Save the Shipley Nature Center
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NATURAL PERSPECTIVES
The annual budget now being drafted by Huntington Beach officials
is going to be a dreadful one. Major cuts are expected in all
departments. One of the proposed cuts is the city’s beloved Shipley
Nature Center. The proposal on the table now is to simply close the
door, padlock the gate, and shut it down completely.
Why is anything like this even being discussed? Once again, the
problem for municipalities and counties is state government. The
staggering state budget deficit has caused state government to draw
upon revenues that previously went to local government. Now our local
government “shares the pain” with the state government. Budget cuts
are the inevitable result.
Who’s at fault? The state legislators who voted for deregulation
of the electric power industry and threw California into chaos are
responsible. Catering to the energy giants has come back to bite us
again.
Unfortunately, local government is different from state or federal
government. Everything that local government does has some direct
benefit to our community. Unlike state government, we have no fat to
cut such as a million-dollar-per-year board to regulate dry cleaners.
When our town’s budget faces cuts, those cuts have to come from true
service-providing functions like police, fire, libraries and -- yes
-- Shipley Nature Center.
The sad thing is that the cost of operating the nature center is
mostly the salary of the city’s only full-time park ranger. His name
is Dave Winkler. He’s not just some anonymous statistic in a
computer-generated budget document. He’s a real, flesh-and-blood
person with a family and a long history -- more than 20 years -- of
service to the city.
What is it that he’s done for us all these years? For one thing,
he virtually single-handedly designed and laid out the plantings of
the nature center. He knows just about every individual tree in the
18-acre center. Over the years, he has led hundreds of tours through
the grounds of center, introducing nature to tens of thousands of
youngsters and college students.
Of even broader benefit to the community are his patrols of
Central Park. When he’s not giving tours, he drives around the miles
of park roads, providing an official presence in an area where
trouble does occur from time to time. Huntington Central Park is
mostly a safe, peaceful place for the public. One reason for that is
the presence of Ranger Winkler.
Besides the full-time ranger, the nature center budget includes
funds for some part-time staff and about $15,000 in supplies and
other costs associated with the small interpretive building inside
the fenced Shipley Nature Center. The current budget proposes
eliminating all of that to yield a cut of $116,955 per year.
This proposed cut would mean closing and locking the gates of the
Nature Center. This couldn’t come at a worse moment.
The city has recently embarked on a program of major improvements
to the center. Non-native vegetation in the form of giant reed
(Arundo donax), as well as tamarisk and other water-sucking plants,
had gradually taken over large areas within the center, as they have
many other places in Southern California.
The city recently hired contractors to remove much of this
vegetation. This has left several acres of ground bare. However, new
trees are going in during the fall planting season, which has just
started.
Ranger Winkler has coordinated a campaign of volunteers to tend
these areas and keep them weed-free until the newly planted native
trees can get successfully rooted. Closing the gates of the center
now will throw this major project into disarray and may make it
necessary to do much of this work over again. We’d end up spending
more in the long run than we would save now.
Shipley is operated under the auspices of the Community Services
Department. This department runs city parks, manages the lifeguard
program, and does a host of less obvious functions for the city.
Leaders of the department have a long record of creativity in
solving problems. In particular, they have found ways to charge fees
for city programs so that many of their functions pay their own way.
Charging fees for the tours at Shipley Nature Center could help to
defray its operating costs and ease the burden on taxpayers.
The late former Mayor Don Shipley worked long and hard to leave
the members of this community the fine nature center that bears his
name. Generations of children have learned to appreciate their
natural environment there. Untold numbers of people have enjoyed a
brief respite from their harried lives as they strolled under the
sycamores and pines, delighting in the splash of a mud slider or the
flit of a butterfly. Don’t let the Nature Center fall victim to
budget cuts.
* VIC LEIPZIG PhD and LOU MURRAY PhD are Huntington Beach
residents and environmentalists. They can be reached at
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