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WEEK IN REVIEW
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Count drags on long after the election's over
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Saturday


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Friday


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Safety long a concern for road involved in fata...
State budget's $2 billion hole will require dee...
County considers building for disaster response...
Wednesday


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Marysville rejects idea of a much later start f...
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Tuesday


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Monday


Friends mourn 2 killed in Lynnwood crash
'No Child' law sees more students transferring ...
"Nutcracker" is link to family history for 6-ye...
 

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CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Monday, October 26, 2009

Cavalero Hill Park opens as a work in progress

An off-leash area for dogs is open as are trails, but more development is on hold.

LAKE STEVENS — A park near the crest of the hill overlooking the Ebey Island flats might stay a work in progress for a long time, but it's opening to the public anyway.

As of today, dogs have free run of a fenced-in area at Cavalero Hill Community Park. People can stroll through trails on the 40-acre property.

“The site's open, at least on a limited basis,” Snohomish County parks director Tom Teigen said. “It's going to be a number of years before we start doing the large-scale development.”

The park is on 20th Street SE near Cavalero Hill Road, an unincorporated area expected to be annexed by Lake Stevens. An opening ceremony is scheduled at 4 p.m. today.

The county is opening new parks at a time when other governments are considering closing them down or giving them away.

Over the summer, the county took over Wenberg State Park, one of more than a dozen parks Washington wanted to hand off to local governments. King County leaders, meanwhile, are considering the closure of 39 parks as a way to deal with a budget shortfall.

In contrast, Snohomish County has opened several parks this year, with plans for more in 2010.

A $5 gate fee is helping the county operate Wenberg, while inmate labor has kept the cost of preparing the Cavalero Hill Park to about $20,000, Teigen said.

Perhaps the biggest factor in keeping the county's parks open, however, has been volunteer work from horse riders, bikers, hikers and other user groups.

Fundraising and volunteering by the Sky River Soccer Club allowed the county to open the Fairfield County Park soccer complex near Monroe this year.

Dog-owners group Sno-DOG has taken the lead in maintaining off-leash areas at Willis Tucker Community Park near the Silver Firs neighborhood. Sno-DOG is a major reason the number of dog parks in the county has grown from three in 2007 to more than nine now, Teigen said.

“These dog groups, all they want is a few acres of field,” he said. “They do a good job of patrolling and self-correcting.”

Mountlake Terrace, Monroe and Marysville all have opened municipal dog parks. A private dog park on Ebey Island has been open about two years, said Chris Newman, who oversees the property.

An anemic economy means parks departments need volunteers to pitch in more than ever, said Gabrielle Flanagan, Sno-DOG's secretary and treasurer.

“The county has been really, really supportive but going forward, we're going to need some community support,” she said.

The county bought most of the future Cavalero Hill Park in 2001. The purchase defused a fight between the previous landowner, who was trying to bring a large retail store to the site, and neighbors.

Kay McDonald lives nearby on property that's been in her family for generations. She can remember the present-day park as farmland when growing up in the 1940s and 1950s.

“It's wonderful,” McDonald said. “Everyone's very happy that it's parkland now.”

Noah Haglund: 425-339-3465, nhaglund@heraldnet.com.

READER COMMENTS
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Park Politics
Very few may recall that this park was actually scammed into existence by a fraudulent County Council action back in 2002.

At the time the county was being threatened with a multi-million dollar lawsuit by the land owner over a zoning issue (was going to be a Fred Meyer).

So the County stole money earmarked for neighborhood parks (under 3 acres) and used it to payoff this landowner to make the lawsuit go away.

The result is the loss of 5-10 parks scattered around Snohomish County to benefit local neighborhoods. Instead we got one mega-park that won't likey serve as many families week in and week out - not to mention that a decade after the debacle this park still may not be fully-functional.

So don't be too eager to pat the county on the back on this one... it was politics and disservice to the citizens at its finest.

A R | Oct 26, 2009 12:28 pm | 0 replies | View all | Post reply | Request removal

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