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Throwing Our State Parks Off A Cliff

by: Soundpolitic

Wed Feb 17, 2010 at 17:53:59 PM EST


As our Legislature continues its President's Week vacation as an a matter of right, and as our Governor announces he'll seek election in his own right, I found myself loathing to discover a perfect reason for not casting my ballot for any of them.

It appears that in order to "save money," Governor Paterson has, behind closed doors, slated a slew of State Parks for closure.  Not to diminish the effects of these proposed shut-downs across the state, but rather to illustrate how each closure affects each individual New Yorker, one of these knifings stabbed right at my heart.  Albany Times Union columnist Fred LeBrun brought this to my attention this past Sunday in a piece entitled State Parks Make Hit List:

Two lists of possible state park and historic site closures made necessary by Gov. David Paterson's proposed 2010-11 state budget finally have been prepared by senior staff at the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and the governor's office.

::

Say goodbye to the venerable John Boyd Thacher State Park in the Helderbergs, for example, as bizarre as that sounds. At this point, it will take extraordinary measures to save it. Once closed, who knows when it reopens?

Emphasis by me -SP

For more on how this hits home for me personally - and therefore, how this is important to everyone in our State - click "There's more..."

Soundpolitic :: Throwing Our State Parks Off A Cliff
There's no way to truly appreciate John Boyd Thatcher State Park unless you see it for yourself.  Here's about 100 words on the site from the State Parks website:

John Boyd Thacher State Park, is situated along the Helderberg Escarpment, one of the richest fossil-bearing formations in the world. Even as it safeguards six miles of limestone cliff-face, rock-strewn slopes, woodland and open fields, the park provides a marvelous panorama of the Hudson-Mohawk Valleys and the Adirondack and Green Mountains. The park has volleyball courts, playgrounds, ball fields and numerous picnic areas with nine reservable shelters. Interpretive programs are offered year-round, including guided tours of the famous Indian Ladder Trail. There are over twelve additional miles of trails for summer hiking and mountain biking, and winter cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, hiking, and snowmobiling.

Sounds pretty nifty, right?  Take a look at the picture below and tell me that it's not worth ten quoted paragraphs:

Thacher Park Overlook Panorama

Now the LeBrun column goes into greater detail as to how and why this is being set up behind closed doors in the Butcher's Governor's office and the Meat Packing Department Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation.  I suggest reading the whole thing, but the main idea is that the first list includes a whole mess of state parks to close and the second list recommends moving some money (about five million bones) from the Environmental Protection Fund in order to save a handful from these sites, which would require approval from the Cattle Corral State Legislature. Regarding the thought process and implementation behind all this, LeBrun says it best:

The expression "arbitrary and capricious" comes to mind, not to mention insensitive and ill-considered.

What is utterly dismaying is that these discussions are going on behind very closed doors with no public input.

Sounds about right to me, especially considering the close relationship my community and I have with Thacher Park.  Here in the Hilltowns, the park is an emblematic preservation of the escarpment we live on.  It's the very thing that separates us from the "flatlanders" down below, the division between suburban and rural in Albany County.

Not only does the park serve thousands of Albany residents in the summer, but Thacher serves as an almost universal place of employment for young folks on The Hill.  I can speak for myself on this.  A large portion of my high school friends worked there during the summer, saving them a drive down to the 'burbs or the city in order to save money for college.  My younger brother did this as many of his friends.  It's a huge boon to the local economy, not a drag on the state budget!

I even worked the place for a short while.  I saw first-hand how Thacher Park provided accessible and affordable natural recreation for both the urban and rural poor.  It made me not mind picking up the trash so much to see the joy on young children's faces when they were able to escape the concrete jungle and stand face-to-face with something like this:

Indian Ladder Trail's Minelot Falls

Not only that, these hills have some of the most unique history in the state.  Thacher Park preserves that history in the only place possible.  The above photograph is of the Indian Ladder Trail.

