MAY 5, 2017, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A9 Gates may get reopened at MHS before. And it’s going to take a relatively large By ERIC A. HOWALD communication campaign to let students know Of the Keizertimes After numerous appeals to the Keizer City about it,” Reid said. Reid added that even if the other gates were council, there may be some light at the end of the tunnel for neighbors on the west side of the opened on a limited basis, it might not curtail the parking issues on Newberg, only the traffi c McNary High School campus. Three nearby residents, Charles Anderson, congestion. In an display of his frustration with the situ- Jeff Weekly and Michael Catlow, spoke with council members at a meeting Monday, May ation, Weekly confessed to having put a lock on 1. Anderson and Weekly have made regular the Newberg gate in mid-March. School offi - appeals to the council during the past several cials responded by cutting the gate off entirely. The action drew sharp months hoping to fi nd some rebuke from Mayor Cathy sort of relief from overfl ow Clark. traffi c and parking problems “You locked a gate to keep during the peak drop-off and our students out of our high pick-up hours at McNary. school? Is that what you just “It’s a convenience for the told us? Words fail,” Clark students, but you are doing said. “There have been a lot it on our backs. Please wrap of things that we have worked your head around that. (The together on like allowing po- students using Newberg) get lice to tow vehicles blocking out of paying the parking fees driveways. There are things and get out of parking in that — Mayor Cathy Clark that can be done like side- school lot. I wouldn’t want walks and lights that have to park in that lot,” Anderson been refused. Locking stu- said. One of Anderson’s main points of conten- dents out, it’s something that ... wow.” Weekly retorted, “I didn’t lock them out tion is that when the school closed gates to the campus on Sandy Drive and Robindale Drive of school. I kept them from using our street. the problems associated with student traffi c all They can walk an extra block on Chemawa and moved to Newberg Drive. He objects to the Lockhaven.” City manager Chris Eppley, who has urged school not taking similar action at the Newberg gate, and wants the city to put pressure on the Anderson to take up the issue with the school Salem-Keizer School District to make a change. district during meetings and in private corre- Councilor Laura Reid, who is also a teacher spondence, did so again. Anderson asked whether the city could block at McNary, recently met with Principal Erik Jespersen and said the school administration is off the side of the gate facing Newberg, which looking into experimenting with reopening the is city-owned. “It’s a public right-of-way allowed to be used Sandy and Robindale gates during peak hours, by citizens for driving and walking. The students but no action is likely until this fall. “We don’t want to open them permanently are members of the public. It’s not illegal,” Ep- and invite the criminality that was happening pley said. “You locked the gate to keep our students out of our high school?” PARKS, continued from Page A1 four seasonal workers hired each year for the busy season from March to October. One of the full-time employees spends half of his time dealing with maintenance issues at the Keizer Civic Center. In the past year alone, issues at Keizer parks have caused no small amount of consternation for parks employees and the members of the parks advisory board. “Too many people think you can buy something for a park and not touch it for 20 years,” said Robert Johnson, Keizer's parks supervisor. “Parks are no different than a car, you have to get tires rotated, you have to change the oil, you have to do the things that keep it running and usable.” When a play structure at Wallace House Park was van- dalized, the city struggled to fi nd $3,500 to repair it. Sec- tions of the structure had to be blocked off for about a week. A planned repair to the parking lot on the south end of Claggett Creek Park cost nearly twice as much as originally estimated because the work was deferred for a year. At Carlson Skate Park, cracks are becoming so prominent that it is becoming a safety issue for park users. Pri- oritizing fi xes at the skate park meant that the parks board will not offer a matching grant pro- gram for parks improvements during the next fi scal year. Without additional funding, Keizer Public Works Director Bill Lawyer has said that even things like mowing and garbage removal will suffer and that some amenities will be closed or removed as they reach the end of their life cycle. What options were consid- ered before settling on fees? Bonds and establishing a parks taxing district were con- sidered. Both were rejected for different reasons. Bonds cannot pay for operational costs and those are the heart of the parks' woes. A bond could pay for a new tennis court, but not the staff time needed to maintain it. The taxing district was rejected because of the additional over- head it would create that would add to the