Lodi News-Sentinel

Libraries may lose free passes to California parks as budget deficit grows

- Lila Seidman

LOS ANGELES — As California faces a staggering budget deficit, library card holders may soon lose the ability to check out free passes to more than 200 state parks.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget for the upcoming year does not include funding for what’s known as the California State Library Parks Pass, which was launched two years ago to provide more equitable access to the outdoors. A survey of people who used the passes found the majority identified as low income and people of color.

If it ends, “it would be sad because obviously some of our patrons are really enjoying (the passes),” said Shellie Cocking, chief of collection­s and technical services at the San Francisco Public Library.

Passes, which provide free day-use parking at participat­ing parks, were checked out more than 2,500 times at San Francisco’s 28 branches since July 2022. The highest number of checkouts were made at the Main Library, near the notoriousl­y gritty Tenderloin

neighborho­od.

In April 2022, California State Library and California State Parks launched the threeyear pilot program that handed out the passes — hangtags that fit over a vehicle’s rearview mirror — to all public library branches across the state, including mobile libraries.

Cocking herself used a pass in the early days of the program to visit Hendy Woods, a state park

near Anderson Valley that is notable for its majestic old-growth redwood trees. Several families, including hers, went together and brought their kids.

“It’s a really different experience from San Francisco,” Cocking said. “It really gives kids a different view of the world, being able to connect to nature.”

California State Parks said in a statement that it was “very proud” of

the program, but did not indicate that a revised version of the budget arriving in May would include money to extend the program.

However, the department said it was “exploring potential partnershi­ps with park support organizati­ons to continue the California State Library Parks Pass where feasible.”

Omission of the funding arrives as the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e

Analyst’s Office projects a state budget shortfall of $73 billion — an estimate that has ballooned by $15 billion since last month.

The library parks pass and two other outdoor initiative­s were allocated one-time funding of $9.1 million for three years. The other initiative­s, however, remain funded and include free California State Park Adventure Passes for fourth-graders and their families, and Golden Bear Passes for families enrolled in CalWORKs, the state’s public assistance program.

With the library program in jeopardy, the California State Parks Foundation, a large advocacy group, has raised a battle cry to try to save it, writing to legislativ­e leaders and posting a petition that’s garnered 1,800 signatures.

Rachel Norton, executive director for the foundation, said funding for the project was a “drop in the bucket” relative to the state’s proposed $291.5-billion budget.

“This is just such a good program,” she said, “and it’s so inexpensiv­e in the context of the state budget that it seems crazy that you wouldn’t keep doing it.”

A survey of the program released in October, which was administer­ed by State Parks and supported by the foundation, found 63% of participan­ts considered cost to be their main reason for not having visited state parks previously.

Nearly 70% of the survey’s respondent­s reported an income of $60,000 or less and more than 63% indicated that they are BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, people of color).

 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Low clouds hug the coastline at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park in California’s Big Sur.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES Low clouds hug the coastline at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park in California’s Big Sur.

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