Advertisement
Page 1 of 2 1 2 Last
Results 1 to 10 of 13

Thread: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

  1. #1
    Senior elmariachi's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    West Covina, CA
    Miles
    276

    Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    Interseting article in the L.A. Times about OHV funds being hidden an not used for OHV activities in the California

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,3856220.story


    latimes.com
    Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund
    Tense relationship between park conservationists and recreation advocates is further strained by the discovery of a surplus hidden partly in an off-roading fund.
    By Chris Megerian and Anthony York, Los Angeles Times

    July 27, 2012


    SACRAMENTO -- The accounting scandal that forced the ouster of the California state parks director and her chief deputy has highlighted a long-standing rift over off-roading on public land.

    The culture clash has pitted conservationists against drivers of dirt bikes and dune buggies, who have tangled over how to spend more than $100 million set aside to buy and manage land for off-road vehicles. That fund is where state accountants found more than half of a $54-million hidden surplus, the revelation that sparked the ongoing scandal.

    Why the money went unnoticed for at least 12 years and whether it was intentionally hidden remains under investigation. But a former chair of the state commission that oversees off-road vehicle parks and advises how the money is spent said he wasn't surprised to find the fund playing a starring role in yet another controversy.

    "Parks has a culture of preservation as opposed to recreation," said Eric Lueder, who was removed from the Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Commission by a state Senate committee earlier this month. "They don't want people using the land unless they're hiking or bird watching."

    Elizabeth Goldstein, president of the California State Parks Foundation, a nonprofit advocacy group, said no one is trying to slight off-roaders.

    "We do not pick between our children here," she said. "This is a great park system because it's responsive to many different audiences."

    The Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Division is one part of the state parks department, focused on eight of California's 279 state parks that have been set aside for such vehicles. That includes more than 80,000 acres of desert in San Diego and Imperial counties and more than 1,300 acres of hilly dirt trails in San Joaquin and Alameda counties.

    The off-road parks are funded out of the Off-Highway Vehicle Trust Fund, and state auditors have warned over the years that park officials were mismanaging that money. At one point officials earmarked $38 million to purchase properties that a 2005 audit said offered "little or no additional OHV recreation." The state didn't end up buying much of the land.

    In December, Gov. Jerry Brown upset off-road advocates by removing the program's high-profile director, Daphne Greene, who was viewed as their community's champion within an unfriendly parks department.

    Tensions have surrounded the off-road program since it was created in 1971 in an effort to manage off-road recreation and protect and restore parklands. Environmental advocates have long contended that the program received too much money and that its leadership refused to allocate money for conservation.

    "There's always been huge reserves because they have more money than they can spend," said Karen Schambach, the California director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. But the program's directors "were just adamant that the fund not be used for projects that didn't benefit dirt bikes and ATVs."

    The off-road fund is one of several dedicated funds routinely targeted by state lawmakers as they try to balance the state's books in lean budget times. There are $133 million in loans from the last three years still outstanding, according to Brown's Department of Finance.

    "We have served as the slush fund more times than I can tell you," said Amy Granat, managing director for the California Off-Road Vehicle Assn.

    Granat, who enjoys the outdoors via off-road vehicle because a rare disease has made it difficult for her to walk, said off-roaders feel like second-class citizens in the parks system.

    "Frankly, they treated us very unfairly," Granat said. "They did not treat us with the respect that is due hardworking, taxpaying California citizens."

    In 2010, $21 million was borrowed from the fund. This year Democratic lawmakers wanted another $21 million to be available for other parks, but Brown reduced the amount to $7 million.

    The accounting scandal at the parks department has been an embarrassment for Brown's administration, which had said the state was too broke to continue funding some 70 state parks, setting off a scramble by local communities to raise cash from foundations, wealthy donors, even bake sales. The hidden surplus was more than twice the amount needed to keep all 70 of the parks open another year.

    The director, Ruth Coleman, resigned July 20, although she denied knowing about the hidden surplus. Coleman's deputy, Michael Harris, was removed from his post when Coleman resigned, and the department's top lawyer, Ann Malcolm, left her post on Wednesday. An interim director, Janelle Beland, is in charge.

    State Sen. Joseph Simitian (D-Palo Alto), who incurred the wrath of off-roaders this year when he eyed their funding to support other parks, said the next round of leadership will face a steep challenge in navigating the concerns of environmentalists and off-roaders.

    Said Simitian, "Whoever the next parks director is has their work cut out for them to improve the working relationship between the factions in the parks world."

    [email protected]

    [email protected]


    Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times

  2. # ADS
    Circuit advertisement
    Join Date
    Always
    Location
    Advertising world
    Miles
    Many

    Membership in the largest desert racing community has its advantages

    - Participate in Forum Discussions
    - Send and Receive Private Messages
    - Maintain Public Photo Albums
    - Access to Groups
    - User Profile in our Social Network
    - Increased Access to more Sub Forums
    - Reduced Online Advertisements

    Join our community today

     

  3. #2
    RDC's resident crackpot
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    The Cloud
    Miles
    10,117

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    "Eric Lueder, who was removed from the Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Commission by a state Senate committee earlier this month."

    Why? On what legal grounds?
    Hey! You kids!! Get OFF my driveway!!! If you can't go away happy, just go away!