The history of the park area dates back to the late 1570s when the trail now known as the Indian Ladder Trail was used by the Mohawk Iroquois Indians to reach the trading post run by Henry Hudson. It was here that in 1777, at a spot known as Tory Cave, Jacob Salsbury found refuge from settlers during the Burgoyne Invasion.

That just skims the surface...I won't even get into the Anti-Rent War that finally destroyed Dutch Patroonship in the 1840s; check it out for yourself, but be reminded that the terrain played no small role in our success up here.  That's part of the history Thacher Park preserves.  

Even in spite of the history, the trail is just below the Overlook, and from both points, one can look out and view almost the entire Capital Region and straight into Massachusetts.  See above...you can pick out the Empire State Plaza and The Capitol.

How can the Governor and the Legislature and the Department not see this?

What's even more confusing about the proposed shut-down is the amount of money that the State has put into preserving and expanding Thacher Park in just the last four years...and how the State didn't have to pay a dime for the land just four years shy of a century ago!

The park is named after Albany mayor John Boyd Thacher whose widow, Emma Treadwell Thacher, donated the land in 1914. The purchase of 500 acres of land in 2004 with a State grant of $750 00 from the Environmental Protection Fund and a donation of land from the Nature Conservancy of 81 acres and the further purchase of 188 acres on 3 August 2006 took the total area of the park to 2,155 acres.

Emphasis added -SP

So the State got all sorts of historic, geologically and geographically unique land at the premium price of, uh, zero dollars and then spent three-quarters of a million dollars to add to it, then got even more acreage for free...and they're going to shut it down because it costs too much?

Don't you just love the way these guys practice not-thinking?

Unfortunately, that's how they think.  I've already contacted the Legislators whose districts include Thacher Park (these are Assemblyman Jack McEneny, AD-104, and State Senator Neil Breslin, SD-46, by the way) but since they're on vacation right now, I haven't heard back from them yet.  And I'm not even going to bother lobbying Gov. Paterson on the matter.  He's in campaign mode now.  He'll only do something about it if he thinks it'll help him win - and realistically, nothing is going to help him win.

Besides that, I don't think the closure is going to happen.  It's just far too foolish.  In fact, it's downright impossible to close!  Our friend and columnist Fred LeBrun tells it like it is:

Take Thacher Park. How do you "close" it? A major highway runs right through it. There's easy access on all sides. Those escarpment cliffs are dangerous; hardly a year goes by without serious injury there. Which means a squad of park police will have to be stationed there, at what cost, patrolling the area year-round to protect the state's liability interest and safeguard the public.

But what park police? Manny Vilar, a veteran park cop, is the president of the union that represents the senior officer corps at parks. He points out that repeated budget cuts and a pathetic pay scale have created a ludicrous situation. In 2007, the last year there was a park police academy for new recruits, 113 new cops were hired at a cost of $6 million. But from 2004 to 2007, 118 park police left for better paying police jobs from the village level on up to State Police. So, Parks paid $6 million for a net loss of five officers, because the agency doesn't have the funds to remain competitive. As a direct consequence, a skeleton crew of 263 officers and supervisors is responsible for safeguarding 55 million visitors a year at more than 100 parks and historic sites across the state.

So, who's going to protect and preserve Thacher Park until we can reopen it? As I said, this not a pretty picture, no matter how you focus it.

Me emphasize, ugh! -SP

Now I could have left this quote to just the top paragraph.  But let me explain because this hits home for me again.  See, between 2001 and 2003, I was a student at the State University of New York at Oswego.  I ended up majoring officially in music, but dropped out because I truly was majoring in improv comedy and dining hall studies.

The Park Police facilities for new recruits were right on campus.  In fact, the recruits had the pleasure of getting to come to breakfast before the dining hall officially opened.  Which means I had the distinct pleasure of having to get my own ass up early enough to help serve the morning rush.  It was a fantastic experience that really taught me the value of hard work and of knowing the whole job inside and out.

