List Item

Each year the Catskill Park Coalition gathers in Albany to meet with legislators to discuss the urgent needs of the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. This annual Catskill Park Awareness Day event last year generated an historic line item for the region under New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Aid to Localities budget.

05

List item

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

List Item

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Bedford V2 kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities.

Catskill Park
Awareness Day 2017

February
9
9
2016
9
00
am
4
00
pm
February
9
2016
4
00
pm
Date TBD
Meeting Room 5, Empire State Plaza
NYS Capitol / Legislative Office Building
Albany
NY
12224
LOCATION TBD
RSVPs Closed
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay

Welcome to Catskill Park Awareness Day 2016

Help build a modern park

Each year the Catskill Park Coalition gathers in Albany to meet with legislators to discuss the urgent needs of the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. This annual Catskill Park Awareness Day event last year generated an historic line item for the region under New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Aid to Localities budget.

#CatskillPark
AwarenessDay

osted by Your Company

Contact your state representative today and ask them to support the Catskills with a $1M line item in the DEC Aid to Localities budget, and a fully funded $300M Environmental Protection Fund budget, as proposed by Governor Cuomo!

Click Below To Contact Your State Assembly And Senate Rep Today!

SAMPLE LETTER IN SUPPORT OF THE CATSKILLS

OR Click here to Sign our online petition!


Team Leader Trainings

Join the Catskill Park Coalition for a series of team leader trainings in January, hosted by the Catskill Center. These trainings are geared towards folks interested in leading a group of volunteers thru the New York State Capitol and Legislative Office Building for appointments with legislators to HELP BUILD A MODERN PARK! 

 
All trainings are optional. For more information contact Erik Johanson, 845.586.2611 or ejohanson@catskillcenter.org. 

 

SATURDAY

January 9th at 11 am

Catskill Center

43355 Route 28

Arkville, NY 12406

WEDNESDAY

January 13th at 11 am

Catskill Center

43355 Route 28

Arkville, NY 12406

WEDNESDAY

January 20th at 6 pm

Catskill Center

43355 Route 28

Arkville, NY 12406

TEAM LEADER TRAININGS

Join the Catskill Park Coalition for a series of team leader trainings in January, hosted by the Catskill Center. These trainings are geared towards folks interested in leading a group of volunteers thru the New York State Capitol and Legislative Office Building for appointments with legislators o HELP BUILD A MODERN PARK! 

 
All trainings Are optional. For more information contact Erik Johanson, 845.586.2611 or ejohanson@catskillcenter.org. 

 

01

Quick Solutions

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

02

Fast and Easy

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

03

Clean and Simple

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

04

Ready to Go

Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

TEAM LEADER TRAININGS

Join the Catskill Park Coalition for a series of team leader trainings in January, hosted by the Catskill Center. These trainings are geared towards folks interested in leading a group of volunteers thru the New York State Capitol and Legislative Office Building for appointments with legislators to HELP BUILD A MODERN PARK! 


All trainings are optional. For more information contact Erik Johanson, 845.586.2611 or ejohanson@catskillcenter.org. 


Quick Solutions

Each year the Catskill Park Coalition gathers in Albany to meet with legislators to discuss the urgent needs of the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. This annual Catskill Park Awareness Day event last year generated an historic line item for the region under New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Aid to Localities budget.

List Item

Each year the Catskill Park Coalition gathers in Albany to meet with legislators to discuss the urgent needs of the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. This annual Catskill Park Awareness Day event last year generated an historic line item for the region under New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Aid to Localities budget.

2016 Catskill Park Awareness Day Priority Requests


SUPPORT FOR A $300M ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION FUND
We request support for a $300M EPF as proposed in the Executive Budget.


CATSKILL PARK FUNDING - PLANNING, INFRASTRUCTURE MAINTENANCE AND IMPROVEMENTS, COMMUNITY GRANTS
We request continued support for the creation of a $4M line item in the expanded Environmental Protection Fund for the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve; and an ongoing Catskills line item in the DEC Aid to Localities budget of $500K for planning, infrastructure maintenance and improvements, smart growth community grants, and stewardship activities throughout the Catskill Park.


NYS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION FOREST RANGER AND DIVISION OF LANDS & FORESTS SUPPORT
We request continued support for Forest Ranger academies to fill vacancies and the expansion of the budget for DEC Division of Lands & Forests to provide the ability to properly manage and oversee the Catskill Park.


CATSKILL INTERPRETIVE CENTER IMPROVEMENTS AND SUPPORT
We request support for capital projects (pavilion, amphitheater, fire tower, trails, solar arrays, electric vehicle charging stations) at the Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center as well as operational support and funding to grow visitorship and increase visitor services offered at the Catskill Interpretive Center, the Gateway to the Catskill Park.


