HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council Meeting - Council Workshop - Minutes - 02/19/2019
Approved
City Council Workshop
Workshop Regular Meeting
Minutes
February 19, 2019
Date: February 19, 2019
Time: 5:00 p.m.
Place: Chambers
I. CALL TO ORDER
Attendee Name Title Status Arrived
Dennis Higgins Councilmember Present
Les Thomas Councilmember Present
Bill Boyce Council President Present
Dana Ralph Mayor Present
Satwinder Kaur Councilmember Present
Brenda Fincher Councilmember Present
Toni Troutner Councilmember Present
Marli Larimer Councilmember Present
II. PRESENTATIONS
1. Riverbend Golf Complex Business Update
Parks Director, Julie Parascondola advised that this presentation is to update
the Council on the progress of the Riverbend Golf Complex Business Plan and
that Riverbend Golf Complex Manager, Pete Peterson will give tonight's
presentation.
Peterson provided a brief history of the golf complex including information on
the:
1982 Purchase of the Par 3 Golf Course and Driving Range
1989 18-hole golf course opened
1995 Remodeled the driving range and min-putt course
2000 Parks Department took over the management and day-to-day
operation of the complex
2008 Holes 2-9 remodeled to accommodate levee improvements
2016 Riverbend drilled an irrigation well
2017 Completed first 6-year business plan
2018 City sold par 3 golf course property
The Riverbend Golf Complex consists of an 18-hole golf course, driving
range, lesson center, merchandise center and restaurant/bar.
Peterson advised the Riverbend golf complex has a full-time staff with 177
years of experience at Riverbend in addition to 36-part time and seasonal
staff.
City Council Workshop Workshop Regular
Meeting
Minutes
February 19, 2019
Kent, Washington
Page 2 of 5
Programs include being the home course for four local high school golf
programs, supports and hosts the First Tee of Greater Seattle and the
Douglass Youth Development Junior Golf, supports the Washington State Golf
Association and Western Washington Chapter of the PGA, home course for
Riverbend men's golf club and Riverbend ladies golf association. Riverbend
offers lessons and clinics for women only and offers reduced rates for juniors,
millennials, seniors and active military.
Innovative marketing includes:
“Growing the Game” campaign
Tee it Forward tees designed for juniors, beginners and shorter hitters
Dynamic pricing structure
Doppler Deals - November through February reduced rates based on the
percent chance of rain
Tuesday morning senior men’s league
Preferred player cards
Season and monthly golf passes
Eagle, Double Eagle and Birdie cards
Kids play for FREE - Sunday afternoons with a paying adult
Millennial Madness - reduced rates for ages 18-35 during non-peak times
Riverbend 2018 Key Accomplishments
Managed within and exceeded the Business Plan goals
Transitioned the sale of the par 3 property and closure of the Par 3 Golf
Course
Initiated the Tuesday morning Senior Men's League
Initiated the Riverbend Growing the Game Campaign
Purchased a new fleet of maintenance equipment
Installed state of the art ball machine at driving range
Installation of a new point of sale system
Over 5,500 volunteer marshal hours
Over 7,000,000 range balls were hit
Over 63,500 rounds of golf were played
Riverbend Golf Complex - 2018 Financials:
2018-2023 Business Plan - Riverbend did not show profit until 2019,
dependent upon driving range expansion.
Met or exceed key business plan financial goals
Significant reactive and proactive cost management, dynamic pricing
In 2018 the Golf Enterprise Fund wrote off all past bad debt
59% of cash reserve established to help balance fund differential.
Peterson reviewed the 5-Year-round history.
Riverbend Golf Complex 2019 Work Plan Highlights:
City Council Workshop Workshop Regular
Meeting
Minutes
February 19, 2019
Kent, Washington
Page 3 of 5
30th Anniversary of the 18-hole golf course
New restaurant coming this spring
New website coming this spring
Expansion of the "Growing the Game Campaign"
Pro Shop expansion and remodel project at the 18-hole golf course
Renovation of the landscaping around the 18-hole golf course clubhouse and
parking
Replacement on the on-course restrooms at the 18-hole golf course
Driving range expansion and remodel project tentatively scheduled to start in
the fall
Revision and updating the golf complex business plan
Councilmembers expressed their appreciation of the work of Parascondola,
Peterson, and their staff in developing and implementing the Riverbend
Business plan.
2. Traffic Congestion
Senior Long-Range Planner, Hayley Bonsteel advised that the goal of
tonight’s presentation on traffic congestion is to arm the councilmembers
with the knowledge to help them respond to constituents and make sound
decisions on this controversial topic.
Bonsteel provided a brief history on the building of the interstate system.
