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Capital <br />Parks and <br />Park Acquisition <br />Operations <br />Pass- <br />Other <br />Improvement <br />Trails Legacy <br />Opportunity Fund <br />and <br />Through <br />Investments <br />Program <br />Fund (State <br />and Council <br />Grant Program <br />Maintenance <br />(State Funds) <br />Grants <br />(State and <br />(State and <br />Funds) <br />(State and Council <br />(State Funds) <br />Council <br />Council Funds) <br />Funds) <br />Funds) <br />ENRTF PTLF <br />$414.1 M <br />$84.1M <br />$15.1 M <br />$15.6 M <br />$163.0 M <br />$104.7M <br />$25.1 M <br />The Council administers pass- through funds from the state to regional park implementing agencies to <br />pay for a portion of their operations and maintenance costs. The share each regional park <br />implementing agency receives is based on a formula specified in state statute (Minn. Stat. 423.351). <br />In addition to the four grant programs highlighted above, the Council also provides additional funds and <br />administers other investments. For example, the Council administers pass- through grants from the <br />state to regional park implementing agencies. These dollars are legislatively earmarked for a particular <br />regional park implementing agency or park and trail unit. Additionally, the Council provides other <br />funding investments not included above. For example, legislation created a special fund for North <br />Mississippi Regional Park. In another example, Council bonds have been issued to pay for acquisitions <br />without state matching funds. In sum, the total investment the state and Council have made toward the <br />Regional Parks System between 1974 and 2014 totals $821 million (Table 2 -1). <br />Table 2 -1. 40 -year Regional Park System State and Regional Funding Investments, 1974- <br />2014 <br />1 Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund acquisition account <br />2 Parks and Trails Legacy Fund acquisition account <br />About eight /tenths of a percent (0.82 %) of the total state and local taxes paid by a household in the <br />region go to support the Regional Parks System. For the owner of a $250,000 home in the seven - <br />county metropolitan area, the average annual cost of the Regional Park System is $67 - including $26 <br />in state income and sales taxes and $41 in regional and local property taxes. <br />The investments and funding sources described above are not the only funding sources for the <br />Regional Park System. Each regional park implementing agency provides their own mix of funding for <br />their respective regional parks and trails. Other funding sources also exist, including federal grants, <br />public - private partnerships, and private donations. In addition to the four grant programs highlighted <br />above, the Council is committed to creating a set -side competitive grant program that is specifically <br />targeted to enhance equitable usage of regional parks and trails. This grant program, tentatively called <br />the Park Equity grant program, will be created using Council bonds and funded on an annual basis. <br />Because of existing constraints on Council bonds, the grant program will provide funding only for <br />acquisition, development, or redevelopment projects in the Regional Park System. Additional details of <br />the new grant program are described in Chapter 4. <br />