It was murder, sometimes, though.  I'd be on the register at the entrance swiping cards, then I'd be at the grill flipping eggs and spinning around to serve them, then I'd be rushing about the dining hall making sure that milk and juice dispensers were full, and then careening into the "slop room" to get the dishes done, all the while anticipating the next rush of studious early-riser college kids while simultaneously getting on the phone to ask my co-workers "Hey! Did you know you were on the schedule today?"  In the end, the hard work paid off: I eventually worked my way up to Group Leader, an assistant manager position of sorts.  But this was only a title; I knew that my hard work was going to help these trainees become full-fledged park police, who would one day safeguard New York's most precious treasures like Thacher Park back home.

So here's what this new chopping block maneuver tells me:  "Sorry, but you worked for nothing, bro.  It just made ya feel rosy and good about yourself.  Sorry 'bout that, but since those trainees can't make a livin' and we're shuttin' down the joint anyway, you might as well have been the one partying it up and sleeping in.  Hey...wanna tax credit to make up for it?"  And here's what I say to that:

Bite me.

Bite me Governor David "Run Away" Paterson, bite me Office of "Closing" Parks, bite me bite me Assemblyman "History Major" McEneny, and bite me Senator Neil "Gavel Drop" Breslin.  

Even if you do bite the bullet and keep these parks funded, you've gone too far just by getting this discussion started.  Former Governor Teddy Roosevelt must be spinning in his grave.  This should have never come under consideration.  Not.  Even.  Mentioned.

To me, it's perfectly clear why it did: so you could scare us all with the threat of park closure and then make yourselves all look like heroes when you "turned around" and saved the parks.  So you could force us all into "taking action" and organizing protests, which requires us to raise money, which we can then donate the excess to your re-election campaigns after you swoop in like Batman with your legislative and bureaucratic gadgetry to "save the day."  

Save the day from what?  From your own tomfoolery, that's what!

How about this: ever see a steer shovel his own bullshit?  If you haven't, Washington Avenue and State Street in Albany is a good place to start.  

After that's thoroughly disgusted you, take Washington up to Lark Street hang a left, stop at one of the nice cafes, then a right onto Madison Avenue after a couple blocks across from Washington Park onto New Scotland Avenue, which will carry out right out of the Albany city limits as it turns into New Scotland Road, state route 85, through the Towns of Bethlehem and New Scotland, then just after passing through the little hamlet of New Salem, go up the hill and make a right onto State Route 157 at the fork in the road to get a glimpse of Thacher Park while you still can.  It'll take about twenty minutes, depending on the traffic through Delmar.

Ironically, the sign will say that Governor David Paterson "welcomes" you.

I say instead of throwing our State Parks off a cliff, we should throw these guys out of office.

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Tip Jar and Cross-Post (4.00 / 6)
Tips for progress & preservation.

Cross-posted on Soundpolitic.


More information: (0.00 / 0)
Another earlier column by Fred LeBrun on the matter.

And an updated roundup of the action being taken, including Facebook pages and online petition signing, at All Over Albany.


[ Parent ]
sadly (4.00 / 2)
we all have our favorite parks that are on the chopping block.  I'm just afraid that it's going to be a situation where New Yorkers in wealthier areas are able to successfully complain and keep their parks open, while New Yorkers in the less affluent, more rural areas get their equally deserving parks closed.

I already know that it's very likely some of my favorite parks and sites are on the death list, such as Crown Point and Pixley Falls.

And what happens when these parks are "closed" and the state decides to invite privateers in when nobody's watching, like they're doing with the state forest lands?


Understood... (4.00 / 1)
I will refer you to the top of my diary.  The purpose of highlighting Thacher is in paragraph two, sentence two, clause one:

Not to diminish the effects of these proposed shut-downs across the state, but rather to illustrate how each closure affects each individual New Yorker

I understand that every park has a story to tell.  This is the park who's story resonates most with me.  If I wrote about Crown Point and Pixey Falls, the writing would have been crap because I have no personal point of reference to establish the fact that we each have the same with each separate park.

And the main point:  none of them should be shut down.  Not in this econonmy...not in any economy.