Bonsteel indicated that traffic congestion is a significant community concern
and reviewed myths and truths regarding congestion.
Myth: Traffic is caused by too much growth and we can fix it by building
wider roads.
The way that we grow is what causes traffic, not that we grow. The truth
about this myth is “if you build it, they will come.” Traffic = people making
choices. People make the choice to take a trip that they wouldn’t have
before. It’s called induced demand - You induce people to use something by
building it. Bonsteel provided countless examples of roadways built with the
intention to ease congestion, and traffic getting worse every time.
The true cause of traffic congestion is car- and truck-dependent land use and
infrastructure. As people whose role it is to shape the future of our city, we
must take a bigger picture viewpoint and see that we are forcing people to
drive because of policy decisions about land uses (what’s allowed to be
where) and infrastructure (how are different areas connected).
How can we use the facilities we have in the best way?
City Council Workshop Workshop Regular
Meeting
Minutes
February 19, 2019
Kent, Washington
Page 4 of 5
Street Capacity - How can we help the greatest number of people go from A
to B safely and efficiently? We can increase the capacity of a street if we
focus our investments on modes that get people moving through the system
more efficiently.
Induced demand also means inducing different modal trips. When viadoom
was predicted, people were encouraged by the situation, news, press, etc, to
shift their habits - and it worked.
Maintenance Costs - We can’t afford to continue our car-dependent pattern
anymore. Roadway projects come with an overwhelming cost of maintaining
the system. It’s fiscally prudent to ask what the costs are of the choices
we’ve made. The result of a system where driving is mandatory - costs us all
an incredible amount of money, that we simply don’t have anymore.
Public transit travel costs are much lower than automobile costs in urban
areas. Walking and biking cost a lot of time and inflict virtually no damage on
roads and streets, and take up only a tiny fraction of the road space occupied
by vehicles.
Bonsteel provided examples of costs to human health, time and mental
health, the environment and life safety.
Bonsteel indicated we need to:
· Prioritize bike/pedestrian/transit projects. These are lower cost and come with a
higher benefit
· Rapid Ride I is coming to the East Hill and this is a real chance to change things
for our East Hill residents, particularly since light rail investments are less likely
to work for them
· Comp Plan and zoning code amendments. Land use decision making. Note the
recent opening up of downtown to light, clean manufacturing for Naden and
other opportunities. We need jobs, residents, and services to be collocated
· Densify on existing roadway infrastructure to capitalize on prior investment
· Where we’ve already widened roads and have good facilities, we should focus
growth there. New developments can contribute by filling in sidewalk gaps,
making it easier to get to transit. This will be easier when we’ve changed our TIF
and concurrency management to support Multimodal LOS, which is being
analyzed as part of the TMP process
· Densify an existing, roadway infrastructure to capitalize on prior investment
· Look for redundancies in our system and shift the priorities to better serve
different purposes.
Examples: Willis/516 and Meeker
228th and Central Avenue
Benson/116th/132nd
City Council Workshop Workshop Regular
Meeting
Minutes
February 19, 2019
Kent, Washington
Page 5 of 5
By prioritizing truck traffic for decades = rational choice given the tax
revenues that made the rest of Kent possible
The Challenge is that places built for trucks are difficult to also make
welcoming for people.
Bonsteel indicated that the industrial valley subarea plan is likely to shift
emphasis away from truck-heavy (and people-light) warehousing and
distribution. This
Due to revenue, number of jobs, quality of jobs.
What does this need to succeed?
Manufacturing = high quality jobs = needs to attract talented workforce =
must be welcoming for people. Cool companies want cool people who want to
work in cool places with cool lunch options and happy hour spots.
We need to start rethinking the roadway space allocated to truck movement
and potentially reclaim some of the vast roadway space in the valley for
people.
So, what do we do about trucks?
De-emphasize truck mobility in our infrastructure planning and plan
pedestrian and placemaking improvements in the valley.
Bonsteel concluded with indicating we need to think about how to “solve”
traffic congestion. There is not one silver bullet: many smaller decisions
(and some big ones) can start to turn us in a more responsible, sustainable
direction. We need to shift our mindset to facilities bike/ped/transit options -
many overlapping benefits for the community in the long term.
Meeting ended at 6:37 p.m.
