Let’s clear up Shipley confusion
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Stephanie Pacheco
There seems to be conflicting information about the status of the
Shipley Nature Center. In the Huntington Beach City budget
presentation, the city says it has relinquished its responsibility
for the $117,000 operational costs for the center by allowing a
nonprofit group to run the center.
They are referring to the Friends of Shipley Nature Center, a
local group of a few dedicated volunteers that was started this year
to help the nature center. This group is just starting to gather
members and donations. The Friends of Shipley Nature Center are not
in a financial position to pay the salary for the full-time and
part-time employees currently staffing and leading tours for the
city, nor could they afford to pay for the operating costs to run the
center.
A master plan for the landscape restoration of the park is being
developed. This would restore native plants that support wildlife,
fill in large areas of the nature center that are now devoid of any
plant life except weeds and improve the nature trails. The city has
allocated $10,000 for some maintenance work by the California
Conservation Corps. But no money has been allocated by the city for
the $500,000 needed for labor, equipment, and materials over the next
few years to complete restoration, even with volunteers assisting.
There is no written agreement from the city that the center will
reopen or that restoration will be completed or even begun. The doors
will lock on Oct. 1, and the animals in the interpretive center will
be given away. A city employee must be on site in order for
volunteers to conduct tours and participate in restoration at this
time. For the Friends of Shipley Nature Center to keep the center
open full time, the city would have to hire an employee to supervise
them. To expect the volunteers to complete the restoration, lead the
tours and open the Interpretive Center is unrealistic.
The Friends of Shipley Nature Center will assist in restoration,
lead a few natural history tours -- for a cost -- and help raise
funds. To run the center, the nonprofit group would need enough
donations or an endowment that could pay for restoration and $117,000
yearly for operating costs. Unless someone wishes to set up an
endowment for this amount, our plans are to help the center in the
same way that the Friends of the Library help the library, but don’t
run the library.
We hope the city will shoulder its responsibility to restore and
operate this urban environmental education center. Each year 40,000
people enjoyed the center, including tours given for more than 9,000
children. The California Department of Education has shown “that
students in experiential environmental education programs learn
better, are better citizens, and transfer their learning to new
situations better.” Just shutting the doors without an adequate plan
in place to restore and reopen the area leaves the children and
community of Huntington Beach with no option but to merely look over
the fence of the nature center and wish things were different.
You can contact Friends of the Shipley Nature Center at
[email protected] or call 963-1658 for more information.
* STEPHANIE PACHECO is a Fountain Valley resident and the
president of the Friends of Shipley Nature Center. To contribute to
“Sounding Off,” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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