“This is an exciting next step in the Park’s journey and critical to improving the Park and its forthcoming new master plan, which will be grounded in public input and focused on serving the greater good,” said City Park CEO Cara Lambright. “We are thrilled to put the Park on par with the best parks in the world with this streamlined structure and proven model for resourcing greenspaces, programming, and the community.”
City Park Conservancy will operate according to a cooperative endeavor agreement with the Improvement Association to operate and manage the Park. The agreement ensures transparency and accountability through multiple measures, including an approved, publicly informed master plan, a strategic plan, and an annual operating budget.
“The City Park Improvement Association and its Commissioners have made huge strides over the years in creating a world-class Park, and this transition has been a long-contemplated improvement to better serve Park users and the community,” said David Waller, CPIA chairman. “We are delighted that the Conservancy will help us improve our care for this Park and the people it serves.”
In addition to the City Park Improvement Association and City Park Conservancy boards, the process of formulating the cooperative endeavor agreement involved the participation of four different law firms and an auditing firm. The governance and oversight role of City Park Improvement Association does not change with this agreement, and it continues to ensure that the public is served and management is consistently guided by what is best for City Park.
State lawmakers approved City Park contracting management and operations of the Park to a nonprofit in 1989, and City Park Improvement Association has consistently revisited the importance of this opportunity. The recent impacts of the pandemic and Hurricane Ida highlighted the pressures on the Park’s financial resources and the need for diversified funding sources. This, combined with CEO Lambright’s vision for improving the Park and extensive experience in fundraising and the conservancy model, clarified that it was time to move to this nationally recognized best practice model of park management.
“It is an honor to launch the Conservancy,” said Liz Sloss, inaugural chair of the City Park Conservancy Board of Directors. “As a steward of this magnificent Park, providing for its continued operation and sustainability is our highest and most important role. The conservancy model does just that.”
If you’re wondering what will happen with Friends of City Park…
Friends of City Park, a nonprofit organization that has supported the Park since 1979, has approved an agreement to merge with City Park Conservancy, bringing fundraising, membership, and programming under City Park Conservancy management. This merger will combine resources under one strategic plan, maximize dollars for the Park by reducing overlap in operations and align initiatives to better deliver services and Park user experience. The Friends of City Park Membership program, along with other programs that Park users have come to know and love, will continue.
Premier urban parks throughout the country rely on the conservancy model, which is a public-private partnership, to create vibrant and thriving public spaces. The public-private partnerships between the City Park Improvement Association and City Park Conservancy will ensure best practice management of City Park and support the Park’s vital connection to the community. The Improvement Association retains ultimate authority over the Park. Both City Park Improvement Association and City Park Conservancy will maintain unique boards of directors to ensure the highest standards of transparency and accountability.
The master planning process is anticipated to launch in 2023 and will support a robust and inclusive public engagement process, rigorous scientific and usage studies, and procuring the services of a landscape architecture firm that will listen to the public to improve the unique urban ecology and create a visionary plan for the next 100 years at New Orleans City Park.
Featured image by Mallory Fandal from Shutterstock.