PRIORITY LAND ACQUISITION
We request an increase in the EPF for land acquisition and your support for priority land acquisition projects to knit public lands for more recreational opportunities and increase access in the Catskills.


SUPPORT FOR PARK STEWARDSHIP PROGRAMS
We request greater support and growth of public/private stewardship partnerships such as the Catskill Conservation Corps, the Catskill Summit Stewards program, Fire Tower Stewards program, and the Catskill Regional Invasive Species Partnership (CRISP) to counteract resource degradation from increased visitorship and invasive species.  We also suggest the state more strongly support invasive species work that can prevent the spread of new invasive species through state strike teams in the Catskills.



ABOUT THE CATSKILL PARK COALITION CatskillParkCoalition.org               

 

The idea of the Coalition is the outgrowth of efforts by the Catskill Center for Conservation and Development, Catskill Mountainkeeper and Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) to seek additional resources for the Park. In the 2013 legislative session the Catskill Center, Catskill Mountain Club, and NY/NJ Trail Conference tested the waters in Albany through an “awareness day” of meetings with key state legislators about the need to increase funding for the Park. A DEC commitment to construct a larger building in the first phase of the Catskill Park Interpretive Center was one of the group’s accomplishments from that day. The success of this first trip to Albany showed that there needed to be a broader, longer-term campaign to try to advocate for increased funding for the Park and for a dedicated Catskill group to speak on the Park’s behalf. The Catskill Park Coalition, an alliance of like-minded groups working together toward this goal.


Coalition Structure and Members

The Coalition is guided by a five-member steering committee with representatives from the Catskill Center, Catskill Mountainkeeper, NRDC, Catskill Mountain Club, and Catskill Heritage Alliance. Members consist of a wide array of local, regional, state, and national groups with a Catskill focus: the environment, tourism, community revitalization, culture and the arts, and agriculture, to name just a few areas. We look forward over time to the membership both growing and taking up leadership for specific issues that arise from a broad consensus on what issues the Coalition should advocate for. 

A vision for the Catskill Park


 

We applaud Senators Seward and Amedore for taking up our cause to build a modern park by developing the first line item in the state budget, through the Department of Environmental Conservation’s Aid to Localities budget, establishing a $500,000 line for the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. This state support will help us break through a backlog of public access and stewardship enhancement projects, promote the park and support permanent sustainable jobs in our region. We thank the senators for their strong support to help us build a modern park.

We also wish to express deep gratitude towards Governor Cuomo for his support of a fully funded Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) budgeted at $300 million. We strongly urge the legislature to confirm this historic increase in the EPF.

The economy of the Catskill region is built on the natural beauty of its forever wild land. In order to further preserve and enhance this region’s economy we ask for an appropriate funding level of a recurring $4 million per year from the EPF. Few other places on earth contain so much abundant undisturbed land so close to so many millions of people. With few options for economic development, appropriate access to the more than 450,000 acres of public land within the Catskill region is the key feasible foundation for economic opportunity. Access for the millions who rely on its open space, facilitated by acquisition of the key parcels of unprotected land within park boundaries, will significantly enhance economic opportunity while meeting Governor Cuomo’s conservation goals and principles, in line with New York State’s proud and leading legacy of first-in-the-nation conservation.

A region with the cultural and historical significance of a National Park just two hours from the largest population center in the country is held back by an outdated recreation plan, limited funding for public access to land, and urgent unmet needs of various stewardship programs.  After more than a century of public investment, the Catskill Park is increasingly threatened by several years of inadequate funding, putting into risk the stature, value and viability of this spectacular public amenity.

With dedicated annual funding from the EPF and the Aid to Localities budgets we can ensure that the New York City watershed lands are integrated into a recreational strategy that provides economic leverage while protecting our most vital resources. Consistent funding from EPF and Aid to Localities increases will allow the Catskills to proactively and strategically plan for the future while appropriately managing this extraordinary resource.


