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June
23, 1999
Make
2000 a Year for Parkland
Source: Los Angeles Times
Measures
are moving quickly through the Legislature to put more than $20
billion in proposed bond issues before California voters to finance
infrastructure projects ranging from new police crime laboratories
to high-way and transit work and water projects. All are worthy
to some degree, but Gov. Gray Davis and legislative leaders will
have to decide soon which will actually go on the ballot in 2000.
There isn't room for all. Having too many issues on the ballot might
stretch the state's debt limit or invite voter opposition. In terms
of California's needs, a parks bond issue rates near the top.
The
biggest single item being considered is a transportation bond issue
of $16 billion spread over four successive elections. It passed
the Senate and is pending in the Assembly.
A bond
measure that passed the Assembly with bipartisan support Monday,
sponsored by Speaker Antonio Villaraigosa (D-Los Angeles) and Assemblyman
Fred Keeley (D-Boulder Creek), includes $322 million for state parks
and an especially welcome $704 million in grants to local government
for urban parks, trails and recreation facilities. These combined
with other measures, would add up to $1.5 billion in park bonds
on the November 2000 ballot. The Senate has three versions of a
park bond issue.
Davis
no doubt will approach all of the bonds with his usual fiscal caution.
That's good. But he should remember that it has been more than a
decade since California passed a statewide park bond. Annual budget
allocations for parks and recreation have been slashed and fees
have risen.
The
state has many urgent and competing needs. But help for parks and
recreation has been delayed so many times in recent years that many
state and local nature and recreation facilities are in crisis.
California should make 2000 the year of the parks.
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