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Butts: A letter to the governor PDF Print E-mail
Written by Leona Butts   
Sunday, 13 January 2008

Dear Gov. Schwarzenegger,


I have reviewed your address to Californians and your proposals to balance the budget. It seems strange that when there is legislation already in place that the representative members in Sacramento cannot work within those laws, but leave it to you to propose drastic budget cuts.


My concern is whether or not you understand the consequences of your actions in proposing the closing of California State Parks.


Parks belong to the people. Parks are very much a part of our educational system. Parks are a resource for senior citizens. Parks are for family recreation. Parks are where people across the nation and those from foreign countries learn about our cultural history and our national resources. Parks impact health by giving people a safe place for exercise and spiritual rejuvenation. Parks have a crucial economic impact on the areas where they are located.


Through American Disabilities Act, California parks were required to add new trails, boardwalks and restroom facilities for people with disabilities and now you propose closing these very areas to them. This is absurd and hypocritical.


For example, consider the two state parks, Anderson Marsh Historic State Park (AMHSP) and Clear Lake State Park (CLSP), in the County of Lake where I live.


An abbreviated history of these two parks adds to the appreciation of them. In 1885, AMHSP was part of a large cattle ranch with some cultivate acreage. From that date, it passed through the Anderson family until 1964, when the surviving members of the Anderson family formed a Family Trust and sold the ranch to Ray Lyons. Mora Anderson, last surviving member of the original family, continued living in the ranch house per a life estate agreement until her death in 1966. In 1982, Lyons sold the ranch to the State of California. In 1985, the ranch lands were classified as Anderson Marsh State Historic Park. The ranch house is well maintained and is open for tours and special events. It exemplifies the remarkable early history of the area.


The recent history of Clear Lake State Park begins in 1944 with the desire of Fred and Nellie Dorn that the public should have a park on the shore of Clear Lake. That resulted in their gift of land to Lake County. Through several processes, the State of California accepted approximately 300 acres from the county and began development of CLSP in 1948. Today there are numerous trails, 147 campsites, a boat launch and a visitor center with a natural history museum, gift shop, auditorium and the administrative office for both parks. Many park users have been coming to CLSP, with their families, for over 30 years.


Both of these parks are used extensively by the Lake County school systems for environmental education for their students. Junior Ranger programs serve the summer visitors to the park as well as resident children. These are opportunities for learning that do not exist within the doors of the schools. Campfire programs by the Park Rangers educate and entertain all ages.


Both of these parks have non-profit Interpretive Associations whose members staff the ranch house and the natural history museum and gift shop, lead walks, and present specialized programs for children and adults. Without compensation, the associations and docents assist with student education and present nature related programs to civic groups throughout the year. These volunteers are not unique, as they join with 26,000 park volunteers within California.


Two major events take place each year. The Anderson Marsh Historic State Park Bluegrass Festival takes place in the fall. The Heron Festival - Wildflower Brunch takes place in April in Clear Lake State Park. It is co-sponsored by local Redbud Audubon Chapter and the Clear Lake State Park Interpretive Association (CLSPIA). Many other events are hosted throughout the year.


CLSPIA is currently raising funds to build an Education Pavilion in the Clear Lake State Park.


The Anderson Marsh Interpretive Association is drawing plans for a discovery facility at that location. These associations also fund the gift shops and additions to the visitor center museum.


You are probably already well aware that understaffed and underpaid Park Rangers are also law enforcement officers and faithfully provide safety for all who enter the parks?


Governor, I believe it would be very short sighted for California to close any of its state parks. You say we have 37 million people now in the state and estimate that in twenty years there will be 50 million. Please weigh carefully the educational, health and recreational value of our state parks. Rather than closing parks, parks should be given more funds so that they can meet the ever-growing population and needs of Californians. The cost of closure, repair and reopening would be enormous.


If California would stop rewarding illegals with housing, medical care, education and food, I truly believe that the State of California would find enough money to balance the budget. Please explain why taxes from legal hard-working citizens should go for services for illegals while such things as education and parks suffer severe budget cuts and closures.


From Federation for American Immigration Reform: Analysis of the latest Census data indicates that California’s illegal immigrant population is costing the state’s taxpayers more than $10.5 billion per year for education, medical care and incarceration. Even if the estimated tax contributions of illegal immigrant workers are subtracted, net outlays still amount to nearly $9 billion per year. The annual fiscal burden from those three areas of state expenditures amounts to about $1,183 per household headed by a native-born resident. A huge amount of money earned by illegal immigrants is being sent directly to their relatives in Mexico every month.


I respectfully request that you withdraw your proposal to close California State Parks.