Proposed Catskills Budget Package

Public Access $1,000,000

Parking lot improvement and creation

Connector trails

Connecting trails for villages and hamlets

Signage/way-finding

Accessibility enhancements


Stewardship $2,000,000

Regional recreation plan

Mountain bike plans

Unit Management Plan updates

Comprehensive planning

Consulting fees, capital improvements

Marketing and promotion

Trail repairs/building

Public/private partnerships (CRISP, Summit Stewards)

 

Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center $500,000

Pavilion $125,000

Amphitheater $125,000

Fire Tower $150,000

Trails $50,000

Solar Array $25,000

Electric vehicle charging stations, elec. upgrades $25,000


Grant program for regional small businesses $500,000


Grant program for enhanced smart growth opportunities $500,000

Distributed to regional municipalities


____________

TOTAL $4,500,000


Building a Better, More Modern Catskill Park


Public Access
Public access in the Catskills should be focused on the purpose of trail access, parking lot access and trail connectors that collectively knit together this patchwork mosaic of publicly accessible land. Creating a more visitor-friendly park through simple ease of access will drive visitors to the region, concentrating spending power in our region’s towns and hamlets, growing the region’s economy developing permanent jobs.


The preserved lands in the Catskill Park have been assembled gradually over the past 110 years as land protection opportunities matched the availability of funding.  A focus on preserving high peaks and scenic vistas has created a history of tracts with scarce road access, limited parking and difficult terrain for general public access. Acquisitions made by New York City focused on willing sellers and water quality criteria and have tended to be a collective patchwork of lands. This resulting mosaic of public lands makes management for recreation and tourism very challenging with limited access between parcels owned by either New York State or New York City, as well as other privately held but publically accessible lands.


The focus for the next decade of public access must focus on building tourism-friendly public access with continuity and comprehensive integration between city and state land holdings.  A focus on making access points between these parcels, area towns and villages is critical to helping local businesses connect to this vital tourism resource while sustaining access, interest and use.


To add enhanced public access for essential parking lots as well as ADA-compliant access may require the limited acquisition of easements and small fee properties.


Forest Preserve Stewardship
The Catskill Park Coalition is very concerned about safeguarding the many acres of public lands that contain sensitive ecosystems and provide vital environmental services, such as protecting breeding habitat for migratory forest songbirds and the water supply for New York City. Any successful effort to increase visitation creates a stewardship challenge, thus requiring additional funding.  Nevertheless, analysis by the Trust for Public Land completed in 2012 found that for every $1 dollar of EPF investment in public lands the state gained $7 in economic benefits through natural goods and services.


These investments continuously yield sustained and long term economic gains. Recent support and investment in the Catskill region is building great momentum for the park improving the economic vitality of the region as a whole. The opening of the Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center in 2015; the establishment of the Catskill Conservation Corps; and the work of the Catskill Park Advisory Committee and  Catskill Park Coalition are creating a foundation to further cement the economic advancement of the region. Through an EPF line item we can insure these continuous economic gains.


Funding to upgrade current facilities and build new parking areas, trails and bridges as well as improving ADA-compliant accessibility can be further leveraged by the participation of passionate volunteers and sportsmen, like the Catskill Conservation Corps, who will provide the required labor.  Many of the projects identified during the comprehensive recreation plan process will require stewardship funding, investments that inevitably reap rewards for the region as well as the state. Updating management plans and hiring design experts for mountain biking enhancements, improved signage and natural and cultural resource interpretation, and engagement with the scientific community for assessment of forest system health are also integral parts of appropriate forest preserve stewardship.


The last public access plan for the Catskill Park was completed August 1999. New York City had just begun its public access program, and newer uses like mountain biking were starting to gain popularity. The 1999 plan called for the establishment of new signage, information centers, better promotional tools, building networks of volunteers, and improving access for hiking, fishing, swimming, boating and camping. In the last few years some progress has been made on a few of these recommendations, but without dedicated funding much of this access plan remains unimplemented.


In 2014, for the first time, four New York City reservoirs were opened for recreational boating. We have recently developed a collaborative volunteer group, the Catskill Conservation Corps, which works across the park pulling volunteers from a variety of affinity groups.  


At the same time the Catskill Park is experiencing a new wave of visitors as more and more people understand the value of unplugging and getting out into nature, as well as the increasing pressure from potential development. In Sullivan County (one of the four counties of the Catskills region) Governor Cuomo recently approved a 391-room casino and resort project. This and other projects can only accelerate the demand for public access and create new stewardship challenges for our public land.


Capitalizing on this momentum of visitors and enthusiasm for the Catskill Park, the ideal time is now to develop a new comprehensive plan. Now is the time for an updated blueprint for increased access and recreation as well as sustained economic growth.  


Integrating Tourism Service Businesses with Public Land Opportunities
After a historic economic decline, the average income of residents in the Catskill Mountain region is nearly 40% below the state average. Small business creation to capitalize on new tourism opportunities can revitalize the moribund economy. We propose that a portion of the EPF funding for the Catskill Park be designated for a grants program to stimulate related business growth and creation. New businesses focusing on interpretation, guide services, hospitality, arts and culture, and recreational equipment will help grow this new green economy.   These grant funds would also be made available to municipalities seeking to reinforce the assets of villages and hamlets that help preserve the heritage of the Catskill Park.


