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Serving Northwest Fort Wayne & Allen County
June 27, 2014
Town opens spigot on splash pad Free dog park opens;
people park advances
By Garth Snow gsnow@kpcmedia.com
By Garth Snow The Riverside Gardens splash pad opened with a splash. Schoolchildren circled the concrete surrounding the water park and playground equipment. Impatient toddlers wandered along the limestone play creek that carries the water from the splash pad. Leo-Cedarville town and school leaders, and other supporters waited for a moment at the microphone, or to nod in acknowledgement of other speakers. Town Council President John Clendenen quickly summed up years of work on the $800,000 project, which also includes three horseshoe pits, two sand volleyball pits and additional, ADA-compliant concrete paths. It’s just a pond and a pavilion away from the Cedarville Reservoir, and a short walk from the center of town. “On behalf of the Town
gsnow@kpcmedia
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
Teeva Gerber, 2, explores the limestone creek owing from the new splash pad at the recently improved Riverside Gardens, 14701 Schwartz Road in Leo-Cedarville.
Council and the Leo-Cedarville Foundation, we’d like to thank the Park Board for all their hard work to bring this park to our town,� he said. “Three years ago I challenged the Park Board to bring additional recreational opportunities to our park and I think they answered that challenge in
a big way,â€? he said. “I’d like to especially thank our town manager, Peggy Garton. From the original grant application to the planting of the owers, her attention to detail has really had a big impact on this project.â€? “Leo/Cedarville is more than just a place,â€? he said. “It’s where we live
our lives, we raise our children, we work and we play. And now, more than ever, our parks will help deďŹ ne who we are.â€? Park Board President Mark Hamilton said the project “brings all kinds of activities for all ages.â€? “Promoting health is the main idea of this project,â€? he said.
It’s a dog’s world — about a hundred feet square. “Everybody’s walking dogs in town, lots of people, but they had no place to run and roam,â€? said Dan Holmes, the president of the Friends of Huntertown Parks, “And we provided a place for them.â€? Dogs can enjoy the wide open spaces and the canine playground equipment of the new Huntertown dog park while dog owners enjoy the cost: Free. “The ďŹ rst phase of it is ďŹ nished,â€? Holmes said. “Our hope is that we can build a second one and then have a division of dogs by weight.â€? The ďŹ rst phase measures a hundred feet on each side, with a 15-by-20 staging area. “Then you get your doggy bags, etc., and then go into the open area and then it’s off-leash,â€?
Parkview recruits police with ‘a heart for service’
Holmes said. “There’s a posted set of rules, it’s open to the public, it’s all free,� he said. “We just ask them to clean up after their dog and observe the rules, and everybody have fun.� Dogs might wander over a wooden bridge, jump onto tables, or leap over an adjustable bar. Just the bridge might have cost $1,200 from a catalog. Holmes said he and others built all the See PARK, Page A3
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By Peter Ambrose pambrose@kpcmedia.com
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PHOTO BY PETER AMBROSE
Shannon Berry will become a lieutenant stationed at Parkview Regional Medical Center as part of Parkview Health’s new police department.
“Ninety-ďŹ ve percent of their job is going to be customer service and providing a safe and secure environment for the patients, the visitors and all the co-workers.â€? He plans to have 22 sworn ofďŹ cers in the department when it’s
fully implemented. They would be dispersed among the Parkview Regional Medical Center campus off Dupont Road, Parkview Hospital Randallia, and the four community hospitals in See POLICE, Page A4
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Kiddie AcademyÂŽ of Fort Wayne
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Northeast Indiana will see a brand-new police agency begin operations in the coming weeks. Not one that serves a community or county, but one sworn to speciďŹ cally protect Parkview Health. The nonproďŹ t health system is forming its own police department in an effort to provide a higher level of security at Parkview’s hospitals in the region. But unlike traditional police forces, law enforcement would only be a small part of the overall mission for these police ofďŹ cers. “If something rises to the level that we need to take action, we would, and they would be certiďŹ ed and trained to do that,â€? said Tom Rhoades, Parkview’s director of security and a chief architect of the initiative.
PHOTO BY GARTH SNOW
Dog cleanup bags and rules are ready. Park along Woods Road.
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