[ Parent ]
the problem (4.00 / 1)
is, as Norbrook states, the problem is worse than we have been led to believe.  It's the secretiveness of the process that's disturbing.  Anyone who has utilized the parks over the years can see that they have been underfunded and the infrastructure is really suffering.  I have sometimes wondered if the state parks system has bitten off more than it can chew, even in the best of times.  We have 178 state parks, add in the historic sites and it's above 200.  

I'm not dead set against the concept of closing some parks - but why is this all happening NOW?  There should be a long-term program of constant reassessment of parks and their health.  To prepare New Yorkers for the message, "Look, we're overextended, we need to embark on a program of cutting back - this is what we need to do this year in order to regroup," - EVERY year this should be up for discussion.  Ways need to be found to work with outside groups to keep certain key things (like trails) in repair.  

Pixley Falls is a favorite park of mine, but I accept it is probably targeted for closure.  It's small.  It's in an isolated area.  It doesn't bring in much camping revenue (in fact the campground seems to have been permanently terminated already).  It's rugged and not child-friendly.  It suffered damage during the '06 floods requiring an expensive bridge repair (couldn't get into the park without the bridge).  I'd be delighted if it's not, but I can accept it; and also be a little hopeful because there are volunteer outdoor groups operating in the area who might be able to maintain some trails (they already maintain cross country ski trail just outside the park entrance).

However this gigantic bait-and-switch just is no way to manage the situation.


[ Parent ]
I learned to swim there when I was 8.... (4.00 / 3)
...and brought my grandson there to hike up the creek just this past summer.

A pox upon those who bring these travails upon us....


It's worse than you think it is (4.00 / 1)
I've been doing a lot of research over the past two weeks, digging through all the budget information.  Yes, I'm planning a diary about it. :)  This is just a small sliver of what's really going on.  OPRHP is looking at major cuts, which yes, means that parks will be closing.  As bad as that is, it's been a long-standing problem.  They've added parks to the system over the past 15 years, but their budget hasn't come close to the need to staff and maintain them.  That's getting the big cuts too.  

Then, if you look at who runs the other park system, DEC, you see an equally bleak figure.  There are some big personnel and budget cuts in their Division of Operations.  Why is that important?  Operations is the division that runs the DEC campgrounds and maintains the trails and wilderness camping areas.  They're going to close the Interpretive Centers as well.  I know they've cut back trail maintenance a lot over the past decade, and it's not going to be pretty.  The campgrounds will still be open, but if there's something (and there is) falling apart or needing replacement, it's going to fall apart and not be replaced.  There's already one campground which, for all intents and purposes has been permanently closed (Poke-o-Moonshine), and another which is closed "this year" - read forever.  


Haven't you heard? (4.00 / 2)
The part of DEC that is being beefed is the mineral-extraction regulators.  Our DEC land (and even some of our State Park land-- like Allegeny) is being leased to natural gas companies at a fever pitch.  Large swaths of upstate NY, including the parkland, is being transformed from a beautiful ag and resource rich area in which many enjoyed pleasant residences, lovely tourist amenities, and vast wild areas.... into a natural gas sacrifice area. The water and air quality will be ruined for scores of generations.  But, this makes little difference, apparently, to Paterson, who believes that nothing west of the Hudson Valley is inhabited by actual humans worth consideration.

We are fast on our way to becoming West Virginia in some parts of this state.


[ Parent ]
More personal connection! (4.00 / 1)
My father supported my family through 30 years of work as a DEC aquatic entymologist (read: water-bug science guy) in the Stream Biomonitoring Unit.  He's only just retired.

Boy did he have some words to say about DEC penny-pinching at the retirement party, thanks in part to the supply of fine brew available at the Albany Pump Station.

It used to be they had the budget to send guys like my father out to talk to school children about the importance of environmental conservation - the "EC" in "DEC."  And he let them have it because now the budget is so tight (read: taxes on those who could afford it are too low!) that he and his team were unable to go out and talk to kids about preserving natural beauty.

