Day of Service coming Sept. 12 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is plan- ning its second Day of Ser- vice at Champoeg State Park on Saturday, Sept. 12, and the public is invited to join hun- dreds of other volunteers. Chores will include bark dust, removing ivy and blackberry vines throughout the park. Clean up work at the park will begin at 9 a.m. and be concluded by noon. SEPTEMBER 4, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A3 Dedicating the Big Toy A hot dog barbecue will follow. Volunteers are asked to bring rakes, shovels and wheelbarrows. Work gloves are a must. The day will start at the Oak Grove overfl ow parking area where duties and teams will be assigned. For further information contact Didi Orr at 503-869- 8746 or Phil Bay at 503-930- 2649. Holiday card contest A call has been made to area artists to enter submissions for the 2015 City of Keizer holiday greeting card. The Keizer Public Arts Commission, which works to bring art into the community, invites residents of all ages to submit art work that expresses the holiday season in Keizer. The deadline is Friday, Sept. 18. All submitted entries become the property of the city. The artist of the selected artwork will receive a $100 gift card to Michael’s Art and Crafts. Contest rules and an application can be downloaded at keizer. org; they are also available at city hall. This year the Keizer Public Arts Commission, whose goal is to bring public art into our community, invites Keizer residents of all ages to submit artwork expressing the holiday season. KEIZERTIMES/Lyndon A. Zaitz KEIZERTIMES/Lyndon A. Zaitz Mayor Cathy Clark addresses the crowd during the Big Toy dedication on Saturday, Aug. 29. From left: Crater, state Rep. Bill Post, Marion County Commissioner Janet Carlson, task force chair Marlene Parsons, Mayor Cathy Clark and Richard Walsh. Big Toy group looking at grant options By CRAIG MUPRHY Of the Keizertimes City offi cials will be apply- ing for a grant in the spring for the Big Toy’s surface. The question remains just how much will be applied for. The Community Build Task Force is still meeting, even fol- lowing June construction of the play structure at Keizer Rapids Park and last Saturday’s offi cial grand opening, in large part to apply for more grants in the fu- ture. While engineered wood fi - ber is the current surface, the hope all along has been to have a spongy, poured-in-place sur- face. That option was elimi- nated from the project budget in the spring, with the idea being grants would be applied for in the future to secure the necessary fi nances. If funding is secured and the new surface is put down, the current surface would be removed and put into other Keizer parks. Thus the discussion at Tues- day’s CBTF meeting. The biggest grant being looked at for next year is the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department’s Local Govern- ment Grant. City leaders ap- plied for a $150,000 grant through that program in 2014 but didn’t get it. Though the new surface is the main improvement being sought, there is the possibility of other improvements such as an expanded trail and possibly new restrooms being added to the tally. Marlene Parsons, chair of the CBTF, used estimated fi gures from Bill Lawyer, Keizer’s Pub- lic Works director. “The poured-in-place will cost roughly $175,000,” Par- sons said. “If you get a $100,000 grant and a $100,000 match, that is $200,000. We want to put in more of a path and pav- ing. We do have old system de- velopment charges money of $100,000, but that’s it. If we go for more, we’re talking about other fundraising and other grants.” Janet Carlson, who chaired the fundraising committee that has since been rolled into the overall CBTF group, noted the improvements could be shown as examples of making the play structure easier for youth with disabilities to use. After some discussion, Par- sons noted fi gures have to be presented to Keizer City Coun- cilors such as herself for ap- proval before any grant can be applied for. “I need a fi gure to take to council,” she said. “I need an exact fi gure.” Lawyer said something else needs to be done fi rst. “We need to identify the scope of the project fi rst,” Law- yer said. “What’s going to be in- cluded in the project?” CBTF member Richard Walsh liked Carlson’s sugges- tion of tying projects into the disability theme, with things like an ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) compliant path. Councilor Brandon Smith suggested adding permanent re- strooms to the list, but Lawyer noted cost issues. “The problem with a per- manent bathroom right now is it has to be vault toilets, or we have to put in sewer,” Lawyer said. “Just to get the sewer there is at least a $300,000 project. It’s a major, major project.” Smith suggested looking at other improvements down the road in the KRP master plan and asked about seeing if other groups might have funds avail- able to use as a match. Lawyer wondered if that would be overstepping the group’s bounds. “This is the Community Build Task Force; you’re talk- ing about Parks Board issues,” he said. “This is just for the Big Toy.” Parsons was in agreement with Lawyer. “That’s a discussion the Parks Board needs to have,” she said. Walsh said a relatively simple proposal would be good. “If we made a simple project like the spongy surface, the path and bathrooms, that would be pretty attractive,” Walsh said. Parsons would like to see more exact numbers and infor- mation at next month’s CBTF meeting. “It would be helpful to have the information so we’re not shooting in the dark,” she said. “Hopefully we’ll have a lot of answers to questions next month.” Sam Goesch Ins Agcy Inc Sam Goesch CLU, Agent 3975 River Road North Keizer, OR 97303 Bus: 503-393-6252 State Farm , Bloomington, IL 1211999 We’ll transform your kitchen or bath into what you’ve always dreamed of 503.393.2875 remodelkeizer.com CCB#155626