Kimberley A. Komoto
City Clerk
RIVERBEND GOLF COMPLEX
2019 West Meeker St r eet | Kent, WA 98032
Riverbendgolfcomplex.com
Riverbend Golf Complex History
•1982 the City purchased the Par 3 Golf Course and Driving Range from the owner of Colony
Park Apartments
•1989 (June) the 18 Hole Golf Course opened for play
•1995 the City remodeled the Driving Range and Mini-Putt course
•2000 the Parks Department took over the management and day to day operation of the Golf
Complex
•2008 Holes 2 –9 were remodeled to accommodate levee improvements along the Green
River
•2016 Riverbend drilled a new irrigation well
•2017 Riverbend completed its first 6 Year Business Plan (2018-2023) with the help of Pro’s
Consulting
•2018 the City sold the Par 3 Golf Course property
Riverbend Golf Complex Information
•The Riverbend Golf Complex consist of an 18 Hole Golf Course, Driving Range, Lesson Center,
Merchandise Center and Restaurant/Bar.
o The 18 Hole Golf Course features a relatively flat lay out with five different tee locations
ranging from 4,435 yards to 6,663 yards and plays to a par of 72 and has 52 bunkers, 3 lakes
and a wetland west of the course
o The 18 Hole Golf Course is one of the busiest golf courses in the state with over 60,000 rounds
annually
o The Driving Range features 32 covered and lit stalls for year around practice (goal to expand to
13-14 more by 2020)
o The Lesson Center consists of 6 stalls designed for both private and group lessons
o The Merchandise Center features a full line of name brand golf equipment, golf apparel,
custom club fitting, re-gripping and club repair services
o The restaurant area consists of 6,400 square footage, which includes the main dining and bar
area, kitchen, the outdoor patio area and the 2,400-square foot outdoor tent for tournaments
and events
Riverbend Golf Complex Full Time Staff
Lloyd Abraham
Maintenance Worker III
35 Years at Riverbend
Melanie Manning
Golf Financial Supervisor
34 Years with the City of Kent
18 Years at Riverbend
Pat Sims
Golf Complex Mechanic
31 Years with the City of Kent
14 Years at Riverbend
177 Years of Experience at Riverbend in addition to 36 Part Time and Seasonal Staff
Eric Hinrichs
Head Professional –18
Hole Golf Course
20 Years at Riverbend
Josh Immordino
Assistant Golf Professional
13 Years at Riverbend
Dave Owen
Maintenance Field Supervisor
29 Years at Riverbend
Pete Petersen
Golf Complex Manager
25 Years at Riverbend
Marti O’Neill
Head Professional –Driving
Range/Merchandise Center
23 Years at Riverbend
Riverbend Golf Complex Programs
•Riverbend supports and is the home course for four local high school golf programs; Kent Meridian, Thomas
Jefferson, Mount Rainier and Seattle Christian.
•Riverbend supports and hosts the First Tee of Greater Seattle and the Douglass Youth Development junior golf
programs
•Riverbend staff conducts three Junior Camps annually; two for kids 5-15 and one for high school age players
•Riverbend supports the Washington Junior Golf Association and regularly hosts sub-district tournaments
•Riverbend supports the Washington State Golf Association and has hosted their Parent and Child tournament
•Riverbend supports the Western Washington Chapter of the PGA and annually hosts their Pro-Junior
Tournament
•Riverbend is the home course for the Riverbend Men’s Golf Club and the Riverbend Ladies Golf Association with
a combined membership of over 400 members
•Riverbend offers lessons and clinics for women only, such as Lady’s Night Out
•Riverbend offers reduced rates for juniors, millennials, seniors and active military
Riverbend Golf Complex Innovative Marketing
•Riverbend’s “Growing the Game Campaign” designed increase participation
•Tee It Forward tees, designed for juniors, beginners and shorter hitters.
•Dynamic Pricing structure which offers reduced rates during non-peak times.
•Doppler Deals –November through February reduced rates based on the percent chance of rain
•Tuesday Morning Senior Men’s League to offset the closure of the Par 3 Golf Course
•Preferred Player’s Cards –Reduced rates for regular customers that play often
•Season and Monthly golf passes
•Eagle, Double Eagle and Birdie cards –Pre paid rounds of golf at a reduced rate
•Growing the Game Tee Times –Daily after 6:00 p.m. during the golf season
•Kids Play for FREE –Sunday afternoons with a paying adult
•Millennial Madness –Reduced rates for ages 18-35 during non-peak times
Riverbend Golf Complex
2018 Key Accomplishments
•Managed within and exceeded the Business Plan goals
•Transitioned the sale of the Par 3 property and closure of the Par 3 golf course
•Initiated the Tuesday morning Senior Men’s League which used to the Par 3 Golf Course to offset the closure of the
Par 3 golf course
•Initiated the Riverbend “Growing the Game Campaign” to increase participation and offset the closure of the Par 3
golf course
•Purchased a new fleet of maintenance equipment
•Installation of a new state of the art ball machine at the Driving Range
•Installation of a new Point of Sale system and hardware at the 18 Hole golf course and Driving Range
•Over 5,500 volunteer marshal hours
•Over 7,000,000 range balls were hit at the Driving Range
•Over 63,500 rounds of golf were played at the 18 Hole Golf Course, making it one of the most played golf courses
in the state of Washington
Riverbend Golf Complex –2018 Financials
2017 ACTUAL 2018 BUS PLAN 2018 EST ACTUAL VARIANCE
REVENUES / SOURCES $2,527,079 $2,572,624 $2,402,097 ($170,527)
EXPENSES / USES $2,827,952 $2,712,129 $2,467,669 ($244,460)
NET INCOME / (LOSS)($300,873)($139,505)($65,572)$73,933
•2018 -2023 Business Plan did not show profit until 2019, dependent upon driving range expansion.
