Who would’ve thought arch-conservative David Madore would support socialized parks? And yet that’s essentially what the new Clark County commissioner has done (with the support of Commissioner Tom Mielke) by removing parking fees from parks and shifting that annual funding burden of $325,000 to the county’s general fund.In austere financial times, indigent governments should have more user fees, not fewer. The more government can get those who use a service to pay for that service, the better off we all are. It’s strange that Madore and Mielke don’t understand this basic principle. (County Commissioner Steve Stuart opposed the measure. None of his four amendments — with the intention of “not shifting the burden onto our taxpayers” — drew a second.) Are there other user fees that Madore intends to eliminate? Other costs he expects the general fund to absorb?
We also wonder why Madore and Mielke ignored the advice from an objective, respected and fiscally astute source: County Auditor Greg Kimsey. At Tuesday night’s meeting, he advised against dropping the parking fees. Kimsey, 15 years in office and unopposed in elections for more than a decade, gave county commissioners three solid reasons for his recommendation, and he repeated those points in a telephone interview Wednesday.
“First, it’s appropriate that whoever parks at these parks pays, as a direct user,” Kimsey says.
Also, there is the practical business angle, which Madore, a successful businessman, ought to embrace. “The county does not work like the federal government,” Kimsey stated. “We have to balance expenses and revenues. If we eliminate an ongoing revenue like the $325,000 from parking fees, we will need to eliminate some other ongoing expense of that same amount.”