Funding to Build a Modern Park
In the current environment of tight competitive funding, these necessary and urgent initiatives are not being implemented rapidly enough. We propose a dedicated line be established within the EPF, to be funded from future EPF increases, beginning in fiscal year 2015-16.  We project the annual needs for this fund at $4.5 million a year. Rather than creating any further administrative structure we suggest that this funding be administered by NYS DEC, with advice from the diverse stakeholders of the Catskill Park Advisory Committee.

Now is the time that a dedicated and recurring line item in the EPF be established for the Catskills. A line item insures that obsolete five-year recreation plans are no longer updated just once every few decades. A line item guarantees that public access occurs in a holistic fashion that benefits both the environment and the economy rather than be restricted by untimely and ad hoc funding availability. A line item appropriately stewards and protects the land of the Catskills, particularly critical as we now approach the greatest demand for access seen in years, if not in the history of the region. A line item integrates our natural resources as an economic asset stimulating growth in the villages and hamlets of the Catskills while preserving our heritage. This is the year that a recurring $4 million dollar line item in the EPF begins to transform the park for the benefit of all.


THE DAY WE'VE BEEN WAITING FOR

In 2015 the Catskill Park Coalition requested

the following from Albany:

  • NYS Forest Rangers & Asst. Ranger Program

    We request a fully funded Assistant Forest Ranger Program in NYS DEC Regions 3 & 4 as well as the establishment of a 2015 Academy for Forest Rangers.

  • Land Protection in the Catskills

    Please contact the NYS DEC Commissioner to request action on priority land protection projects: Lindo-Ulster 237 (in-process); Bearpen Mountain; Bolcek; Spruceton; Bowman Owen (in-process); Ulster 307 (in-process).

  • Recreation Plan for the Park

    We request your help in securing funding to conduct a planning process for a Catskill Park Recreation Plan.

  • Environmental Protection Fund

    We request your support for a dedicated line in the Environmental Protection Fund for the Catskill Park of $4 million.

  • Catskill Association for Tourism Services

    Please support additional funding in the amount of $100,000 for CATS to implement its marketing program in 2015.

The Catskill Park & Forest Preserve

Located approximately 100 miles northwest of New York City, The Catskills encompass over 6,000 square miles (about the size of Connecticut) of mountains, forests, rivers, and farmland. The Catskills are often referred to as America's First Wilderness because scholars trace the beginning of the environmental conservation movement to this beautiful area. With almost three dozen mountain peaks over 3,500 feet in elevation, six major river systems and reservoirs supplying the drinking water for 9 million people in the NYC metropolitan area, the Catskills are an ecological resource of signficant importance. Over 700,000 acres are State-designated as the Catskill Park. Within the park, over 250,000 acres make up the Catskill Forest Preserve and are designated as forever wild forest.

 

The Catskill Park was established by the NYS Legislature in 1904, and encompasses an area of Delaware, Greene, Sullivan and Ulster counties in which state-owned or acquired lands were classified as forever wild Forest Preserve. The Catskill park is a checkerboard of public- and privately-owned  lands. While the percentages change when the State acquires new land, the ratio of private to public is about two to one--the state owns over one-third of the land within the park boundaries, and the balance is privately owned. These State-owned lands within the "Blue Line" boundary of the Catskill park are designated as the Catskill Forest Preserve, and the New York State Constitution requires that these lands be forever kept as wild forest.

 

Over the century since it was first established, the Catskill Forest Preserve has grown from its original 33,894 acres to its current total of over 287,000 acres, and now constitutes over 40 percent of the total area of the Catskill Park. The forest preservce encompasses the highest mountains in the Catskills, including many of the 35 peaks over 3,500 feet in elevation. The State of New York continues to acquire land within the Catskill Park to add to its Forest Preserve holdings, with the goal of preserving lands of critical ecological importance. 

Details on our Five 2015 Asks:

 

Catskill Forest Rangers

Forest Rangers are a critical safety net in the backbone of tourism in a wilderness area. We ask you to fully support funding of the Forest Ranger Programs including:

- $10 million in payroll (plus funding for new recruits)

- $2,164,100 for Other Personal Services

- $1,350,000 for Non-Personal Services (NPS)

- $3,479,000 in capital funds (update aging fleet of vehicles and equipment, and replace outdated radios)

- establishing a 2015 Academy with biennial Academies thereafter

- assure the hiring of 20 AFRs supported by a specific budget line which is not part of Forest Ranger OPS funding


Land Acquisition Priorities

Please contact the NYS DEC Commissioner to request action on these priority land protection projects:

- Lindo-Ulster 237 (in-process)

- Bearpen Mountain

- Bolcek

- Spruceton

- Bowman Owen (in-process)

- Ulster 307 (in-process)

 

Catskill Recreation Plan

We request your help in securing funding to conduct a planning process for a comprehensive integrated Catskill Park Recreation Plan.


