The state is offering five public workshops to help partner organizations that may want to operate some of the 70 state parks originally slated for closure this year.
The closures are required to trim $22 million from the state budget. The California Department of Parks and Recreation has negotiated partnerships with the federal government and nonprofit groups to keep nine of the parks operating.
That leaves 61 still set for closure by July 1, including Brannan Island, South Yuba River and Malakoff Diggins in the Sacramento region.
The workshops will explain the process to form a partnership with the state to operate a park. They will not take testimony on why certain parks were chosen for closure.
In the Central Valley region, the workshops will be held Feb. 22 in Redding at Turtle Bay Exploration Park, 840 Sundial Bridge Drive; and Feb. 28 in West Sacramento at the City Hall Galleria, 1110 West Capitol Ave. Both will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The other workshops are in Fort Bragg on Feb. 23, Santa Rosa on Feg. 24, and Los Angeles on March 1.
The department has also published a handbook on the process, called a "Partnership Workbook for Operating Agreements," available online at http://parks.ca.gov/?page_id=26966.
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