The Department
of Culture, Recreation, and Tourism has braced
itself for more budget cuts to parks in fiscal year 2019. This has led to
shorter operational hours (and some sites open only by appointment) and
deferred maintenance at the 22 parks and 19 historic sites. Already, parts of
many stay closed, and some amenities that generate revenue have fallen into
disrepair, creating a vicious cycle where the agency finds it harder to raise
money to fix these things.
Yet, to some degree, CRT officials and lawmakers
bear the blame for such problems by promoting an inefficient model. In 2012,
the Legislative Auditor released a report
that included suggestions on better running the operation. Five years later, at
best only lukewarm implementation of these has occurred.