•Met or Exceed key business plan financial goals.
•Significant reactive and proactive cost management, dynamic pricing, etc.
•In 2018, the Golf Enterprise Fund wrote off all past bad debt –clean slate.
•59% of cash reserve established ($207,317) to help balance fund differential. Remaining 41% to come after Phase
II of Marquee on Meeker .
Riverbend Golf Complex –5 Yr Round History
62,000 64,000
60,032
66,215
64,506
59,546
63,578
56000
58000
60000
62000
64000
66000
68000
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019-Est
Business Plan Actual
Riverbend Golf Complex
2019 Work Plan Highlights
•30th Anniversary of the 18 Hole Golf Course
•New restaurant coming this spring to the golf course, Half Lion Public House
•New website coming this spring
•Expansion of the our “Growing the Game Campaign”
•Pro Shop expansion and remodel project at the 18 Hole Golf Course, scheduled to be completed by early spring
•Renovation of the landscaping around the 18 Hole Golf Course clubhouse and parking lot
•Replacement of the on-course restrooms at the 18 hole golf course
•Driving Range expansion and remodel project tentatively scheduled to start in the fall
•Revision and updating the Golf Complex Business Plan
TRAFFIC CONGESTION
COUNCIL WORKSHOP 02/19/2019
SIGNIFICANT
COMMUNITY
CONCERN
MYTHS ABOUT TRAFFIC CONGESTION
It’s caused by
too much
growth
We can fix it
by building
wider roads
MYTH #1:
CAUSED BY TOO
MUCH GROWTH
MYTH #2: WE CAN FIX IT BY BUILDING WIDER
ROADS
TRUTH:
MYTH #2: WE CAN FIX IT BY BUILDING WIDER
ROADS
TRUTH:
THE TRUE CAUSE OF TRAFFIC CONGESTION
Car-and truck-dependent land
use and infrastructure
STREET CAPACITY
How can we help the
greatest number of
people go from A to B
safely and efficiently?
SPACE COMPARISON
MAINTENANCE COSTS
OTHER COSTS
Human Health
Time and Mental Health
Environment
Life Safety
OTHER COSTS
CDC Data
Prioritize
bike/ped/transit
projects
Prioritize
bike/ped/transit
projects
Mix land uses to
allow for shorter
trips
Prioritize
bike/ped/transit
projects
Mix land uses to
allow for shorter
trips
Densify on existing roadway infrastructure
to capitalize on prior investment
Prioritize
bike/ped/transit
projects
Mix land uses to
allow for shorter
trips
Densify on existing roadway infrastructure
to capitalize on prior investment
Look for redundancies in our system and shift
the priorities to better serve different
purposes
WHAT ABOUT
TRUCK
TRAFFIC?
Prioritizing truck traffic
for decades = rational
choice given the tax
revenues that made the
rest of Kent possible
THE CHALLENGE
Places built for
trucks are difficult
to also make
welcoming for
people
(E.g., Amazon
employees having
difficulty walking
to work from bus
–have requested
crossing
improvements)
NOT TO SCALE
ACTIVITY IN THE VALLEY: CHANGING?
Industrial
valley
subarea plan
likely to shift
emphasis
away from
truck-heavy
(and people-
light)
warehousing
and
distribution
ACTIVITY IN THE VALLEY: CHANGING?
What does this
need to succeed?
ACTIVITY IN THE VALLEY: CHANGING?
Talented people!
SO WHAT DO
WE DO ABOUT
TRUCKS?
De-emphasize
truck mobility in
our infrastructure
planning
Plan pedestrian
and placemaking
improvements in
the valley (more
to come)
CONCLUSION
Induced demand: if you build it, they
will come
Evolution in thinking about how to
“solve” traffic congestion
Not one silver bullet; many smaller
decisions (and some big ones) can
start to turn us in a more
responsible, sustainable direction
Shifting our mindset to facilitate
bike/ped/transit options = many
overlapping benefits for the
community in the long term