I didn't realize that The Lost Dutchman was targeted in the closures... I'm going to see if I can get to the Feb 1st meeting... :O
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/ ... sures.html
Ariz. officials propose closing 13 state parks
by Casey Newton - Jan. 11, 2010 06:16 PM
The Arizona Republic
Fewer than one third of Arizona's state parks and recreation areas will remain open after June 3 under staff recommendations released Monday.
The recommendations, which will be considered by the Arizona State Parks Board on Friday morning, call for the closure of 13 parks between February and June. Three other parks already have closed because of budget cuts
, and other lands under parks control have either never opened or have been transferred to community control.
If approved by the parks board, the state would close Fort Verde, Homolovi Ruins, Lyman Lake and Riordan Mansion state parks on Feb. 22.
Roper Lake, Tombstone Courthouse, Tubac Presidio and Yuma Territorial Prison would follow on March 29.
The closures would conclude on June 3 with the shuttering of Alamo Lake, Lost Dutchman, Picacho Peak, Red Rock and Tonto Natural Bridge state parks.
The state parks selected to remain open are the ones that generate revenue: Buckskin Mountain, Catalina, Cattail Cove, Dead Horse Ranch, Fool Hollow Lake, Kartchner Caverns, Lake Havasu, Patagonia Lake, and Slide Rock.
But even those will close unless the parks system gets a $3 million infusion of cash before the end of the fiscal year, said Renee Bahl, the parks director.
Parks officials hope that money will come in the form of a loan from the state's General Fund, which will be repaid as the parks generate revenue.
Bahl said deep budget cuts to her agency have left her staff with no other choice but to recommend the closures.
Bahl noted that last year parks contributed $25 million to the General Fund, even though parks themselves receive no General Fund dollars. A Northern Arizona University study found that the parks generated $266 million annually in economic activity for rural communities.
"We're important to the economy," Bahl said. "We're important to the people right now. Folks can't afford to do much these days, and parks are one affordable luxury that we want to keep open."