Sacramento County Parks To Use Volunteer Rangers

Sacramento County will use volunteer park rangers in an effort to put more law enforcement officers on patrol.

The auxiliary ranger program will bolster a force that has been reduced from 25 to 14 rangers. Currently, people on the popular American River Parkway and Dry Creek Parkway are hard pressed to seen a ranger on duty.

“It’s not like it used to be. Three or four years ago you’d see a lot more of them out here,” said cyclist Rod Stoy.

“I have a real issue with that,” said hiker Andrew Mortimer, of the budget cuts that reduced the number of Park Rangers in the county. He’s upset because he sees people on the parkway that make people feel unsafe.

“The fact that this is built for people to enjoy recreational activities and they don’t even feel safe to be out,” said Mortimer.

The county is currently doing extensive background checks for the first six auxiliary rangers who must have police academy training under their belt. They will also get the training that full time paid rangers undergo. Rangers say with the current staffing, they spend the bulk of their time responding to calls rather than doing preventive and proactive policing on the parkway.

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