HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council Committees - Parks and Human Services - 04/18/2013 Parks and Human Services Committee Meeting
/'�► April 18, 2013
'Z KENT
W nS XINGTON
Council Committee Members: Chair Debbie Ranniger, Elizabeth Albertson, Dana
Ralph
Chair Debbie Ranniger called the meeting to order at 5:03 p.m.
Item 1: Minutes of March 28, 2013 - Approve
Committeemember Ralph moved to approve the minutes dated March 28,
2013. Committeemember Albertson seconded. The motion passed 3-0.
Item 2: Namina of Fire/Police Department Exercise Room - INFO ONLY
Fire Chief Jim Schneider spoke of City of Kent Firefighter Marty Hauer who was an
International Association of Firefighters Peer Fitness Trainer. He devoted his entire
career to the promotion of health and wellness, as well as advocating for early
detection of cancer. Firefighter Hauer contracted a rare form of cancer that was not
detected in prescreening and he passed away at the age of 41. Marty spent his last
five years on the development of a Regional Wellness Center designed to serve many
fire and police departments in the Seattle, Kent, and Tacoma area. Because of
Marty's dedication, the Kent Fire Department RFA would like to name the Joint
Fire/Police exercise room, at Fire Station 74, located at 24611 116th Avenue SE, in
memory of Firefighter Marty Hauer.
The Kent Fire Department RFA leases Fire Station 74 from the City of Kent so Chief
Schneider conferred with CAO John Hodgson and Police Chief Thomas and received
approval. Chief Schneider noted that since the naming policy refers to facilities and
parks, naming a room does not require a formal process. If moving forward, the
dedication would occur on Wednesday, June 19, 2013 at the scheduled Kent Fire
Department RFA Governance Board meeting.
Director Watling reiterated that this exercise room is used by public safety staff only
and not a public space, so there is no need to take formal action as traditionally
required through Parks and Recreation Policy 1.14 - Naming Parks and Facilities. The
Comm itteemembers unanimously agreed that it is a wonderful idea and fully support
it. They felt no reason to take formal action. Facilities staff will be directed to proceed
with Chief Schneider on naming the room.
3. Kina Conservation District Grant Agreement for Green Kent
Partnership - Accept/Authorize
Park Planning and Development Manager Hope Gibson reported that this is year four
that staff applied for and received a grant from the King Conservation District to
continue implementation of the Green Kent Partnership. Specifically, this grant
funding breakdown is: $29,747.76 for a Green Kent temporary employee (includes
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allowable mileage stipend) and $2,365.78 for an intern, both to supplement available
Parks personnel and provide field support to stewards, $15,794 to Forterra for
regional coordination and trainings, $9,000 for contracted crew work, $1,370 for tools
and plants, and $4,125 to offset the Special Programs Manager's time overseeing the
project.
Director Watling commented on the positive three way partnership with Forterra, King
Conservation District, and the City of Kent. Director Watling commended the Park
Planning staff on taking the lead on this funding and the successful management of
the Green Kent Program.
Committeemember Albertson moved to recommend accepting the
$62,402.54 King Conservation District grant, authorizing the Mayor to sign
the agreement and approving the expenditure of funds in the Green Kent
Partnership budget. Committeemember Ralph seconded. The motion passed
3-0.
Item 4: 2013 First Quarter Fee-in-Lieu Funds — Accept
Manager Gibson reported that between January 1, 2013 and March 31, 2013, the City
of Kent received a total of $70,125.00 from the following developer who voluntarily
paid fees in lieu of dedicating park land to mitigate the development of single family
homes in local subdivisions:
• Springwood Park budget: $54,825.00 from Henley USA LLC
• Springwood Park budget: $15,300.00 from Henley USA LLC
Committeemember Ralph moved to recommend accepting the $70,125.00
fee-in-lieu funds and amending the Community Parks Reinvestment budget
for future expenditure of funds in the Springwood Park budget.
Committeemember Albertson seconded. The motion passed 3-0.
Item 5: Recreation Conservation Office Grant Agreement Amendment -
Acceot/Authorize
Manager Gibson stated that Victoria Andrews is extraordinary in obtaining grants for
some of the programmatic work we do and Brian Levenhagen is exceptional in
obtaining grants for some of the park development projects.
The city has an agreement with the Recreation and Conservation Office (RCO)
Washington Wildlife and Recreation Program and this amendment awards the city
$144,880.00 in additional funds to reimburse the purchase of the Schulte property.
This .71 acre site will be included in the Clark Lake Assemblage.
Director Watling added that these funds are part of completing the land acquisition of
the Schulte property with full grant funding. Director Watling also complimented Brian
Levenhagen in doing a fantastic job as we've been very strategic in our acquisitions
and our grant funding options.
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Committeemember Albertson moved to recommend authorizing the Mayor to
sign the Recreation and Conservation Office grant amendment to receive
$144,880.00 in funds to reimburse land acquisition at Clark Lake.
Committeemember Ralph seconded. The motion passed 3-0.
2013 First Ouarter Report and Contributions Report - INFO ONLY
Director Watling highlighted division programs and services, as well as in-kind,
and/or cash contributions received during the first quarter of 2013.
Riverbend. In looking closely at the first quarter of 2013, the revenues are up in all
four revenue centers at the Riverbend Golf Complex. That is 30% up in revenue from
2011 and 2012 comparably, and it is approximately a $90,000 improvement in the
first quarter alone.
Park Operations. During the spring season, we have a lot of preparation happening
within our park acreage. The crews are conducting safety compaction in our play
areas during the first quarter of the year and bringing in two cubic yards of bark for
our play areas.
Athletic Complexes. Staff is prepping for a busy tournament season as we are careful
to amend the soil to have the right mix. Approximately 26 tons of infield mix has
been spread onto our fields to minimize injuries and maximize use.
