The Commercial Appeal

Pause in outsourcin­g of parks celebrated

- JAKE LOWARY

NASHVILLE - Rep. John Ray Clemmons and Sen. Lee Harris say the response from their statewide tour to gauge the interest and potential effect of privatizin­g the operations and management of state parks and facilties was overwhelmi­ng, even in rural parts of the state that consistent­ly vote against Democrats like them.

But what they’re calling a “very significan­t victory” is likely short-lived.

On Wednesday, Haslam put an indefinite hold on the privatizat­ion of management of Fall Creek Falls State Park, where he and his proposed budget have taken first aim at privatizat­ion. For a couple of years Haslam has pushed a sort of sidecar initiative to privatize the management of state facilities, including state parks, facilities at state-run colleges and universiti­es.

“We think it is — at least for now — the people back in charge of what we do with our public assets,” Harris said on Thursday.

Many saw the Fall Creek Falls privatizat­ion of concession facilities and renovation of the inn as a test to whether the measure could be scaled to all state parks or across the entirety of stateowned facilities.

Eric Ward, communicat­ions director for the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on, said a Request for Proposal submission deadline was postponed to make an amendment, which will be made public when the new RFP is issued.

Ward said he couldn’t legally disclose what the amendment was until it was made public.

Last year, the effort to privatize facilities management at colleges and universiti­es drew an outpour of criticism from state workers concerned they would see a reduction in pay, layoffs or loss of valuable state benefits.

Haslam pushed the effort as a measure to save the state money and a reduce the size and scope of government, both core Republican pillars.

Clemmons said that goal is noble — “government efficiency is a great aim,” he said — but he and Harris both suspect there was influencer­s behind Haslam’s idea that had a stake in the game and questioned the virtues of Haslam’s initiative.

“Before (the postponeme­nt), many of us believed that consultant­s were in charge of our cherished public assets,” Harris said.

Clemmons, of Nashville, and Harris, of Memphis, have toured the state to collect input from state workers “with an open mind.”

They said the response and feedback they got was overwhelmi­ngly opposed to what Haslam had proposed.

“What we heard, resounding­ly, is they’re understaff­ed, there’s no more room for cuts, they need extra funding, and they believe these jobs need to stay in control of state government,” Clemmons said.

But inclusions in Haslam’s proposed budget suggests a different direction. There’s a $10 million item deep in the 1,000-page document that indicates he wants to raze the inn at Henry Horton State Park, but there’s no accompanyi­ng item that would support the rebuilding of the inn. At least not by the state.

 ?? YALONDA M. JAMES, THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Black clergy hold hands in prayer during a meeting at LeMoyne-Owen College to issue a call to end black-on-black crime on Saturday.
YALONDA M. JAMES, THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Black clergy hold hands in prayer during a meeting at LeMoyne-Owen College to issue a call to end black-on-black crime on Saturday.

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