The project didn’t go to public hearing and was decided behind closed doors, catching the community off guard.
The City Commission learned of the project in January. The park would be torn up when Fiesta rolled around the first week in May, making them shift the location. COVID-19 made the move unnecessary, since the event was cancelled.
The Farmers Market that spread across the park has also been displaced. It now convenes around the nearby pond on Saturdays.
Hechler said the project was initiated because, “We knew we needed to upgrade the sprinkler system.”
“It is cast iron and PVC mix,” he said, “affecting the water pressure” in nearby houses.
The City tore up the park in February and March, supposedly to put in the sprinkler system, expending grant money awarded for the purpose before a June deadline, but Hechler indicated the sprinkler system is not in yet, implying the City got an extension on the grant.
The City also put the project out to bid fairly recently. With no engineering or proposed budget, the bid document was based on a concept plan, according to Hechler.
City Manager Morris Madrid said the bid prices ranged from “$600,000 to $1 million,” which gave them sticker shock. As a result, Madrid said the City staff will be doing the work, although some concrete work may be put out to bid.
No budget has ever been presented to the City Commission or public for the project, and the City Commission has never asked for one.
Hechler’s new plan was not included in the City packet, therefore it is not available to the public without an Inspection of Public Records Act request.
The stormwater runoff is a major issue. It was running down the steep hill, pollutants from cars and the asphalt roadway killing the grass, Madrid said. The hill was regraded not only to slow and reroute the water to the sandy area next to the tennis courts, but also to make the new steps going in the hillside more gradual.
Hechler showed a map of the City’s redesign of the concept plan, which squares up the sidewalks within the park into a right-angled cross pattern. The concept plan had the sidewalks form a wide- and acute-angled cross. Hechler said the new plan works better for water-head placement.
The City has also put in a parking lot next to the river. City Commissioner Amanda Forrister said constituents were concerned that the parking area would ruin the view of the river, but pollution should be a major concern as well.
Just as the road runoff and car pollutants were killing the grass, pollutants will harm the river. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 85 percent of stormwater pollution is from road runoff.
In a separate interview, Hechler said the parking lot will not be paved, removing the problem of more pollution from asphalt. However, compacted soil and gravel still prevent water from slowly soaking into the soil, which filters pollutants from cars before the stormwater drains into the river.
Hechler said the COVID-19 shutdowns delayed the project. The first phase—getting the irrigation, sod and sidewalks in—may be finished by the end of September. In the interim the park will be fenced off to prevent access.