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In an effort to save on cash processing and hand handling fees, 22 national parks have gone cashless as of 2023. In September 2023, U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) proposed the "Protecting Access to Recreation with Cash Act" (PARC) which would require national parks to accept cash as a form of payment for entrance fee. [13]
State Route 73 (SR 73) is an approximately 17.76-mile (28.58 km) [1] state highway in Orange County, California.The southernmost 12 miles (19.31 km) of the highway is a toll road operated by the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor Agency named the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, which opened in November 1996.
Tolled northbound exit and southbound entrance: Irvine: 24.97: 40.19: 25: Portola Parkway – Irvine: Tolled northbound exit and southbound entrance Tomato Springs toll gantry 27.43: 44.14: 27: SR 133 Toll south to I-5: Tolled southbound exit and northbound entrance; northern terminus of SR 133; SR 133 north exits 14A-B: Orange: 32.54: 52.37: 33
The Southern California Railway Museum (SCRM, reporting mark OERX [1]), formerly known as the Orange Empire Railway Museum, is a railroad museum in Perris, California, United States. It was founded in 1956 at Griffith Park in Los Angeles before moving to the former Pinacate Station as the "Orange Empire Trolley Museum" [ 2 ] in 1958. [ 3 ]
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; last free northbound exit before toll road begins: 1.64: 2.64: 2: Irvine Boulevard: Tolled northbound exit and all entrances: Irvine Ranch toll gantry: 2.85: 4.59: 3: Portola Parkway: Tolled southbound exit and all entrances: Orange: 6.04: 9.72: 6A: Santiago Canyon Road / Chapman Avenue to SR 241 Toll south
State Route 57 (SR 57), also known as the Orange Freeway for most of its length, is a north–south state highway in the Greater Los Angeles Area of the U.S. state of California. It connects the interchange of Interstate 5 (I-5) and SR 22 near downtown Orange , locally known as the Orange Crush , to the Glendora Curve interchange with I-210 and ...
Wild Rivers is a water park in Irvine, California, United States.It opened in July 1986 on the site of the former Lion Country Safari. [1] Following the expiration of its lease with The Irvine Company, it closed on September 25, 2011. [2]
The 17.4-mile (28.0 km) road was dedicated on July 14, 1967, at the toll plaza just east of SR 15, and the remaining section (Orange Blossom Trail to Orange Avenue) opened nine days later. The OOCEA board had voted to name it after Martin Andersen in December 1966, and in 1967 the Florida Legislature passed this designation into law.