Robinia's highlight of the real money-grubbing of the DEC is just as timely.

It all boils down tho this: we have to start taxing in accordance with our spending.  There are hundreds of Wall Street tycoons who are still making out great in this rececession.  And by "making out" I mean "sucking face."


[ Parent ]
I have a personal connection as well (4.00 / 1)
Besides having worked on DEC campgrounds in the past, my father was a DEC campground supervisor for several years during my childhood, and a lot of other members of my family have worked on them as well.  It's actually harder to find someone in my town who hasn't worked for DEC at some point than to find people who have.  

Most of the men around my age remember their first summer job out of high school was working on one of the trail crews.  Plural.  Last year, there was a trail crew, and it consisted of three people.  One of whom was the supervisor, and he just retired.  They're responsible for over 160 miles of trail, plus various camping spots along them.  It doesn't take much thinking to realize how bad things are going to get on those trails.   Another friend of mine retired early last year. He was the Operations supervisor for this area, the person responsible for over half of this county and a third of another.  The maintenance on four wilderness areas, a huge number of wilderness camping sites, all the trails, 10 campgrounds, and the ECO's and Forest Ranger's equipment were under him.  He hasn't been replaced, they dropped it off on another supervisor, who was responsible for all the campgrounds.  He's quite willing to point out that when he retired, he had a third of the personnel that he'd had when he started.  There have been a couple of other retirements in that crew since then, and they haven't been (and probably aren't going to) be replaced.  

I also know many of the people who work on the campgrounds, and they're all stressed out of their minds.  Staffing has been cut, hours have been cut, programs have been cut, supplies have been cut back, and they're not getting the maintenance support they used to.  One of them said to me that what they've been doing is holding things together with duct tape, and the state has just told them they can't buy duct tape.  


[ Parent ]
so... (0.00 / 0)
...why do we have two different agencies running the parks, again?

(I always having such trouble explaining this to people and I'm not sure I understand why, myself.)


[ Parent ]
History for one reason (0.00 / 0)
The Adirondack Park and the Catskills fall under the Dept. of Environmental Conservation.  That's been that way since virtually the creation of the parks.  DEC has been running campgrounds for over 90 years.  OPRHP is actually a newer organization, and it's responsible for everything outside of the Forest Preserve.  

Then you have the Olympic Regional Development Authority - they also have facilities, principally everything in Lake Placid, along with Gore Mountain ski resort.  There's also the trails and areas maintained by the Canal Authority.  

There are also some internal divisions.  Lands & Forests in DEC is responsible the wilderness camping sites and trails, while Operations is responsible for the campgrounds and day use areas.  

OPRHP is a year-round system, while DEC is mostly seasonal.  A Park Supervisor is a civil service slot, and works their park for the entire year.  A Conservation Recreation Facility Supervisor is a seasonal position, and only runs their campground/park while it's open, then they're let go.  


[ Parent ]
Save Thacher Park! (4.00 / 2)
I've got a large Facebook group going to save Thacher and we're  planning a protest for March 3rd at 9:30 AM outside the capitol building. I hope any of you who can will come! We're also going to be speaking with legislators, voicing our opposition and proposing other possible sources of funding for the park. To learn more and get up-to-the-minute information, come join: http://www.facebook.com/pages/...

We've also got a twitter group:
http://twitter.com/johnboydtha...

And an email:
savejohnboydthacher@gmail.com

Hope to see you there!

-Anni P. Murray


question (4.00 / 1)
If Thacher Park doesn't get closed, doesn't that mean that some other park elsewhere in the state gets closed?

"Divide and conquer" ...

http://twentyfour01.com/nyco/2...


[ Parent ]
Pretty much, yes. (0.00 / 0)
Even if they're not closed, you're going to see serious cutbacks in hours and services at them.  This is a problem that's been building for years.  People really haven't noticed it until now, but the park systems in this state have been operating on an austerity budget for a long time.  Now they're moving from "austerity" to "starvation."  