Environmental Protection Fund

We request your support for full funding of the Environmental Protection Fund in 2015 with the amount of $172 million.


We request a dedicated line in the EPF of $4 million dollars dedicated to the promotion and protection of the Catskill Park. 


A dedicated line in the EPF will give the region the source of funding necessary to protect and promote our region through:

- comprehensive planning

- acquisition

- forest preserve stewardship

- integrating tourism service businesses with public land opportunities

- funding to build a modern park


Catskill Association of Tourism Services

Please support additional funding in the amount of $100,000 for CATS to implement its marketing program in 2015.

 A Vision for the EPF & Catskill Park

The economy of the Catskill Region is built on the natural beauty of its forever wild land. In order to preserve this region’s economy we ask for an appropriate funding level of $4 million per year from the New York State Environmental Protection Fund. Few other places on earth contain so much abundant undisturbed land so close to so many millions of people. With few options for economic development, appropriate access to the more than 450,000 acres of public land within the Blue Line of the Catskill Park is the key feasible foundation for economic opportunity. Access for the millions who rely on its open space, facilitated by acquisition of the key parcels of unprotected land within park boundaries, will significantly enhance economic opportunity while meeting Governor Cuomo’s conservation goals and principles, in line with New York State’s proud and leading legacy of first-in-the-nation conservation.

 

A region with the cultural and historical significance of a National Park just two hours from the largest population center in the country is held back by an outdated recreation plan, limited funding for public access to land, and urgent unmet needs of various stewardship programs.  After more than a century of public investment, the Catskill Park is increasingly threatened by several years of inadequate funding, putting into risk the stature, value and viability of this spectacular public amenity.

 

With dedicated annual funding from the New York State Environmental Protection Fund we can ensure that the growing acreage of New York City watershed lands are integrated into a recreational strategy that provides economic leverage while protecting our most vital resource, the New York City watershed. The history of the Blue Line also includes acquisition of lands that enhance the public land available for recreation and preservation. Over the EPF’s more than twenty year history the state has contributed a total appropriation of nearly $3 billion. Consistent funding of a $4 million dollar annual line item generated from future EPF increases will allow the Catskills to proactively and strategically plan for the future while appropriately managing this extraordinary resource.


Proposed Annual Catskill EPF Line Item Budget
 

                        Comprehensive planning                                                 $150,000

                        

                        Land acquisition                                                                  $1,000,000

                                    Fee purchases & conservation easements

                                                Allows up to 10 small parcels to enhance public access

                                                (10 @ $100K/ea.)

                       

                        Stewardship                                                                          $2,000,000

                                    Public access, consulting fees, capital improvements

                                                Marketing and promotion

                      

                        Grant program for regional small businesses                 $500,000

                        

                        Grant program for smart growth                                      $500,000

                                    Distributed to regional municipalities

                                                                                                                         ____________

                                                                                                      TOTAL      $4,150,000

                                                                           TOTAL EPF APPROPRIATION    $2,766,412,000

                                                                                                    (Enacted budgets 94-95 to 13-14)

                                                                           AVERAGE ANNUAL EPF             $145,600,632

                                                                                                    (Enacted budgets 94-95 to 13-14)


Building a Better Catskill Park
Comprehensive Planning
The last public access plan for the Catskill Park was completed 15 years ago in August 1999. New York City had just begun its land acquisition program, and newer uses like mountain biking were starting to gain popularity. The 1999 plan called for the establishment of new signage, information centers, better promotional tools, building networks of volunteers, and improving access for hiking, fishing, swimming, boating and camping. In the last few years some progress has been made on a few of these recommendations, but without dedicated funding much of this access plan remains unimplemented.


This year for the first time, four New York City reservoirs were opened for recreational boating. We have recently developed a collaborative volunteer group, the Catskill Conservation Corps, which works across the park pulling volunteers from a variety of affinity groups.  

At the same time the Catskill Park is experiencing a new wave of visitors as more and more people understand the value of unplugging and getting out into nature, as well as the increasing pressure from potential development. In Sullivan County (one of the four counties of the Catskills region) Governor Cuomo recently approved a 391-room casino and resort project. This and other projects can only accelerate the demand for public access and create new stewardship challenges for our public land.


