City receives parks grant
Conor CHRISTOFFERSON<br | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 15 years, 5 months AGO
SANDPOINT — A new program designed to make local parks more inclusive got a financial boost last week when the city received a $5,000 grant to help build accessible playground equipment.
The grant, one of 86 given annually by the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, will help fund Project Everyone Play. As part of the project, the Parks and Recreation Department will build or renovate play equipment at city parks. The $5,000 will help pay for a swing set at Travers Park, which Parks and Recreation Director Kim Woodruff said will be built next year.
Woodruff said he was contacted by a number of local parents and citizens who were concerned with the lack of accessibility at the city’s play areas. Those initial talks turned into a long-range plan to make portions of all city parks accessible to everyone, including disabled children.
“What we want to do is recognize the need in the community and then plan for it, as much as we can,” Woodruff said. “We want our playgrounds to have features that are accessible for everybody.”
The city officially kicked off Project Everyone Play several weeks ago by unveiling a new all-access swing set at Lakeview Park, Woodruff said.
“By all access, we want to design and build things with features that truly do span that entire spectrum, from non-ambulatory to fully ambulatory” he said.
Woodruff said he will continue to seek out grants for the project, but will also use money from his own budget to continue upgrading the equipment.
ARTICLES BY CONOR CHRISTOFFERSON<BR
ITD: Ruling only delays construction of bypass
SANDPOINT — The future of the Sand Creek Byway may be in jeopardy after the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an emergency injunction Wednesday that halts construction on the polarizing project.
Local residents celebrate inauguration
SANDPOINT — On one of the nation’s most historic days, hundreds of area residents gathered to celebrate the inauguration of Barack Obama as America’s 44th president.
Group debating historic depot's future
Meeting set to discuss options
SANDPOINT — With reports of vandalism and hints that it will soon be abandoned, the future of Sandpoint’s train depot is uncertain at best. However, that hasn’t stopped a group of depot advocates from fighting to save the 93-year-old structure.