Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'neighborhood parks' Tag

BONFORTE COULD BECOME GARBAGE ORPHAN

October 24th, 2010, 12:01 pm by

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Robin McPeek  believes in giving back to her community.

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 She appreciates Colorado Springs and particularly enjoys walking her dog in Bonforte Park and along the Rock Island Trail.

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So when the Colorado Springs Parks Department announced in February it was pulling 396 garbage cans from 128 neighborhood parks as a cost-cutting measure, McPeek worried what would happen.

The Parks Department took them away to save $40,000 in liners, roll-off service costs, landfill fees and worker time.

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She feared the park and trail would become trashy places.

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That’s why McPeek volunteered when Springs resident Steve Immel created Proud of Our Parks to encourage people to adopt their neighborhood parks and collect the trash.

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McPeek thought it would be no big deal to picked up the trash bags  from Bonforte Park once a week.

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Six months later, she has had a change of heart.

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She still loves her park and trail.

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 But she issick of hauling garbage and feels unappreciated.

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McPeek is so burned out she says she will not continue collecting the garbage next summer.

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If the city doesn’t change its policy and start picking up the trash, Bonforte will again be a garbage orphan.

Not all the Proud of Our Parks volunteers who adopted parks are burned out. Of the 160 or so trash cans being patrolled by volunteers, about one-third are sponsored by businesses and the rest are mostly neighborhood groups, Immel said.

Sue Iverson, Tony Valdez, Bonnie Hansen, Mike Lucas and Mitch Lucas have shared the duty of taking out the trash at Broadmoor Glen park since March 2010.

Real estate agents have their smiling faces on many cans. Restaurants are frequent adoptees, too.

A typical neighborhood group is one organized by Sue Iverson to patrol Broadmoor Glen Park in the 211-home Reserve at Broadmoor Glen neighborhood.

Iverson said she rotates with three other families. They emtpy the garbage twice a week. They learned to use Bungee cords to secure the bags and everything has gone smoothly.

Iverson said one family used the trash can project as a chance to teach their son about giving back to his community. For her, it’s a chance for community service and to protect the property values in the neighborhood where she has lived 11 years.

Kurt Schroeder of the Parks Department applauded all the volunteers who have adopted parks.

He said the program worked well all summer. He said a few glitches involved garbage cans left unattended during volunteers’ vacations. But he said the program is a huge success.

Schroeder said it’s unknown if the City Council will approve money for trash removal in the 2011 budget.

Here’s an earlier column I wrote about Proud of Our Parks and my previous blog on the subject.

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NO PARKING ZONE – Flying Horse residents demand their neighborhood park now

October 21st, 2009, 5:42 pm by

A big reason Maureen and Jeff Storch bought a home in the new Flying Horse neighborhood of Saratoga back in 2007 was because plans called for a near six-acre park across the street from them on Crane Canyon Loop.

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Here’s a look at an architect’s blueprint of Saratoga from the Flying Horse Web site:

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So-called  “Frogs Leap Park” would have something for all four of their children, ages 3, 8, 10 and 11. There was to be a playground, basketball court, baseball diamond and walking trails.

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“We bought a house right on the park,” Maureen Storch said.

Except for one problem. Two years later, there is still no park. Just weeds.

Here’s a look at the field after the developer, Classic Homes, rolled out some artifical grass in an effort to appease neighbors upset that the park had not been built yet:

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Storch and other neighbors say they were promised a park in 2007 and can’t understand why Classic is building parks in adjoining Flying Horse neighborhoods but not in Saratoga.

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Doug Stimple, chief executive officer of Classic, explained that Saratoga was conceived as a commercial development. Not residential.

When the developer decided to convert it to new homes in 2006, it didn’t have financing for a neighborhood park, which cost about $400,000.

 Before the company could complete a refinancing package, commercial credit markets froze solid. He said the parks being built in Syrah, Solera and Calistoga neighborhoods of Flying Horse all were designed and financed with the original package and those funds cannot be transfered to Saratoga.

Want to see how Saratoga has progressed? Here’s an early look from GoogleEarth:

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This is later from FlashEarth:  saratogaflash1

 

Storch also is upset that Classic has not landscaped a detention pond behind her home. Here’s how it looks today in a patched-together panorama:

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