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CRWA Opposes Cutback of
Parks' Funding
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April
30, 2004
CITIZENS
OUTRAGED OVER HOUSE BUDGET FOR PARKS
Boston,
MA.....This week, advocates for the Commonwealth’s parks
system delivered three hundred and fifty signed postcards to Senate
President Robert Travaglini, urging him to work with his colleagues to
develop a budget in the Senate that more effectively funds parks and
recreation. The House budget
slashed funding for the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR),
which manages all of the state’s parklands, by 8% in 2005, bringing the
overall decrease to 37% over the last four years.
“The people of Massachusetts were promised a ‘world-class parks
system,’ and we now have the management structure and leadership to
achieve that. But if it
isn’t funded properly, then we’ll kill any possibility for meeting
that goal,” said CRWA Executive Director Bob Zimmerman.
“That pledge doesn’t mean anything if funding continues to be
cut at such an extraordinary rate.”
The Massachusetts House of Representatives proposed a budget of $67.2
million for DCR for 2005, down from $73.0 million in 2004.
Additional new costs to operate zoos and lease office space mean
that DCR needs $80 million to remain level funded in 2005. Spending on parks and recreation has already been cut $33.8
million since 2001 when the former Metropolitan District Commission, or
MDC, and Department of Environmental Maangement, or DEM, were allotted
$106.8 for the year.
The Charles River Watershed Association (CRWA) combined forces with many
groups, including the Metropolitan Parklands Coalition and the Forest and
Parks Partnership, to advocate for level funding for parks and recreation.
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