
maintenance has created safety concerns. In
Belleplain
State
Forest, capital funds are needed to extend water
lines to guarantee the future safety of the park’s
water supply.
The
list of projects needing attention is pages long and
covers the state from north to south and east to
west. For the staff that tends to these sites and
the public that appreciates them, it has been
heartbreaking to see the work deferred for so long
and it will take years for the state to catch up.
But finally, there is cause for hope.
This past July, for the first time in years,
Governor Corzine signed a budget, which provides a
down payment of $9 million to address the most
egregious problems facing these lands we hold in
public trust. Even more important, the legislature
authorized a constitutional amendment that the
Governor and I helped craft so that it could be
placed on the ballot this November. If passed, this
amendment will provide a dedicated source of funds
for these maintenance and capital needs. The
amendment would rededicate environmental funds
generated by the Corporate Business Tax and provide
$15 million a year until 2015 and $32 million
annually beginning in 2016. And because it is a
rededication of existing revenues, it would provide
this funding without any
additional taxes.
With the recent proposal to create three new urban
state parks in Trenton, Paterson and River Edge, New
Jersey’s state park system has grown to 42 parks, 11
forests, three recreation areas, 43 natural areas
and more than 50 historic sites and districts. It
also includes several marinas and a golf course.
These lands, which contain some of the most
significant natural landscapes and historic sites in
the state, account for more than 397,000 acres.
In the last 15 years, annual
visitation to the state’s parks, forests and
historic sites has increased by nearly 50 percent.
Over the past five years, an average of 15 million
visitors per year used the state park system's sites
and facilities. In 2005, that number climbed to
more than 18 million people. Just this Fourth of
July, more than 70,000 people visited Liberty State
Park to celebrate our nation’s independence.
While the popularity of our parks has
grown immensely, unfortunately, our ability to keep
the parks in top condition has not. Without a stable
source of funding it is virtually impossible to
effectively plan and implement long-range resource
management or facility development projects.
Years of neglect have led to a decline in the
services provided at our parks, denying the public
the enjoyment of all the opportunities our sites
have to offer. This November’s ballot question
offers the opportunity to rectify this wrong, but,
despite unanimous legislative support for placing
this proposal before the voters, success cannot be
taken for granted.
As
mayors you recognize firsthand what parks mean to
our communities. I need your help to educate your
constituents on the value of New Jersey’s state
parks system, what it provides to state residents
and the importance of support for this ballot
question. Parks and open spaces attract residents,
businesses, and economic activity to communities.
These sites offer community meeting places,
recreational opportunities and spots to enjoy the
tranquility of the outdoors. The public’s support
for this ballot initiative is critical in
maintaining the beauty and quality of life in our
state. As their representatives and leaders, you can
and must remind them that when we invest in our
parks, we are investing in New Jersey’s future.