Kent Commons. We had over 65,000 customers at Kent Commons during the first
quarter of 2013. A couple years ago, due to budget decisions, we consolidated
Adaptive Recreation and Youth/Teen staff and services over to Kent Commons. We
have begun to see high synergy within the programs at Kent Commons. One very
popular family program is the Indoor Park with an average of 70 customers per day.
Rentals. We've added four additional shelter spaces to rent this year. We anticipate
over 70,000 people will be served through our reservation program.
Phoenix Academy. The center continues to be very innovative. Director Watling
commended super volunteer Tremain McPherson. Tremain provides supervision in the
game room at Phoenix Academy. Besides offering regular activities such as pool, ping
pong, foosball and video game tournaments, we have begun to train teens for job
skills and resume building. The two teens that committed to the program and worked
with Tremain have jobs now.
Contributions Report. This report demonstrates the work of our staff throughout the
department. This is reflective of donations of $5,000 and less, none that require
formal action. We received over $21,000 from residents and businesses from cash
and in-kind gifts. We are very thankful and honored to partner with them.
Quarterly Reporting. Director Watling asked Comm itteemembers if the Quarterly
Report is of value and if they'd like it packaged differently. Comm itteemembers Ralph
and Albertson were in agreement that the report holds a wealth of knowledge and
they appreciate seeing the depth of our services and they impact the community.
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To share this information with the remaining Councilmembers and the public, Chair
Ranniger suggested presenting a quarterly report at the City Council meetings.
Comm itteemembers recommended a distilled report, modeled after the Public Safety
Report, showing graphs, statistics, and trends with a focus on key seasonal
programs. Debbie will talk to President Higgins for approval.
Director's Report
Volunteer events. Earth Day Saturday, April 20 at Clark Lake Park is already full.
Arbor Day is on April 27 at West Fenwick Park and National Trails Day is May 18 at
Lake Fenwick Park. Registrations are going great. Committeemembers were invited to
stop by.
Tournament Season. We received some proof of the economic benefit resulting from
our tournaments. Service Clubs up on East Hill has become a haven for our girls fast
pitch tournaments. We recently received a call from Safeway up at Kent Kangley,
asking for a tournament schedule because their deli was sold out by two teams from
Canada playing in a tournament at Service Club Ballfields.
King County Parks Levy. Director Watling addressed the Council's request for an
update on the proposed King County Parks Levy going on the ballot in August.
Director Watling served on the task force that helped shape what that levy looked
like. This is a renewal - in 2004, the levy was on the ballot for 5 cents per $100,000
and was a stop gap to keep parks open. In 2008, it was renewed as two levies that
totaled 10 cents per $100,000. The 2013 proposed levy is 18.9 cents per $100,000.
It is important to note that the levy has become King County Park's primary funding
source. It is not a levy for local and regional parks. A majority of the funds would
support operation of King County's larger regional facilities such as: Burke Gilman
Trail, East Lake Sammamish Trail, portions of the Green River Trail, the Cedar Trail,
Marymoor Park, and the Woodland Park Zoo. This levy supports King County
operating expenses for the regional system, capital reinvestment, deferred
maintenance, as well as their strategic plan for acquisitions. From the 18.9 cents, 1.3
cents is proposed to be divided up by 39 cities, based on population and acreage.
Previously, County levy funding was for acquisition or trail funding. In this proposed
levy, the 1.3 cents for local cities would support any capital needs within its local
system. For Kent, it would represent about $200,000 per year.
It's now with the King County Council to make the decision. If the levy is placed on
the August ballot, it would then transition into campaign mode. Director Watling feels
it is a very important measure for the regional system, but it is tough knowing the
plight of local systems - including our own aging infrastructure. He is concerned about
sustainability and that this growing levy is only supporting the regional system, not
the local systems. He feels we need to find ways to get funding back into our local
systems.
Committeemember Albertson believes local cities should get a bigger portion of the
levy. She struggles with residents thinking the levy sends sufficient funds to local
cities. This may cause tension from residents wondering why local cities don't have
enough reinvestment funding for parks if they just passed a parks levy.
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Committeemember Ralph feels it's a struggle for system capacity. At some point
system-wide, we are going hit that capacity and the dollars aren't necessarily going
to be available. In integrating the parks we've acquired from the regional system into
the city, the money hasn't followed. It's not enough funding to bring those parks up
to city standard.
Director Watling said that if we really want to think about sustainability, we need to
look at the relationship between the regional and the local system. The city has been
part of solving the County budget problem since 2003, when they transferred their
high use parks and facilities to local cities. Cities continue to fund the operation of
those parks as well. They are united systems that lean on each other. As residents
think of park systems, it consists of both local and regional park amenities. It is going
to be very important to make sure both regional and local parks are supported,
funded and vibrant.
Committeemember Albertson is concerned with the consequences if the levy doesn't
pass. As King County's primary funding source, what happens in shoring up the
regional assets she's paid for and enjoyed for so long? It is similar to school districts
using levy funding for day-to-day operations and not system improvements and
larger projects.
Committeemember Albertson asked for clarification on cities having the opportunity
to submit a list of parks for funding, if the levy passed. Director Watling responded
no, there is no application process to King County. There is just the potential of Kent
getting approximately $200,000 based on the 1.3 cents. Continuing, Director Watling
said, when we looked at the work with our citizens group and some of the
reinvestment needs we have, Wilson Playfields Renovation is at $1.8M and the Lake
Meridian new dock is at $1.5M. The two hundred thousand dollars will help, but it's a
different list in terms of how we reinvest those funds in order to keep our parks
functioning.
Chair Ranniger adjourned the meeting at 5:43 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
"Peril Pett^o-lz
Teri Petrole
Council Committee Secretary
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