Leona Butts is a member of the Clear Lake State Park Interpretive Association Board of Directors. She lives in Clearlake Oaks.


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Comments
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smurf - non-linear thoughts R' us! Registered | 01-14-2008 11:18:03
we are losing our parks because of Mexicans? No, it couldn't be because virtually every state run program is awash in waste and sloth that has been institutionalized by the democratic party-who are the real culprits in the budget mess. proof of this is in the dem's support of the high-speed rail project, a huge boondoggle that solves a problem that doesn't exist using money we don't have at a time when we need to find ways to save instead of spend. Dumb and dumber (Pat & Patty) confirmed the above when they wrote their responses to the governor, lots of whining and no good ideas on where to get the cash needed to fund all the programs they've dreamed-up and then lost track of.

Arnold is using the "close the parks" threat to get people's attention, every reality-based person knows it was done for effect and that closing parks is not on the table. But hey, let's blame the hardest working lowest paid non-white members of our society, since they don't vote or fund political campaigns. The real problem is CalTrans, the dept. of ed, DWR, DFG, etc., and their enablers like Berg and Wiggins.
taxismom - perfect - blame the immigrants Registered | 01-14-2008 11:24:07
[i]
The people who are to blame for this state of affairs are the chowderheads who put this plastic action figure in Sacramento in the first place...[/i]

cross posted comment on this article
http://lakeconews.com/content/view/2892/742/


A personal thanks must go out to every single mouth breathing knucklehead in california
who first of all, in 2003, swallowed hook line and sinker the bait that was rigged so skillfully and twitched in front of their noses,
that put a recall on the ballot and gave us this deluded, self serving corporatist of an executive leader in California.
Here are the relevant october 2003 results for Lake County
Recall question
Yes -9,799
No - 8,149
Governor
Bustamente - 5137
Schwarzenegger - 8,003
http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/sov/2003_special/contents.htm

I would further like to acknowledge those knuckleheads and all the rest of the of the sheep who carried this disaster forward in November of 2006 and pulled the lever for, and are now personally responsible for this craptacular state of affairs we now find ourselves in.
Here are the november 2006 voter turnout stats for lake county
Angelides - 7,031
Schwarzenegger - 10,930
Noonan - 255
Camejo - 615
Olivier - 323
Jordan - 275
http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/sov/2006_general/contents.htm

So it appears that cud chewing ovines, who dont have enough sense to be able to tell the difference between an action figure and a thinking human being, and sadly walk among us here in Lake County are in the majority....
Thanks again to spineless Democrats, who want to 'get along' and 'be polite'.
Elections have consquences...and here they are in spades.

[u]If anybody thinks this has anything to do with raising taxes you havent been paying attention (color me amazed)

Please pick up the clue phone......massive privatization is going to be proposed.[/u]
An extra special hat tip to all the Grover Norquist enablers out there, we are now officially drowning.

Getting all excised over the state park closure proposal is the first step, and a nice diversion for our anger but I would submit to you that services to our families, funds for our first responders, monies for infrastructure and resource delivery,
the care of sick, our elderly and the education of our children from pre-school to post secondary will all be on the auction block in the upcoming months.
Watch for calls for more 'charter schools', the privatization of Healthy Families, Medi-cal services, CalWorks, and on and on all as a sop to our corporate masters.
We will be faced with no win choices - hand our services and infrastructure and public spaces over to profit making entities or do without - oh yeah I forgot, ownership society ---- we're on our own.


For anyone attending any upcoming BOS meetings, bringing a gas mask is recommended.
The quantities of noxious fumes that will be spewing from the lips of our three favorite triangulators,from Dist 1,2 and 4, and our 'get the government off my back' neanderthal who represents district 5, as they try to position themselves on the decisions that will have to be made this year, two of whom will be shoring up re-election bids, will measure off the charts.

My personal thanks again to every one of those four, who worked hard to alienate our state legislators in 2005 by voting to send a 'no confidence' letter to Assemblywoman Berg and then State Senator Chesbro. If we expect advocacy in Sacramento, this does not appear to be the best course of action

june 2005
http://tiny.cc/MBNLmc
july 2005
http://tiny.cc/w59g5

Is there any wonder as to why we get no respect in Sacramento?


--
Donna Christopher - Closing our two Author | 01-14-2008 18:10:06
state parks is a diversionary tactic, when you see what else the Governator has in store for us you may well want to sneak into Mexico. I guess the upside for those worried about illegals sucking up resources their not entitled to (I tend to be one of them) is pretty soon there will be no resources for no body no matter where your from or why your here. How do you say 'we're soooo screwed' in spanish?
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