Huron–Clinton Metroparks
The Huron–Clinton Metroparks system is a regional park system in Metro Detroit in the U.S. state of Michigan. The park system includes 13 parks totaling more than arranged along the Huron River and Clinton River forming a partial ring around the metro area. Plans are in development to finish the ring by building hike/bike trails to connect all the parks as a green belt. The parks draw about 7.5 million visitors a year, down from a peak of 10 million in 2009. The park system is primarily tax-funded with a $50 million annual budget. The system provides employment for 200 full-time and part-time employees year-round and 1,000 additional summer workers. The rivers are prime fishing and canoeing streams with Delhi Metropark including a short rapids, which while runnable, is the only point other than dams on either stream normally portaged.
Parks
The park district encompasses Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Washtenaw and Livingston counties. The park system was authorized in 1939 and funding began in 1942 with local property taxes providing for most of the budget. Additional funding comes from vehicle admission fees and fees for golf, boat launching, bike and boat rentals, swimming pools and other activities. The Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority is the body that administers the Metropark system and is governed by a seven-member Board of Commissioners. Two members are selected by the state governor and the other five members are selected, one from each of the five member counties. The Metropark system exists independent from other park systems in the area which include city, township, county and state parks. The park system has its own police force.- Delhi Metropark,, opened 1957
- Dexter-Huron Metropark,, opened 1952
- Hudson Mills Metropark,, opened 1957
- Huron Meadows Metropark,, opened 1984
- Indian Springs Metropark,, opened 1982
- Kensington Metropark,, opened 1947
- Lake Erie Metropark,, opened 1980
- Lower Huron Metropark,, opened 1947
- Lake St. Clair Metropark,, opened 1950
- Oakwoods Metropark,, opened 1975
- Stony Creek Metropark,, opened 1964
- Willow Metropark, about, opened 1970
- Wolcott Mill Metropark,, opened 1989
Park system trails also connect to or are part of larger trail systems like the Washtenaw County Border-to-Border Trail and the Michigan Iron Belle Trail.
An overpopulation of white-tailed deer in the parks in recent years was handled by a controversial special archery hunt. In 2019 the system conducted prescribed burns on 115 acres of land.