Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Red Rock Canyon' Tag

NEIGHBORHOODS LOSE THEIR PATRON SAINT OF PARKS

May 9th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

This is a farewell to Paul Butcher, the patron saint of neighborhood parks. And trails. And open space

He’s one of the good guys of government. It’s popular to bash bureaucrats. Don’t bash Butcher. 

In fact, next time you are riding one of Colorado Springs‘ many trails, or hiking open space, or just watching your kids play in a neighborhood park, take a sip from your CamelBak and toast Paul. 

From 1994 until he retired April 30, he directed the Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department

 During that time, he presided over the largest expansion of parks, trails and open space since Springs founder Gen. William Jackson Palmer was donating land up until his death in March 1909. 

Butcher benefited from passage in 1997 of a one-tenth of a percent sales tax to pay for acquisition, construction and maintenance of Trails, Open Space and Parks, or TOPS, which generates about $6 million a year

The numbers are impressive: 5,000 acres of open space acquired; 100 miles of trails built; 48 neighborhood parks added to the inventory; dog parks; skate parks; swimming facilities; spray grounds; countless ballfields, sports courts, playgrounds and picnic areas. 

Paul decided to retire after watching his department gutted by severe budget cuts. 

In 2007, his agency had 225 employees and a budget of $19.9 million. Today, it has 140 employees and a budget of just $6 million general fund dollars. It generates about half that amount. 

And the future looks grim. 

“If we stay on the course we’re on, there’s a complete inability to maintain the park system to the level we did five years ago,” Butcher said. “It would be foolhardy to build any more parks if the city is required to maintain them.” 

That’s because irrigation systems, grass, playgrounds are expensive. So are the people needed to mow them, empty trash cans and fix sprinklers and repair vandalism. 

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Paula and Paul Butcher kneel on the front row, on the right, surrounded by their family in this 2008 photo.

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“It was an opportune time to retire,” he said, explaining he will be maximizing his time with his wife, Paula, their six kids and four grandkids. 

It can’t get much worse. Sure, the city could cut the remaining funds. But it would be foolish. Only about 12 people on staff are paid from the city general fund. The agency is doing the bare minimum at this point. 

Cutting more would jeopardize the $4 million it receives in lottery funds, which can only be used for parks. They can’t pay for someone to attend City Council meetings. Or for electricity. Or the water bill in the administration building. 

And there’s little to be gained, he said, from selling park property. Most parks have clauses in their deeds requiring them to remain parks or revert to the previous owners. 

“It would be very difficult to sell off parts of the parks system,” he said. 

So he is off to pursue his volunteer work, family life, daily runs with his lab, Shadow, and relax a bit. He considers the city’s acquisition in 2003 of the 789 Red Rock Canyon Open Space a highlight of his career. 

Read a 2007 story I wrote at this link. Here’s a map of the park. 

Here’s a look at the canyon in a 2004 photo by The Gazette’s Bryan Oller

READ ‘EM AND WEEP

September 13th, 2009, 11:43 am by

Budget projections. For Colorado Springs in 2010, it looks pretty bleak.

Just check out the city’s Web page. You can’t avoid the numbers or the city’s efforts to convince voters to approve a property tax increase on Nov. 3 to avoid drastic cuts. Here’s an example of the city’s efforts to educate voters on how little they pay in sales tax compared to other cities.

springsgov

Income from sales taxes and other sources is in a free-fall.  The city planned to spend about $237 million from its general fund in 2010. Now, it  is projecting a $25.4 million shortfall in revenue.

penny-culbreth-graftHere’s a link to a presentation by City Manager Penny Culbreth-Graft , left, on Aug. 24 in which she laid out the ugly numbers.

 

 

 

 

Everyone knows the greatest savings are achieved through reductions in personnel. And you are probably thinking: look, the city has 1,800 employees. How hard can it be to save $25.4 million?

Really hard if you take 1,200 employees out of the equation.

That’s how many police and firefighters are on the city payroll. Voters don’t like cuts in public safety. And politicians like to brag about all the new cops and firefighters they put  on the streets.

That leaves just 600 city staffers to shoulder the cuts. And, again, nobody likes to see their pothole fillers and snowplow drivers cut. Here’s a look at the budget pie. The big slice is police and fire. The smaller slice is every other department in city government.

budgetpiechart

So the budget ax is taking aim at so-called “non-essential” services like parks, recreation and cultural services. I guess that’s true, if you consider quality of life a “non-essential” item. Check out these numbers.

parksgraphic

 That agency has 216 folks work to maintain six community centers, seven pool complexes, the ice center, museum, historic sites and thousands of acres of parks from Garden of the Gods and Red Rock Canyon down to dozens of neighborhood parks.

Who needs them? I’m guessing there isn’t anyone reading this who doesn’t use one or more of the facilities on that list.

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