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INSIDE
County parks
to formulate vision for growth
A county
parks open house to get community feedback on proposals to
be incorporated into an updated parks comprehensive plan was
sparsely attended, with only five people coming to voice their
priorities for park standards and financing over the next 20
years.
“It
seemed the primary issue was the protection and preservation
of Lily Point,” said county parks director
Michael McFarlane, who hosted the March 1 open house with consultant
Tom Beckwith. Other Point Roberts priorities that were discussed
in a January workshop – such as parking and restrooms
at Maple Beach or a lighthouse for Lighthouse Marine Park – didn’t
make it on the maps depicting existing and potential conservancy
areas, water access sites, campgrounds, trail systems, athletic
fields, community facilities and other components of the parks
system.
Beckwith
said while some of the Point’s recreational
priorities would not be reflected in the regional parks plan,
as a local parks plan would document them, and the county
could help local groups find funding. “We’ll look
at what tools can we give each different area to accomplish
these projects,” he
said.
Lily Point
might also be a local issue, Beckwith said, depending on what
value they see it having for all county residents, not just
those on the Point. “It’ll make the list but
the question is, is it regional? At what point do we justify
using countywide resources,” he said.
Trails are
a substantial component of the plan and the proposal to develop
bike and walking trails around the perimeter of Point
Roberts did make the regional maps, but the Point was not included
on the map documenting scenic roads to preserve, despite
input at the earlier workshop that the Point’s
tree-lined entrance on Tyee Drive and other forest buffers
should be preserved.
“Now
we’ll pull these
back and define them into projects,” Beckwith
said. McFarlane said once projects and funding strategies
were developed they would go back to the community
with a telephone and mail survey. “We’ll
get that sample group to tell us their final priorities
and how they want them funded,” he
said. He expects a final updated comprehensive plan
to be before county council by late fall, after planning
commission review.
If Point
Roberts community members who didn’t make the
open house still want to voice an opinion, McFarlane
said they still have time. “The ideal thing would
be to have all the information in the next couple of
weeks,” he said.
McFarlane can be reached at 360/733-2900 or mmcfarla@co.
whatcom.wa.us.
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