Higher fees at beaches and parks are taxing
DANETTE GOULET
What comes out of taxpayers wallets and goes to the state?
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger promised no new taxes, but budget cuts
have forced the fees at state beaches and parks to double for the
second year in a row.
Arnold didn’t mention that when he was strolling the pier, now did
he?
Anyone who uses Huntington and Bolsa Chica state beaches may want
to go get an annual pass, at the already inflated price of $67,
before July 1, when that price goes up to $125. Although $67 sounds
steep, the daily rates will also be leaping up to $12 a day, so even
if you’re not a surfer -- just someone who likes to enjoy the beach a
handful of times in the summer -- you’ll save money by purchasing the
annual pass.
Two years ago, an annual pass was $35, and a day pass was $3 per
car. In July those numbers will have swelled to $125 and $12. That is
an astronomical increase in just two years.
I complained two years ago when the city hiked its annual pass to
$125 and fees up to $9. That $9 is starting to look good. That annual
pass also goes down every three months or so. I never thought I’d see
the day it would be cheaper to go to the city beach.
As taxpayers, we already pay for the maintenance and upkeep of our
state parks and beaches. Most of us didn’t balk at paying a nominal
fee to go to that public taxpayer-owned beach, but now it’s getting
ridiculous.
This isn’t a theme park, it’s California’s coast. We don’t go to
the beach for the amenities, we go for the sand and surf, which was
put there by Mother Nature. I don’t know about everyone else, but I
don’t need a paved parking lot, a path or even plumbing. Give me a
free natural setting any day, and I’ll surf and swim at my own risk.
While it is far too late to go for natural, if you need to raise
taxes, raise them. Don’t tell us there will be no new taxes but fees
will go sky-high. It’s dishonest. A fee paid by a California resident
and taxpayer to use state-owned, taxpayer-funded area might as well
be a tax, no matter what Arnold and his team of spinmeisters call it.
The hiked fees are outrageous. A day at the beach should not cost
$12. The beach should be for everyone.
Huntington Beach is the second most popular California state park,
with about 3.7-million visitors annually. At $12 a pop, Huntington
would be bringing in more than $44 million alone. Where exactly is
that money going?
I have no problem chipping in to keep our state beaches and parks
open and beautiful, but c’mon.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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