cost. Why doesn't the city just raise taxes? It can't. Bond measures passed in the mid-1990s locked in property tax rates (in Keizer's case, $2.08 per thousand dol- lars of assessed value) and the amounts at which property values can increase on an an- nual basis (3 percent). Recently, additional payments to PERS have eaten up the lion's share of the annual property value in- creases that Keizer receives. Wouldn't residents get to vote on whether the city can charge fees? Not necessarily. The city council has the power to enact fees within its jurisdiction. The council could choose to seek an advisory vote, but the results would not be binding. An advi- sory vote would also add to the city's expenses. How would the fees be col- lected? That remains to be deter- mined. Adding the fee to util- ity bills the city already issues for water would save process- ing, postage and printing costs. However, the city council could also set it up as a separate bill. Will my water be cut off if I don't pay the fee? City staff has assured the council that no one would have their water cut off for failure to pay a parks fee. What fee amounts are being discussed? Amounts discussed range from no fee to $8 per month. What were the results of the survey sent to residents? Residents returned 1,102 surveys, which amounts to about 8 percent of Keizer's roughly 14,300 households. Most survey respondents (23.8 percent) said they supported a $4 fee, but the results were fairly close across the board. An $8 fee was supported by 21.9 percent of respondents; a $2 fee garnered 21.6 percent of the votes; 17.2 percent wanted no fee; and a $6 fee had the low- est level of support (15.9 per- cent). Maintenance tasks in general took a higher priority than even the most popular new amenity requested by re- sponders. Did the Parks Advisory Board make a recommen- dation on the fee? After much discussion, the board unanimously recom- mended a staggered rollout of a fee. If the city council were to accept the recommendation unaltered, the fee would start at $4 per month, increase to $6 the following year and top out at $8 per month ($96 per year) the year after that. While the vote was unani- mous, at least one parks board member, Scott Klug, had seri- ous reservations about maxing out the fee at $8. “It bothers me that we don't have a consensus of (survey re- sponders) wanting to pay $8,” Klug said. “More than half of the survey, almost four-fi fths, came back saying they don't want to pay $8.” What would the fee allow the city to do for Keizer parks? • $4 per month/$48 per year. At that level, the dedicated fund would be $686,000 per year. The additional funding would permit the maintenance, repair or replacement of most play structures, restrooms, pic- nic shelter, paths, sports courts and parking areas. Most safety issues could be mitigated, and older equipment could be re- placed. Perhaps most impor- tantly, a separate dedicated fund would be established for the sole purpose of unlocking system development charges (SDCs) collected when new residential construction proj- ects are started. • $6 per month/$72 per year would generate a dedicated fund just north of $1 million per year. All current amenities would be maintained, repaired or replaced; all safety-related issues would be addressed; the fee would maintain all current equipment and replace older equipment as needed; allow for removal of most invasive spe- cies and installation of many of the amenities already planned for Keizer parks. • At $8 per month, $96 per year, the dedicated fund grows to $1.3 million per year. In ad- dition to all of the work made possible with the smaller fees, the fi nal option would: support completion of most projects in the parks master plan within the next 10 years; allow for additional land purchases and increased trail options; and be used to develop environmental, nature and wildlife programs. What comes next? The next steps will largely depend on what happens at the public forum on Monday, May 8. Check next week's edition of the Keizertimes for a full recap and the plan moving forward. Let’s Hustle to Prevent Heart Disease! 3rd Annual 8k, 5k, 1k • Aug 12 • State Capitol Start/Finish Benefits Salem Health Foundation’s High Street Hustle for Heart Fund COSTUMES ENCOURAGED! REGISTER AT: ActiveSalem.com/high WorshipDirectory These Salem-Keizer houses of worship invite you to visit. Call to list your church in our Worship Directory: (503) 390-1051 John Knox Presbyterian Church JOIN US FOR SUNDAY WORSHIP 452 Cummings Lane North • 393-0404 8:30 am • 10 am • 11:30 am • 6 pm PEOPLESCHURCH 4500 LANCASTER DR NE | SALEM 503.304.4000 • www.peopleschurch.com Celebration Services Saturday Evening 6:00 pm Children’s Programs, Student and Adult Ministries 1755 Lockhaven Dr. NE Keizer 503-390-3900 www.dayspringfellowship.com Sunday Morning 9:00 am and 10:45 am Father Gary L. Zerr, Pastor Saturday Vigil Liturgy: 5:30 p.m. Sundays: 8:15 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. La Misa en Español: 12:30 p.m. Rev. Dr. John Neal, Pastor Worship - 10:30 a.m. Education Hour - 9:15 a.m. Nursery Care Available www.keizerjkpres.org