California landscape, for article on California state park expansion

California announces biggest state park expansion in decades

Three new state parks and expansions to several existing ones — California’s Earth Day announcement added hundreds of acres of protected land across the state, from the Central Valley to the redwood coast. It marks the largest growth of the California state park system in decades, bringing the total to 283 state parks.

At a glance

  • San Joaquin River Parkway: Six riverfront properties totaling 874 acres near Fresno and Madera will become a new state park, securing public access that was at risk of expiring due to the San Joaquin River Conservancy’s limited funding.
  • Dust Bowl Camp: A historic site near Bakersfield where Depression-era migrant farmworkers once lived — and which inspired John Steinbeck’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath — will be preserved as a state park.
  • Feather River Park: A 2,000-acre stretch of oak woodland along the Feather River north of Sacramento will become the first state park in Yuba County, a mostly rural region long overlooked by state investment.

Why the Central Valley win matters

For communities in and around Fresno, the San Joaquin River Parkway isn’t a distant destination — it’s within walking distance for some residents. Nesting bald eagles live along the river corridor. At night, the site becomes one of the darkest places in Fresno, offering a rare contrast to city lights.

The parkway’s six properties are currently managed by the San Joaquin River Conservancy, a small state agency with just six staff members. Its funding for operations and maintenance was set to expire next year. Transferring ownership to California State Parks solves that problem and guarantees long-term public access.

“We get forgotten about,” said Kari Daniska, CEO of the San Joaquin River Conservancy, “so for us to be in the spotlight feels really good.” The new park is part of a broader effort to protect 5,900 acres of open land along the San Joaquin River and build a 22-mile trail system.

History, access, and overlooked places

Dust Bowl Camp, near Bakersfield, carries a story many Californians know through literature but few have seen in person. The camp sheltered migrant workers who fled the Great Plains during the 1930s Dust Bowl — the people whose experience Steinbeck captured in one of American literature’s most enduring novels. Preserving the site as a state park honors that working-class history in a concrete and lasting way.

Yuba County’s Feather River Park fills a different kind of gap. The area’s oak woodlands drew heavy informal use for years, but also faced illegal dumping, trespassing, and off-road vehicle damage. Yuba County adopted a limited-use ordinance in 2024 C.E. that improved conditions, but state park resources will allow the land to reach its full potential. Gary Bradford, a Yuba County supervisor, called it “an amazing recreational asset.”

Paul Miller, president of the Sacramento chapter of the Audubon Society, uses a wheelchair and plans to advocate for accessible trails in the new park. The expansion of South Yuba River State Park in Nevada County — which will now encompass the full Independence Trail, the first wheelchair-accessible wilderness trail in the United States — shows what that kind of access can look like when it’s built in from the start.

Redwoods, bluffs, and existing parks grow too

Alongside the three new parks, California announced expansions to several existing ones. Save the Redwoods League donated 453 acres to Montgomery Woods State Natural Reserve in Mendocino County, adding second-growth forest and 1.25 miles of streams. In San Mateo County, 133 acres of coastal bluffs joined Pigeon Point Light Station State Historic Park, tripling its footprint.

South Yuba River State Park grew by 218 acres in Nevada County, absorbing the full length of the Independence Trail along a historic gold mining ditch — a route with both ecological and historical value.

The expansion is not complete in every sense. Many of these properties still need infrastructure investment — trails, facilities, and accessibility features take years and significant funding to build out. How equitably those resources flow to historically underfunded regions like the Central Valley and Yuba County will determine how much of this promise becomes real access for real people.

California State Parks Director Armando Quintero said the announcement sets the state “on a path to not just grow the State Park System but also provide more access and instill a greater connection and sense of pride for all Californians in their state parks.” With 283 parks now in the system, that path just got a little longer — in the best possible way.

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For more on this story, see: SFGate

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