Capitalizing on this momentum of visitors and enthusiasm for the Catskill Park, the ideal time is now to develop a new comprehensive plan. Now is the time for an updated blueprint for increased access and recreation as well as sustained economic growth.  

 
Land Acquisition
The preserved lands in the Catskill Park have been assembled gradually over the past 110 years as land protection opportunities matched the availability of funding.  A focus on preserving high peaks and scenic vistas has created a history of tracts with scarce road access, limited parking and difficult terrain for general public access. Acquisitions made by New York City focused on willing sellers and water quality criteria and have tended to be a collective patchwork of lands. This resulting mosaic of public lands makes management for recreation and tourism very challenging.


The next generation of acquisition must focus on building tourism-friendly access with continuity and comprehensive integration between city and state land holdings.  A focus on making access points between these parcels, area towns and villages is critical to helping local businesses connect to this vital tourism resource while sustaining access, interest and use.


Further complicating these acquisition patterns are the enormous wait times for state funds to purchase parcels acquired through land trusts. Six-year holding times effectively tie up the resources of cooperating land trusts, restricting their ability to respond to important land protection opportunities. Dedicated annual funding from the EPF for land protection would leverage this partnership by more than 100%.

 
Forest Preserve Stewardship
The Catskill Park Coalition is very concerned about safeguarding the many acres of public lands that contain sensitive ecosystems and provide vital environmental services, such as protecting the water supply for New York City. Any successful effort to increase visitation creates a stewardship challenge, thus requiring additional funding.  Nevertheless, analysis by the Trust for Public Land completed in 2012 found that for every $1 dollar of EPF investment in public lands the state gained $7 in economic benefits through natural goods and services.

 

These investments continuously yield sustained and long term economic gains. Recent support and investment in the Catskill region is building great momentum for the park improving the economic vitality of the region as a whole. The opening of the Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center in 2015; the establishment of the Catskill Conservation Corps; and the work of the Catskill Park Advisory Committee and  Catskill Park Coalition are creating a foundation to further cement the economic advancement of the region. Through an EPF line item we can insure these continuous economic gains.


Funding to upgrade current facilities and build new trails, bridges and parking areas can be further leveraged by the participation of passionate volunteers and sportsmen, like the Catskill Conservation Corps, who will provide the required labor.  Many of the projects identified during the comprehensive recreation plan process will require stewardship funding, investments that inevitably reap rewards for the region as well as the state.

 
Integrating Tourism Service Businesses with Public Land Opportunities
After a historic economic decline, the average income of residents in the Catskill Mountain region is nearly 40% below the state average. Small business creation to capitalize on new tourism opportunities can revitalize the moribund economy. We propose that a portion of the EPF funding for the Catskill Park be designated for a grants program to stimulate related business growth and creation. New businesses focusing on interpretation, guide services, hospitality, arts and culture, and recreational equipment will help grow this new green economy.   These grant funds would also be made available to municipalities seeking to reinforce the assets of villages and hamlets that help preserve the heritage of the Catskill Park.

 
Funding to Build a Modern Park
In the current environment of tight competitive funding, these necessary and urgent initiatives are not being implemented rapidly enough. We propose a dedicated line be established within the EPF, to be funded from future EPF increases, beginning in fiscal year 2015-16.  We project the annual needs for this fund at $4 million a year. Rather than creating any further administrative structure we suggest that this funding be administered by NYS DEC, with advice from the diverse stakeholders of the Catskill Park Advisory Committee.

 

Now is the time that a dedicated and recurring line item in the EPF be established for the Catskills. A line item insures that obsolete five-year recreation plans are no longer updated just once every few decades. A line item guarantees that land acquisition occurs in a holistic fashion that benefits both the environment and the economy rather than be restricted by untimely and ad hoc funding availability. A line item appropriately stewards and protects the land of the Catskills, particularly critical as we now approach the greatest demand for access seen in years, if not in the history of the region. A line item integrates our natural resources as an economic asset stimulating growth in the villages and hamlets of the Catskills while preserving our heritage. This is the year that a recurring $4 million dollar line item in the EPF begins to transform the park for the benefit of all.