  4. #3
    RDC's resident crackpot
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    The Cloud
    Miles
    10,117

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    It would be interesting if a critical mass at say, Glamis, practiced civil disobedience and refused to comply with the law.

    What would a few BLM rangers, and the ICSO, do when faced with 110, 000 potential arrestees and a similar number of vehicle impoundments to handle?

    If they didn't enforce the law, could anyone cited later or elsewhere claim selective enforcement and press a claim against the agency responsible?
    Hey! You kids!! Get OFF my driveway!!! If you can't go away happy, just go away!

  5. #4
    Forum Junkie steveG's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Arroyo Grande, CA
    Miles
    1,958

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    A caravan of a few thousand off-road cars, trucks and bikes all the way to Sacto would be cool.
    I know a little German... he's sitting over there.
    GoFastBroncos.com

  6. #5
    RDC's resident crackpot
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    The Cloud
    Miles
    10,117

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    Quote Originally Posted by steveG View Post
    A caravan of a few thousand off-road cars, trucks and bikes all the way to Sacto would be cool.
    HA camped out and got the helmet law repealed back in the day, IIRC.
    Hey! You kids!! Get OFF my driveway!!! If you can't go away happy, just go away!

  7. #6
    Ironman Ramsey_ElWardani's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Carlsbad, CA
    Miles
    5,273

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    Occupy Glamis!
    Ramsey El Wardani
    Smarter Than Dirt!
    One Man Racing

  8. #7
    Senior
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    independence, ca
    Miles
    291

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    Quote Originally Posted by Ol' Curmudgeon View Post
    "Eric Lueder, who was removed from the Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Commission by a state Senate committee earlier this month."

    Why? On what legal grounds?
    I think it was cuz he had bad breath.....if you look at the Cal off-highway commission page, he is no longer listed there...Listerine saves!

  9. #8
    Senior
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    independence, ca
    Miles
    291

    the plot thickens:

    the plot thickens:

  10. #9
    Senior
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    independence, ca
    Miles
    291

    the plot thickens

    California parks department probes alleged destruction of records
    By MATT WEISER
    The Sacramento Bee
    Published: Friday, Oct. 5, 2012 - 1:00 am
    SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- The California Department of Parks and Recreation is investigating whether crucial records were destroyed by officials at Ocotillo Wells State Vehicular Recreation Area, an off-roading park in the desert east of San Diego.

    Richard Stapler, a spokesman for the California Natural Resources Agency, which oversees the state parks department, confirmed that an investigation is under way at Ocotillo Wells. He also said a new superintendent, Kent Gresham, was put in charge of Ocotillo Wells on Thursday.

    "This has all happened just in the past 24 hours," Stapler said Friday.

    State officials declined to give further details Friday, citing the ongoing investigation.

    But an administration official who was briefed on the Ocotillo investigation told The Sacramento Bee that it concerned the unauthorized destruction of documents. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter.

    The official said that Kathy Dolinar, park superintendent at Ocotillo Wells, was placed on "administrative time off" as of Thursday. In addition, another employee, the park's administrative officer, had been previously reassigned.

    The Bee was unable to reach Dolinar for comment.

    The investigation was reportedly sparked when, about two weeks ago, custodial staff at Ocotillo Wells found bags of shredded documents in a trash bin and alerted headquarters officials. Destruction of documents would violate a department-wide directive in July ordering parks employees to preserve all records for a larger investigation into financial misconduct.

    The episode marks the latest fallout from a scandal in which the state parks department was found in July to have hidden $54 million in two park operating funds. For reasons that remain under investigation, the parks department kept the money secret for years by reporting false balances to the state Department of Finance.

    Parks director Ruth Coleman resigned as the scandal unfolded. Numerous other parks officials were either fired or demoted. Separate investigations are under way by the state auditor and attorney general's office.

    Ocotillo Wells is the largest of eight off-roading parks operated by the state Department of Parks and Recreation. Over the past year, the park has also been the source of sexual harassment complaints filed by employees against park supervisors, and a whistleblower complaint alleging that supervisors refused to uphold environmental laws to protect wildlife and habitat.

    http://www.sacbee.com/2012/10/05/488...t-probes.html#

  11. #10
    Elite TomJeeps's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Outer Rim Territory's, Wild Space
    Miles
    594

    Re: Much of hidden state park cash was in controversial off-road fund

    Shredded documents in a Dumpster at a Government Agency does raise eyebrows, problem is anyone could have put them their from someone moving and out of places to throw trash, or some activist looking to cause a distraction. Wonder how much of our tax money will get waisted on this one, yes the drama will never end...TJ
    WWW.TEAMSTEALTH.ORG Noise issue information.
    WWW.OHMVR.COM Total Off Road Recreation!

Similar Threads

  1. Who wants to make some cash and take a road trip?
    By D4D in forum Whatever - General Discussion
    Replies: 27
    Last Post: August 12th, 2010, 13:40
  2. California state park reservations.
    By sparkypyro in forum Whatever - General Discussion
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: July 28th, 2010, 15:25
  3. CBD Campaign for no Offroad in A.Borrego State Park
    By baja619 in forum Save the Desert
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: January 5th, 2009, 10:08

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •