City sows deal with park users
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- The City Council decided Monday to turn on the sprinklers
at the city’s Bark Park and allow whatever’s out there to grow.
The decision was met with cheers, claps, whistles and woofs of approval
from dozens of dog owners, who dressed in green and toted signs to show
their support for grass.
According to a compromise reached between the council and users of the
park, the city will allow users of the park to plant the turf in exchange
for an agreement from the Bark Park volunteer committee to maintain it.
The city will not pay for any grass, just for a new sprinkler system.
The Bark Park volunteer committee already has plans to contact turf
companies and offer the park as a site to test grass hardiness.
“Well it would give them a good test,” said Councilwoman Libby Cowan.
Cowan spearheaded the compromise along with Bark Park committee president
Maryann Marks.
“This is kind of a concession,” Marks said. “They’re saving money and
we’re getting the turf we want.”
The Bark Park committee also will be required to form a nonprofit
organization before the city begins construction on the sprinkler system.
One man who would not identify himself said he thought the Bark Park
committee sold itself short by not holding out to get the city to install
the turf at its own expense.
But most dog owners appeared to be happy, even joyous, after the meeting.
“That was a good compromise,” said Bill Davidson. “If it was going to be
a golf course, I would have said ‘Yes, we should have waited.”’
Park users have lobbied aggressively since August to get the city to
abandon the idea of installing mulch -- touted as being cheaper and
easier to maintain -- instead of grass.
Dog owners complained that mulch was sometimes undiscerniblefrom dog
feces, that it causes splinters and that it attracts fleas and flies.
Helping to maintain the park is nothing new to Bark Park users, who have
raised between $6,000 and $10,000 annually to improve the park.
Dodie Braun, a Costa Mesa resident, hugged Marks after the meeting to
show her thanks.
“Guido thanks you, too,” Braun said of her Chihuahua. “He’s a happy dog.”
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