They really should establish a separate agency dedicated exclusively to managing the state parks. It would allow the parks to receive the focused attention and resources they need, rather than competing with the department's other priorities.
This is the correct answer. If you want a park system like Tennessee or Bama you need a Department of Parks whose sole responsibility is to maintain the parks. Mississippi state parks are funded through a mix of state appropriations, federal grants, special trust‑fund programs, and revenue generated by the parks themselves. The system is more complex than most people realize, and recent legislative actions have significantly changed the funding landscape. Currently there are 25 state parks totalling 24,000 acres. For FY27, MDWFP requested about $21 million in general funds, including $7.4 million for state‑park salaries. The parks welcomed 1.25 million visitors last year at a fee of $0 -$4.00 per guest. Not much revenue for 25 parks and thousands of protected acres.
The boardwalk is 1,700 feet long and built in 2011. To replace it would probably cost $1,000,000 - $2,000,000. Even a refurbishment will probably cost $250,000 - $500,000. The "simpletons" are probably working with too little money and too many projects.
Here are the souces of funds for the parks:
| Funding Source | Type | Purpose | Scale |
|---|
| General Fund | State | Salaries, operations | ~$21M request (FY27) |
|---|
| Capital Expense | State | Major repairs, renovations | ~$18.8M request |
|---|
| MOSTF | State trust fund | Conservation, recreation projects | $50.2M awarded since 2022 |
|---|
| ARPA/Tourism | Federal/state | Infrastructure upgrades | ~$36.3M |
|---|
| LWCF | Federal | Outdoor recreation development | $25k–$250k grants |
|---|
| Park Revenue | Self‑generated | Lodging, concessions | Growing via renovations |
|---|