Bushwick Inlet Park on the North Brooklyn waterfront. Photo courtesy of NYC Parks Department
A drive to increase the Parks Departmentโs budget to at least 1% of the overall city budget is getting wide support in Brooklyn.
New Yorkers for Parks is leading the campaign, known as Play Fair for Parks, with the League of Conservation Voters and District Council 37. It points out that New York allocates a relatively small share of its budget to parks compared to other large cities. While Minneapolisโ parks budget is 5.3% of the cityโs total budget, and Chicago devotes 4.3% of its budget to parks, the figure for New York City is only 0.6%.
People became especially appreciative of city parks during the COVID pandemic, when parks were one of the few places people could go. City Council Parks Committee Chair Shekar Krishnan (D-Queens) told the Brooklyn Eagle that both Mayor Eric Adams and the Council have given their support to the 1% goal, and he categorized the Parks Departmentโs main needs as maintenance, increasing the number of employees, and increasing the cityโs tree canopy.
Adam Ganser, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks and a Brooklyn resident, however, said that despite this declared support, โsince the budget [negotiating] process started, weโre seeing movement in the other direction.ย
โThe cuts weโre seeing are not prioritizing this at all. The mayorโs preliminary budget announced in late January had $47 million in cuts to the Parks Department.โ While the City Council initially supported Fair Playโs for 1,000 new Parks positions, he said, more follow-up is needed.
Historically, Ganser said, โthe Parks Department was funded well above 1%.โ However, during the 1970s fiscal crisis, the budget was slashed and โstaffing numbers were cut by nearly half.โ
The groupโs report gives Brooklynโs Red Hook Recreation Center as an example of a Parks facility thatโs…
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