Testimony
Sarah
Morse
Executive
Director, Little Falls Watershed Alliance
Thursday,
April 12, 2017
Montgomery
County Council hearing on FY19 Operating Budget
and amendments to the FY 19-24
CIP
I’m Sarah Morse, the Executive Director
of the Little Falls Watershed Alliance, an environmental stewardship group for Little
Falls Branch, the Willett Branch and surrounding area. We are located in lower Montgomery County in the
Bethesda-Chevy Chase area. We have over
2,000 members and work closely with the community on projects and issues affecting
the natural areas in our neighborhood. We
are lucky to have many parks in our watershed;
the largest is the Little Falls Stream Valley Park with 4 miles of
trails, and also there is the Capital Crescent Trail which cuts through the
watershed.
I’m here to advocate for the Park
budget. The County Executive’s proposed
operating budget is $5 million less than
the Planning Board deemed necessary to support our extraordinary park
system. And the recommended Capital
Improvements Program (CIP) budget falls $26 million less than the Parks’
request.
It’s especially significant that these
hearings are in April as the County is getting ready to celebrate Earth
Day, a day of environmental activism where
we recognize the obligation that humans have to be stewards of the planet. The park system in Montgomery County is an
essential part of our stewardship to the environment. As the County becomes more and more
developed, as trees and meadows give way to commercial and residential units,
these parks become more and more important as the last green areas.
While the environmental obligation is
compelling in itself, there are also economic and health benefits from having a
robust park system. Many studies show
that housing prices rise the closer a property is to a park – some studies say
properties are as much as 70% more expensive if they are located
park-side. Mental and physical health
improve from park use. More and more
doctors are touting the mental health advantages of simply walking in the
woods. In Japan “forest bathing” is a part of its national health program. And of course, everyone recognizes the
benefits that a daily run or walk on park trails brings. Healthier citizens are also an economic plus
for the County.
With all this in mind, the little Falls
Watershed Alliance requests that the Council fully fund Montgomery Parks moving
forward and restore the entire $5 million to their operating budget for FY19, as well as fully fund their Capital
Improvement Program budget for FY19-24. We
need parks and we need them to be fully
funded.
The Little Falls Watershed Alliance has
a close partnership with Montgomery Parks and we have seen how they get a lot
of bang-for-the-buck from community volunteer efforts. We work with Tenley Wurglitz and Carole
Bergmann on the Weed Warriors Program hosting almost weekly events to restore
native plants. These two remarkable Park
employees have developed a nationally recognized program that utilizes
thousands of volunteers to combat non-native invasives that are killing our
native trees and plants. Volunteers in
their program spent over 5,700 hours last year on behalf of the Parks – the
equivalent of almost 3 full time employees.
Almost 100,000 volunteer hours have been logged since the program began
in 1999. Yet, the Weed Warrior program
is just staffed part-time, with 2.25 employees. Think of what could be leveraged if the
staffing was doubled. Think of what a
loss it would be if this program was cut due to budget concerns.
Parks
is already operating on a lean budget.
The trails in the Little Falls Stream Valley Park are in terrible
shape. They are buckling, sinking, and
crumbling. Because we are located in a
densely urban area, our park is well used by mothers pushing strollers,
children playing in the creek, dog walkers, joggers, bird watchers and a
surprising number of elderly residents out for fresh air. The park is an important part of our
lives. But when we ask for trail
renovation, we are told that there isn’t the money for it at this time. In partnership with the Weed Warriors
Program, we restored a meadow in Norwood Park.
Native wildflowers grow where there was once a wasteland of dead trees and
vines, but when we inquired about doing another meadow, the same response - no
budget for it.
Money is also needed for stormwater
management in the Little Falls Stream Valley Park. Every time it rains, we have considerable
flooding making the trails impassible to anyone who is not able to wade through
two or three inches of water. Where
storm drains flow unchecked onto park land, huge canyons are forming sending
silt downstream into the creek. Again,
when we ask for retrofits to mitigate these issues – we are told that there
isn’t money at this time.
To cut the Park operating budget means
that these and other projects will not come to fruition. To cut the budget means that the
infrastructures will suffer - not only park amenities like playgrounds and
tennis courts, but projects like stream protection and pollution prevention
that are key to our stewardship of the environment. We cannot expect to continue to have a
nationally recognized park system without the budget to maintain it.
We cannot meet our obligation to the environment that the County
celebrates every Earth Day without the budget to maintain our Parks. And we cannot expect to reap the economic
benefits that the County realizes from properties located park-side if the
parks are allowed to fall into disrepair.
Montgomery County has long been a leader in environmental stewardship with one of the strongest stormwater management permits in the Country, the best park system in the Country. Our quality of life is second to none and the County is one of the most desirable places in the Country to live. Help us maintain this standard of excellent and fully fund the Park.