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help save our wisconsin state Parks

5/20/2017

3 Comments

 
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When you remember your first meaningful experience  with nature it may well have been during a visit to a State park, perhaps it was a family vacation  to Door County visiting State Parks like Whitefish Dunes, or Peninsula State Park. That initial experience started an immersion and appreciation for our natural resources for thousands of people, Take that experience and multiply it hundreds of thousands times  across our State ---
Whether it was to the majestic Wyalusing State Park on the Mississippi, or Copper Falls in the far North, or Harrington Beach on glorious Lake Michigan or the unique and popular Devil's Lake State Park near Baraboo, or Capital Springs Recreation Area less than ten miles south of Madison.  

Our state Parks are gems and one of the natural resource keystones that make Wisconsin what it is today. Our Parks act as a primary connection to the natural world for hundreds of thousands Wisconsinites and a significant boost to our tourism economy as well. 

Now imagine what our lives and future would be like without those Parks.

We are in danger of losing those parks for future generations. The loss will not be overnight but with a lack of GPR funding as proposed eventually our Parks will become shells of their former selves.

Wisconsin was one of the first states to have a State Park by setting aside thousands of acres of land in the late 1800s for the public. Today, we are confronted with a budget proposal removing public funding for our Parks leaving DNR to try to use fees to meet the shortfall. This will not work. They are treating the Parks system as a commodity not as a natural resource. 
 
Parks are not simply a recreational commodity that can be supported by fees to balance annual budgets. That approach  ignores any future park upkeep for the parks' land and stewardship needs, including infrastructure, invasives and wildlife management, and erosion control just to name a few.
 
Aldo Leopold said it well "We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.”

Not all people can or will pay the increased fees. So the benefits that Parks play in our quality of life will be jeopardized for many. It will be more difficult to enjoy the physical and mental health benefits of parks and education about our natural environments will not be as readily available.  
 
Additionally, Wisconsin will rely on a new and unproven model of self-sufficiency for the state parks. National information indicates that other state parks have been largely unsuccessful using fees in totally to fund their operations. Among our neighbors Wisconsin's fees are the highest.  
 
Overall, the impact of state parks on the state and local economies is enormous. Local economies rely on attendees at their State Park to sustain their business. The outdoor recreation industry account for 11.9 billion dollars annually to the economy and parks are a significant part of that.  Also, some areas rely on State Parks for their sustenance. All this will be in jeopardy.
 
Finally, there will be Uncertain Revenue for Long Term Management.  Without that management and stewardship the parks will eventually deteriorate, and we are already beginning to see this. Eventually this will lead to calls for privatization.

What can be done ? We are doing it today, but the tasks will continue beyond today. We need to educate, speak up and join, support organizations like the League of Wisconsin Conservation Voters and the Friends of Wisconsin State Parks,  write letters, meet with Legislators, attend hearings, support good candidates or even run for office like I did.  
 
We must carry the message that "Today we take our Parks for granted; tomorrow they may not be here in the way we know them if at all. Parks are resources for future generations and must not be exploited for short term gain."

League of Wisconsin Conservation Voters link
Friends of Wisconsin State Parks link
3 Comments
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6/15/2017 05:20:28 pm

I patronize this kind of organization. We want new generations to experience the beauty of the nature. We want to preserve mother nature. As we can realize, some parts of the world are nearly destroyed and we don't want that to happen. We abuse this world gifted to us and now is the time to take good care of our it.

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10/31/2017 06:39:04 pm

Help save Wisconsin State Park is a calling for all of us by Mother Earth to take care of the environment. We are called to save Mother Earth. Many places of today are industrialized and a lot of buildings had replaced all the trees. Let us save the environment and not to destroy it. We may fail in stopping the industrialization, but we can still fight for the places that are still left for us. Let us help Mother Earth and respond to her needs.

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1/28/2018 04:10:18 am

Wisconsin state parks are really wonderful and amazing to go to and enjoy the sceneries. State parks must be taken care of because it would be really sad to have your children lack the opportunity to see such beautiful and amazing parks. I hope that more people would join and support this cause of yours that caters Wisconsin state parks. I am a lover of natural parks and I would be saddened to know that state parks are not being taken care of.




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    Bill Lunney has held leadership positions in many land conservation organizations in Wisconsin. He chaired the Dane County Parks Commission for 30 years, was former president of the Natural Heritage Land Trust, the Nature Conservancy of Wisconsin, the Friends of Wisconsin State Parks.

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