Arvada Press 120612

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December 6, 2012 A Colorado Community Media Publication

ourarvadanews.com

Jefferson County, Colorado • Volume 8, Issue 28

Arvada receives property donation

TEA TIME

City Council approves donation of former Meridian Farms from owner By Sara Van Cleve

svancleve@ourcoloradonews.com

Members of the Arvada Historical Society enjoy delectable delicacies during a tea at McIlvoy House in Arvada Saturday. Photo by Andy Carpenean

Open Space celebrates 40 years Four decades after the program was established, work remains By Glenn Wallace

gwallace@ourcoloradonews.com Not many 40-year-olds can boast ownership of 53,000 acres of land, but Jefferson County Open Space can. A group of county residents banded together and formed PLAN Jeffco four decades ago. In 1972 voters approved a county ballot measure asking for a onehalf percent sales tax for “planning for, developing necessary access to, acquiring, maintaining, administering and preserving open space real property or interests in real property, and developing paths and trails thereon for the use and benefit of the public.” Since then, that sales tax revenue has helped establish 28 parks with 210 miles of trails across the county. “We’re very known because we’re really the first foothills and mountain experience you can have going west,” Hoby said. An accurate count of annual visitors to Jeffco Open Space land is tough to obtain because there are no gates, no admission charges and multiple entry points to most open-space properties. A rough estimate provided a low-end figure of 2.1 million visits each year. “But we have consultants saying to us that we could have up to 6 million visitor days a year,” Hoby said. As popular as Jeffco Open Space may be today, both publicly and politically, it was not always that way. “It was a small and very, very enthusiastic core of people who started this,” Margot Zallen, one of the founding members of PLAN Jeffco, said. The 1972 ballot measure passed with a simple majority, but that was far from the end of PLAN Jeffco’s fight, Zallen said. She described a series of county-backed

The North Table Loop as seen through a fence line at North Table Mountain Park, part of Jefferson County open space. Photo by Andy Carpenean efforts in the 1970s and ’80s as “tussles” over whether the county was actually going to hold up its end of the bargain, and properly run and fund the voter-approved open-space plan. “There’s been a lot more cooperation from everyone now. We haven’t had a political fight in years,” she said. “We’ve had a very respectful relationship with developers and private land owners,” Hoby said, thanks to policies such as only seeking to buy land that is for sale, and seeking to pay a fair-market price. The next 40 years of Open Space will look a lot like the first 40, according to both Hoby and Zallen. Some $160 million in acquisition bonds taken out in 1998 still need to be repaid, while trails, parking lots and bathrooms at existing sites need to be built and maintained.

Hoby said the department is especially focused on “Heritage Conservation Areas,” including the banks and canyons of Coal Creek, Clear Creek, Bear Creek and Deer Creek. PLAN Jeffco recently took part in a joint Jeffco and Clear Creek County grant application, which resulted in the counties receiving $4.6 million to help build a multiuse trail through Clear Creek Canyon. Zellen and Hoby said the possibilities for acquisition and park development in Jefferson County could easily fill up the next 40 years. “If the county is willing to continue on that path, pun intended, than there’s a lot of opportunity,” Hoby said. For more information about PLAN Jeffco, go online to to Planjeffco.org. For more information about Jeffco Open Space parks or to volunteer, go to Jeffco. us/openspace.

In a first for the city of Arvada, City Council approved a land donation from a resident to the Parks, Golf and Hospitality Department. Council voted unanimously to accept the donation of 7.75 acres from Sydney Keith, owner of Meridian Farms, during its Nov. 19 business meeting. The property, 7650 Indiana St., which will be home to Meridian Farms through the end of the year, is set up as a commercial horse stable, and includes an indoor riding arena, 33 stalls, two small barns, a single-family residence and other facilities, said Gordon Reusink, director of Parks, Golf and Hospitality. “It was so attractive to us because it is adjacent to the city’s 27-acre equestrian center ,” Reusink said. “It [the Arvada Equestrian Center]has an outdoor riding area and a pasture, meaning people come there and use the trails and outdoor riding arena. With an indoor equestrian center, we’re able to look at the future possibility of putting those things together.” The city will officially take possession of the property Jan. 1 and begin developing plans for the future. “We’ll be in the process of developing what those plans will look like next year,” Reusink said. “It will involve a larger group — the equestrian community, the neighborhood out there, as well a bigger group to figure out the best use and the best course of action.” Reusink said the city intends to support Keith’s vision for the property. “Sydney’s vision of the property is to preserve the equestrian history of Arvada,” he said. “Along Indiana Street is changing, and there is a lot of commercial development, but we’ll be able to realize that vision by keeping it in public ownership and preserving the equestrian history. It’s great for the long term.” Though the city is awaiting an appraisal for the exact value of the property, Reusink said it is anticipated to be the largest donation the parks department has ever received in terms of monetary value. Keith could not be contacted for comment because of her traveling schedule, Reusink said.

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