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ILLINOIS PARKS &
RECREATION

MARCH/APRIL 1993

VOLUME 24

NUMBER 2


Intergovernmental Cooperation:
The Park District Advantage

KASPER: Cooperative Efforts
Give Latchkey Kids
A Home Away From Home
Page 8

Tax Cap Legislation Passes
Senate Executive Committee
ip9303tc1.jpg
Page 10

TRENDS
Indoor Parks-A New Trend?
Page 34

  6   Creating a Leadership Team
by TedFlickinger, Ph.D., IAPD Executive Director

  8   KASPER: Cooperative Efforts Give Latchkey Kids
A Home Away From Home

by Jennifer Miller

10   Legal/Legislative Scene
by Peter M. Murphy, CAE, IAPD General Counsel

16   Volunteers: An Underutilized Resource
by Ray Morrill, CLP

18   Changing Trends, Shrinking Funds and Fewer Leisure
Hours Determine New Directions in Recreational Design

by Carol Sente

21   Stress Management in Recreation Settings
by Mary A. Mathieu, CTRS

25   ISU's Alumni Survey: Unique and Valuable Information
by Normal Stumbo, Ph.D., CTRS

28   Illinois Association of Park Districts Hosts New
Legislators Reception

31   A Time For Seekers
by Jane Hodgkinson

32   Public Awareness Perspective: On Hold Message
System An Easy, Creative Way to Promote Your District

by Lisa M. Gann-Wick

34   Trends: Indoor Parks—A New Trend?
by Kathie Mitchell

35   People, Places & Things


Laura J. Bedford, Editor
Springfield, Illinois

Theodore B. Flickinger, Managing Editor
Executive Director, IAPD, Springfield, Illinois

Illinois Parks and Recreation 6 March/April 1993

A Note From The Editor

Forests of Illinois

Following is information published in Forests of Illinois, a cooperative endeavor of the Illinois Council on Forestry Development and the Illinois Natural History' Survey.

* According to estimates by the U. S. Forest Service, about 12 percent of Illinois (4.27 million acres) is forestland, particularly in the southern and western counties.

* Sixty-one percent of the flora native to Illinois and 75 percent of its wildlife habitat are found in forests, which occupy only 12 percent of the state.

* Illinois is responsible for 4 percent of the carbon dioxide contributed by humans to the earths atmosphere; yet our state accounts for only 0.2 percent of the world's population and 0.1 percent of its land surface. Illinois forests help to alleviate this disproportion.

* More than 90 percent of the forests in Illinois are privately owned. The remaining 10 percent is publicly owned, primarily by the federal government in the form of Shawnee National Forest.

* The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that approximately 169,000 Illinoisans own forestland and that each of them owns an average of 21 acres.

* Only 31 percent of the forests in existence in 1820 remain, and today' s forest is essentially secondary forester regrowth from cut-over timberland.

* Illinois forests provide habitat for more than half of the botanical species native to the state.

* Nearly all of Illinois forestland is capable of and potentially available to produce commercially valuable trees; only 235,600 acres have protected status.


On The Cover

Carol Tapio of Downers
Grove Park District captured
this issue's cover
photograph at Lyman
Woods.

ip9303011.jpg

Illinois Parks and Recreation 7 March/April 1993

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