Saw this in the Grizzly this week……
State Considers Cuts To Boating Department
written by Kathy PortieOne week after California Governor Jerry Brown released his 2013 budget proposal, the Marina Recreation Association sounded the alarm.
Brown proposes to merge or eliminate several state departments as part of his cost-cutting measures. The California Department of Boating and Waterways is on the chopping block. The plan is to merge the department with the state’s Department of Parks and Recreation. The Marina Recreation Association asked its members to contact legislators and oppose the proposal.
Local members of the Marina Recreation Association include Big Bear Marina LLC in Big Bear Lake and Captain John’s Fawn Harbor & Marina in Fawnskin. Association members include marina owners in Arizona, California, Nevada, Utah, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Washington, Hawaii, Mexico, Canada and Australia.
What does the elimination of the state department mean to the Big Bear Municipal Water District and Big Bear Lake marinas? Big Bear Marina owner Alan Sharp is concerned the money collected in boating licenses and other lake fees will no longer go toward lake and waterway improvement programs.
“The reality of it is the money would go to Parks and Rec,” Sharp said. “The Department of Boating and Waterways revenue comes out of boat registration. That money is earmarked to improve lakes and launch ramps. Put that into the Department of Parks and Rec, that money could be put somewhere else.”
The proposal also sends a red flag to the Big Bear Municipal Water District, which depends on funding from the state agency for its fleet of vessels and employee training. Lake Manager Mike Stephenson is cautious when criticizing the proposal. “I don’t understand the proposal well enough to know how it will affect us,” Stephenson said. “But I don’t want to see them go away. It could have a lot of effect, mainly on the reimbursable training program and officer training program.”
The Marina Association’s statistics show that recreational boating contributes about $16.5 billion to the gross state product, representing 1.2 percent of the state’s economy. It generates about $1.6 billion in state and local taxes. Loans through the Department of Boating and Waterways generate approximately $20 million in revenue each year for the state.The California Department of Boating and Waterways is self funded by vessel registration fees, boating fuel tax dollars and boating facility construction loan payments. Department programs include officer training, financial aid and equipment grants for more than 100 local and state agencies including boating law enforcement training, marina and launch ramp construction loans and grants, vessel sewage pumpout station grants and abandoned vessel removal assistance.
Stephenson said every boat in the MWD fleet has been paid for through Department of Boating and Waterways grants. “For us, the vessel grant program is important,” Stephenson said. “It helps pay for new engines, drives and boats. And if we lose the education program for our guys, I don’t know where we’d find a replacement.”The Big Bear Municipal Water District has not taken a stand for or against Brown’s budget proposal. How the money from boater fees is used under the merger will be the determining factor, Stephenson said. “That’s one of the questions that I have,” he said. “If that is eliminated, I’d be extremely opposed (Brown’s proposal). But I don’t see how the government could allocate the money to something else.”
The precursor to the California Department of Boating and Waterways is the Division of Small Craft Harbors, which functioned within the Department of Natural Resources until 1961. At that time, the division was relocated to the Department of Parks and Recreation.The division was elevated to the Department of Harbors and Watercraft in 1966. The name was changed to the Department of Navigation and Ocean Development in 1969 and to the Department of Boating and Waterways in 1979.
This is not the first time a California governor has proposed eliminating the department. “The issue comes up with every administration,” Sharp said. “We’ve been fighting this for 13 years.”
State Considers Cuts to Boating Department
Posted in Lake Information | Tags: Big Bear Marinas, MWD





















































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