A staff member told the Butte City Finance and Budget Committee on March 18 that the driving range at Copper Mountain Park sits on a former landfill, and maintenance and monitoring costs for that site are charged to the solid-waste enterprise fund.
The staff member said the landfill has ongoing post-closure responsibilities for the property, including environmental sampling and upkeep of the driving range’s equipment. “That driving range is built on the old landfill, and they are charged with maintaining that property in perpetuity,” the staff member said in the transcript. The staff member added that revenue from the driving range is returned to the landfill enterprise fund.
Commissioner O'Leary asked whether Parks and Recreation is required to maintain the space and how the money interplays between departments. The staff member replied that Parks maintains Copper Mountain Park generally, but the driving range itself is maintained by landfill staff as part of post-closure liability; landfill staff hire summer employees to pick up balls and service equipment, and those costs are paid from the landfill fund.
Why it matters: assigning maintenance and revenue to the landfill enterprise fund means the municipal solid-waste budget, not Parks, funds ongoing upkeep for the driving range. That distinction affects which departmental budgets show revenue and expense and which department is responsible for ongoing maintenance and compliance tasks.
The committee did not take formal action on the arrangement during the meeting; the discussion was explanatory as part of the expenditure and transfer review.