[ Parent ]
what happens (0.00 / 0)
to a closed state park?

Do you sell off the waterfalls and the lakes?

How do you keep people from trespassing on land which they've always been told is theirs?  (do you hire more park police?)

How do you unravel a massive, longterm experiment in public parkland?


[ Parent ]
HEY... (4.00 / 1)
Let's use closed state parks to move in vast, encamped armies of the unemployed this summer.  Tent cities were what it took to get federal unemployment insurance.... and homeless people need a place to camp...

[ Parent ]
that's called (0.00 / 0)
a "Rez" by our Haudenosaunee neighbors.  See where it got them.

[ Parent ]
Got a point there (0.00 / 0)
Sudden thought always gets me in trouble....

[ Parent ]
tent cities (4.00 / 1)
"Tent cities were what it took to get federal unemployment insurance..."

Tent cities were what it took to have WPA projects that created the state park infrastructure in the first place.


[ Parent ]
To answer your questions (4.00 / 1)
1) You don't or can't sell off the property
2) You won't be able to keep people off - particularly since you don't have as many park police as you used to.  

Quite frankly, what happens is that the place falls apart.  Buildings that are closed, bathrooms, plumbing, etc. - all the infrastructure, just starts decaying.  Eventually it'll fall down or have to be torn down.  Brush, grass, erosion just takes over.  People who trespass to use it will leave trash behind, cut down trees, leave waste or dig holes for it.  You'll have the occasional fire, from someone lighting one where they shouldn't, or left-over impromptu fire rings.  

I've seen it happen.  I used to work summers in state parks, and I know from experience that just getting one of them ready to open in the spring takes several weeks of work, to clean up what winter users have left, repair any winter damage, and get everything up and running.  Let it go for a few years, and you might just as well forget it ever was there.  


[ Parent ]
Or, in the case of Thacher: (4.00 / 1)
You will have dangerous geological portions of the park become a magnet for the suicidal.

When I worked at Thacher, it was a daily routine: before you leave, you check over to cliff to see if anybody jumped.

I wasn't at the park for long, so thankfully I didn't have to deal with this.  But just days after I left, they found two bodies.

And here's a more recent event of hiker's coming face to face with death by accidental means.

If you close Thacher, this sort of thing will skyrocket.  So where's the human compassion in this proposal?

It fell off a cliff.


[ Parent ]
NO. (4.00 / 3)
None of this is necessary.  We could simply repeal the Pataki income tax cuts that meant that the state never recovered, in places, from the damages of the over-extension of the budget to cope with the recession of the early 90s.  If we had the tax structure we used to have before Pataki rammed through tax cuts that exceeded all tax cuts made by all other states combined in the same period we could return to reasonable stewardship of our real estate, as well as pay for other needed services.

We should remember that those tax cuts were rammed with the mighty assist of crooked "theft of honest services" Bruno.

This is a rich state.  We should tax the people as we did back in the day when we paid most of our bills and did not live in a perpetual crisis of sell-off-the-assets.


[ Parent ]
The very worst (proposed) park closing (4.00 / 3)
John Brown Farm!  I could hardly believe it.  Grave site and monument to the famous abolitionist.  Site of the experimental subsistance farm for freed slaves.  Happy black history month, everybody.

Whoa. (4.00 / 1)
Agreed.  What's odd is that whenever I have visited the site there has never been any park staff to begin with. I guess not mowing the grass would save something, but I can't imagine this closure would create very much in the way of savings.

[ Parent ]
As I said above: (4.00 / 3)
I only highlighted Thacher because it is closest to home and it is what I know.  As a writer, I follow the maxim "Write what you know."

I only wish I knew everything, and especially wish I knew more about John Brown Farm.  Remember: this diary is a microcosmic example of the macrocosmic catostrophe this State under the duress of conservative financiering.

John Brown Farm too?  That man never stopped rolling in his grave.

How about this: we start turning the burial places of famous progressives into turbines to generate electricity?


[ Parent ]
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