[Source: Jana Bommersbach, True West Magazine]
Mitzi Rinehart is just one of many volunteers saving our nation’s parks.
 As  a volunteer at Arizona’s Lost Dutchman State Park, Mitzi Rinehart  thought the most oft-asked question she’d ever answer was “Where’s the  Gold?”
As  a volunteer at Arizona’s Lost Dutchman State Park, Mitzi Rinehart  thought the most oft-asked question she’d ever answer was “Where’s the  Gold?”
Somewhere  amidst the natural desert and the rugged Superstition Mountains, the  “Holy Grail” of lost mine legends states an 1860s prospector named Jacob  Waltz not only found a fabulous gold mine here but also hid caches of  gold. Since he died in 1891, reportedly with 24 pounds of rich ore in a  candle box under his bed, people have been searching this area for his  mine and his stash.
To  those tourists seeking her help on the hiking, horseback riding and  nature trails she and her fellow volunteers help maintain at the park,  Rinehart often quipped: “Do you want to buy a copy of my map to the  gold?”
But  in 2010, that query was replaced with a more frequently asked—and not  so funny—question: How could the State of Arizona intend to close this  320-acre park that attracts more than 100,000 people a year and means  $4.2 million annually to the economy of the Apache Junction area east of  Phoenix?
“Closing  this park would be like losing a part of me. I know what would  happen—it would turn into housing and be destroyed in a short time,” she  says:
There’s a big chunk of Arizona history here. It almost makes me  cry to even think of it closing.
But  instead of crying, Rinehart got active, helping organize the Friends of  Lost Dutchman State Park and mobilizing community support to raise  private money to keep the park open, at least for now.
Rinehart  not only is a hero for her state park, but she also represents the  hundreds of people throughout the nation who are fighting to save their  own endangered parks in these times of economic distress.
The  National Trust for Historic Preservation, which annually lists its “11  most endangered historic sites,” startled the nation in 2010 by leading  its list with “America’s State Parks and State-Owned Historic Sites.”
As  the Trust notes, the nation’s state parks attract an estimated 725  million visits every year, yet it found almost 30 states had cut as many  as 400 state parks to balance state budgets. “While providing some  short-term budget relief, this approach will actually cost states far  more in the long term,” the Trust warns. “Before they can re-open,  state-owned and managed resources will require massive investments to  undo the damage suffered from abandonment, neglect and deferred  maintenance.”
The  Trust’s survey of the situation shows eight states west of the  Mississippi planning or implementing “major budget cuts,” with two of  them—Arizona and California—among the worst.
California  has instituted cutbacks and part-time closures at 150 of its 278 state  parks, the Trust reports. In Arizona, 13 of its 31 parks were closed in  2010.
The  state park system in Arizona generates $266 million of direct and  indirect economic impact, and earns $19 million in revenue and lottery  funds. Recognizing the financial impact of the closures, Arizona’s rural  communities have been stepping up throughout 2010 to keep most of these  parks open. Yet three parks—Homolovi Ruins, Lyman Lake and  Oracle—remain closed for budget reasons as of December 2010.
Rinehart  is glad to hear that towns in Arizona are finally seeing the value in  saving these parks, yet she will never forget those who helped to keep  the Lost Dutchman State Park open in those early dismal days of  threatened closure. At the first general meeting to fight the park’s  closure, 155 people showed up. The Harley-Davidson dealership in the  area became the unofficial headquarters for meetings and sponsored a  ride to raise money. A retired airline pilot, who is now a winter  visitor to Arizona, Taylor Sanford Jr., wrote a check for $8,000 (“I was  standing right behind him when he pulled out his checkbook, and I was  the first one who got to hug him,” Rinehart remembers). Seventh grader  Haley Anderson at Mesa’s Smith Junior High School raised a total of  $1,431.63 ($1,000 from the student Builders Club and the rest from  individual students’ lunch money). And, in one of the most apropos  fundraisers, the Friends of the park raffled off a chunk of gold (no,  Rinehart says, it didn’t come from Waltz’s claim).
Rinehart  has learned a harsh reality during these hard economic times—not  everyone thinks it’s important to even have state parks. She says she’s  been dismayed to hear people wonder “why the parks can’t be run totally  by volunteers” or suggest “they should only be there if they can pay for  themselves.”
Rinehart  is just one of hundreds of locals hoping to educate Arizonans, and the  public at large, on the value these public spaces hold for both citizens  and the tourists who help fuel Arizona’s economy. She and her  supporters just can’t imagine anyone being cheated out of standing in  the midst of majestic beauty and knowing it belongs to them.