50 ideas to fix Michigan
Fund state parks with $10 surcharge
The Detroit News is highlighting ideas from various groups to promote discussion on reform, restructuring government and the economy.
Fund state parks with $10 surcharge
Idea 46: Shift financing of state parks to an optional $10 surcharge or "park passport" for vehicle registration.
Why: State parks attract 22 million visitors a year and generate $600 million in economic activity, but receive no state funding this year. The $6 daily permits and $24 annual window stickers are not generating enough money -- $11.7 million this year -- to deal with a park system that has a $341 million backlog of repairs for buildings, roads, water and sewer lines. Without action, the director of the state Department of Natural Resources expects to close some parks next year.
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Benefits: Since the surcharge would be $14 less than an annual sticker, more residents would buy it. If a quarter of Michigan's car owners pay the surcharge, it would net the parks an additional $6 million a year, estimates the Senate Fiscal Agency. If half opt in, $26 million more would be raised. Residents could more easily enter 98 state parks and recreation areas for a cheaper price.
How: Pass legislation eliminating the daily entry fee and annual pass and creating the optional surcharge. Out-of-state visitors would still pay an $8 daily entry fee or $29 for an annual pass. The state Senate has already done this.
Obstacles: Transportation funding advocates see this as encroaching on the use of vehicle registration to fund road and highway improvements. The Democratic-controlled state House and Lt. Gov. John Cherry want to automatically charge car owners $10 for parks -- putting the burden on unwilling vehicle owners to opt out on their registration paperwork.
Source: State Sen. Patricia Birkholz,
R-Saugatuck





