Monday, November 23, 2020

Town Council Directs Staff To Better Reflect Towns Needs In Parks and Recreation Master Plan

Plan must reflect resident needs
Last Wednesday, The Oro Valley Town Council directed town staff to better reflect resident needs in the Parks and Recreation Conceptual Master plan. That plan is being developed by PROS Consulting.  Council noted that the conceptual plan  does not properly match the priorities of the community. 

The town developed these priorities after five months of community input gathering by PROS Consulting. They gathered information from community meetings, an input survey and a statistically valid online survey. 

High Priority "Trails and Conservation Areas" ignored in plan
Council Members Barrett and Bohen observed that the conceptual plan relied too heavily on comparisons of what Oro Valley has to overall national statistics; and that it did not adequately reflect what residents said they want. In particular, high priority items, such as trails and open space were generally ignored while low priority items such as basketball courts were emphasized.


Even more astounding is that the conceptual plan has no facilities for the town north of Tangerine. Yet, 40% of Oro Valley residents live in there. 

Winfield : The plan must emphasize resident defined top priority items 
Speaking at length, Mayor Winfield expressed disappointment that the community needs were not reflected in the conceptual plan. Referencing the needs assessment: “With that community input we are going to pivot. It’s going to be included. I am confident of that. I agree. The rankings are critical foundational information to the development of the master plan.” Community input "...simply can not be ignored…. We are going to give greater emphasis to those three priority items.” 

Winfield: North of Tangerine needs a community park
Speaking specifically to the residents north of Tangerine, Winfield observed that PROS equity mapping of facilities has clearly shown the need for a community park north of Tangerine… a park of 10 to 75 acres.  "I believe that the master plan should reflect that need.” 

Winfield's approach to Oro Valley Parks Planning is resident, not commerce focussed
Winfield’s comments are one of those times that clearly differentiate the Winfield Council from the Hiremath Council. 

Hiremath’s goal was to use Parks and Recreation facilities for sports tourism and to focus on building facilities for younger families. The emphasis on attracting younger families was part of his failed “rooftops strategy.” 

Winfield, on the other hand, is focussed on the needs of those who live in the community now and who will likely want to live here in the future. A multi use trail will not bring thousands of people into Oro Valley to spend their money; but it will bring happiness to those who live here.
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