COUNTDOWN TO

CATSKILL PARK

AWARENESS DAY:

The Final Countdown!
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Catskill Park Coalition Members


Richard Barr          3500 Club

Neil Woodworth     Adirondack Mountain Club

Cathy Pedler          Adirondack Mountain Club

Kerissa Battle           Community Greenways Collaborative

Rick Remsnyder    Catskill Area Tourism Services

Ray Pucci        Catskill Area Tourism Services

Warren Hart           Catskill Area Tourism Services

Roberta Lockwood                Catskill Area Tourism Services

Herb Clark             Catskill Area Tourism Services

Jeff Senterman              Catskill Center

Roger Wall             Catskill Heritage Alliance

Heather Rolland     Catskill Mountain Club

Rick Roberts           Catskill Mountain Club

Peter Finn               Catskill Mountain Foundation

Ramsay Adams      Catskill Mountainkeeper

Sue Courrier          Delaware Highlands Conservancy

Justin Kolb               Festival of the Voice

Ettore Infante          Friends of the Catskill Interpretive Center

 Jeff Skelding           Friends of the Upper Delaware

Chris Baker            Hudson Valley Hikers

Anne Jakubowski   Hunter Foundation

Matthew Pokoik      Mount Tremper Arts

Richard Schraeder                Natural Resources Defense Council

Al Butzel                  Natural Resources Defense Council

Ed Goodell             New York - New Jersey Trail Conference

Jeff Senterman        New York - New Jersey Trail Conference

Robin Dropkin        Parks and Trails New York

Paul Gallay             Riverkeeper

Sarah Lupson         Riverkeeper

Wendell George    Rip Van Winkle Hikers

Dave Channon        Shandaken Arts Studio Tour

Bert Darrow           Theodore Gordon Flyfishers

Kathy Nolan            Trout Unlimited

Bill Birns                  Woodchuck Lodge

Kevin Smith            Woodstock Land Conservancy

Konrad R. Marchaj                Zen Mountain Monastery

Dave Riordan         Catskill Revitalization Corporation

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"... I believe that the logic of events will eventually bring to the Catskills a land use plan that will safeguard the future of its so closely intertwined people, wild life, water, air, land and traditions."

- Alf Evers, The Catskills: From Wilderness to Woodstock

"The most precious things of life are near at hand without money and without price. Each of you had the whole wealth of the universe at your very door. All that I ever had, and still have, may be yours by stretching forth your hand and taking it."

- John Burroughs, 1837-1921

PARKING WILL BE LIMITED, PLEASE ARRIVE EARLY!

Additional Parking, near NYS DEC Office

ADD PHOTOS
A new early bear hunting season may have led to record kill numbers in the #Catskills. Read our story about the complicated issue of bear management on our site today.
@Watershed Post
Jan 12th, 12:36PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Count us in ✌️🇺🇸 #redbarnantiques #redbarn #barnporn
@Escape Brooklyn
Jan 11th, 5:41PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Sunny days, shining ice, winter wonderland #Ice #climbing #iceclimbing #NewYork #Catskills #America #USA #discover #explore #travel #adventure #EXPadventures #beatiful #mountains #nature #outdoors #photooftheday #awesome #cold #snow #winter
@EXP Adventures
Jan 11th, 3:07PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#regram @smittypants The Catskills & Phoenicia NY named one of Top 52 Places to Travel in the World in 2015 by @nytimes @nytimestravel #phoenicia #catskills #upstateny #ulstercounty
@Mystery Spot Antiques
Jan 11th, 5:12PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
The amazing Tup's Indispensable on a TMC 921 #flyfishing #fluefiske #flugfiske #tørrflue #dryfly #tørt #mayfly #døgnflue #ørret #harr #trout #grayling #browntrout #catchandrelease #river #nature #scenery #winstonrods #fluebinding #flytying #fiske #flyfishing #fluefiske #flugfiske #tørrflue #dryfly #tørt #mayfly #døgnflue #ørret #harr #trout #grayling #browntrout #catchandrelease #river #nature #scenery #winstonrods #fluebinding #flytying #fiske #catskill
@Kjell S. Rakkenes
Jan 12th, 6:18AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#oksanabaiul #Catskills #Upstate #ILoveNY #NewYorkState #NewYorkStateofOpportunity
@Erik Johanson
Jan 11th, 12:53PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
The New York Times named 52 best places to travel for 2015 and NY made the cut not once but twice! Make sure to hit the Catskills and Lower Manhattan this year. cc: @rocksnbeer
@I LOVE NEW YORK
Jan 11th, 12:25PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Guests sleep in later now that it's winter. Can't say I blame 'em. #catskills
@Casey Scieszka
Jan 11th, 8:49AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Thanks to Catskill Jazz Factory for an awesome night with Evan Christopher & Eli Yamin! #catskills #jazz #killedit
@Deer Mountain Inn
Jan 11th, 11:09AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Gave a little #snowshoe lesson yesterday on the nature trail at Kenneth Wilson Campground...The #woods are so beautiful when draped with snow! #naturetrail #catskills #hudsonvalley #ihikeny #hiking #Phoenicia #campgrounds #woodstock
@60 Main St - On the boardwalk
Jan 11th, 12:35PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Our graphic designer Sara grabbed a camera and snapped this great shot of powdery #snow blowing as the sun cast a gorgeous glow! #thatrhymes #frostvalley #beauty #nature #sunset #winter #catskills #graphicdesign
@Frost Valley YMCA
Jan 12th, 11:54AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Brittle for breakfast is okay when Rosemary & pine nuts are involved. Right?
@Sara Mae Elbert
Jan 11th, 11:28AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
The cold never bothered us anyway. #noiamnotadisneyfanatic #frozen #theroxburyatstrattonfalls #theroburymotel #roxburymotel #catskills #iloveny #cntraveler #hadtodoit
@theroxburymotel
Jan 11th, 12:15PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#ihikeny #thacherstatepark #indianladder #bostonterrier #catskills #hudsonvalley #upstateny
@Kevin Mills
Jan 11th, 1:36PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
It's a winter wonderland this morning... Puffy fluffy powder. #catskills #upstateny #newyork #powder #snow #roxbury #mountains
@thecatskillkiwi
Jan 12th, 10:59AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Violet getting her #snowshoe on! Could probably use more snow- but it was fun just the same! COME RENT A PAIR OF SHOWSHOES ANDHAVE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE! #hudsonvalleyhiker #wintersports #catskills #campgrounds #ispyny #storehouseny #phoeniciany #hudsonvalley #woodstock #mttremper
@60 Main St - On the boardwalk
Jan 11th, 12:39PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Now I standard why the winter is blue. Beautiful frozen scenery to the summit of Slide Mountain. #nocolorsadded #rei1440project #hiking #Catskill #slidemountain #adventure #winter #newyork #wanderlust
@Chihiro Kawaii
Jan 13th, 10:30PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#barn #upstateny #catskills #VSCOcam #farmlife #VSCO #andnorth #redbarn #barnporn #farmstagram #halcott #elkcreek #exploreny #northofnyc #barn #stag #countryliving #alwaysgo #escapebrooklyn #upstate #iloveny #beautiful #colorpop #dscolor #ShrimpSaladSpectrum
@carly ⭐
Jan 11th, 12:35PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#VlyCreek #Catskills #Catskill
@Erik Johanson
Jan 14th, 9:04AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Kaaterskill Clove
@Jenny Zuko
Nov 4th, 6:45PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Took this photo about a month ago in the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York \\ #catskillmountains #catskillpark #catskills #mountains #hills #bridge #architecture #lake #reservoir #rocks #perspective #tour #traveling
@Daniel Shippey
Dec 2nd, 12:57AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Thanks to @kozinnski for sharing your #daytrip to #GiantLedge in the #Catskills with us! Check it out on EscapeBrooklyn.com/giant-ledge ❄️🌲
@Escape Brooklyn
Dec 8th, 10:21PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#mothernature #holynature the man and the #waterfalls #deepwonders #catskillpark
@Emel Mathlouthi
Jan 4th, 11:01PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#hunter#snowboarding#snow#chairlift#winter#shred#dailyblackandwhite#Catskills#catskillpark
@andrew5186
Jan 21st, 7:29PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Fresh snow untouched! @belleayre #belleayremountain #mlk #holidayweekend #catskills #nys #catskillpark
@mikey
Jan 19th, 7:45AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Adult snow days are bullsh*t. #Snowmageddon2015 #Snowpocalypse2025 #Blizzardof2015
@Erik Johanson
Jan 27th, 10:34AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Catskill Awareness Day begins! #catskillparkAwarenessday
@kunatahcamper
Feb 10th, 9:31AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay is ON LIKE DONKEY KONG!
@Erik Johanson
Feb 9th, 8:03PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay @catskillcenter Innie, Minnie, Miny, Agency 4
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 9:28AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
The calm after the storm (between the storms?) #CatskillParkAwarenessDay #CatskillCenter @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 11:35AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 11:33AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 11:32AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Catskill Awareness Day begins! #catskillparkAwarenessday
@kunatahcamper
Feb 10th, 9:31AM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
Show the Catskills a lil' more love #CommissionerMartens #NYSDEC #CatskillParkAwarenessDay #CatskillCenter @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 1:40PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay #CatskillCenter @catskillcenter #Excelsior
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 2:51PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay #CatskillCenter #Excelsior @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 2:52PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay
The Capitol complex is pretty groovy 🔮 #CatskillParkAwarenessDay #CatskillCenter @catskillcenter
@Erik Johanson
Feb 10th, 3:01PM
#CatskillParkAwarenessDay

Catskill Park Awareness Day 2016

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