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Background: <br />OFF -LEASH AREA FOR ALPINE PARK <br />By: Mark Riverblood, Parks Supervisor <br />CASE # 7 <br />Ramsey's park and trail system is valuable for a cross section of the community — including both <br />active uses, and passive. One very popular activity is dog walking with the pet on a leash, which <br />often utilizes the trail and sidewalk system. However, many owners use parks to allow their <br />dogs to run or for training. While City Code requires pets to leashed at all times, it is <br />acknowledged that a number of owners do allow their animals to `run' in park settings. This is <br />seldom a problem, particularly early in the day, or outside of peak use periods. It is during the <br />evenings when the majority of residents are out for fitness walks and parks are the busiest when <br />loose dogs can be inappropriate. Consequently, for several years residents have been requesting <br />that the city create a dog park, or off -leash area to serve their needs. <br />Observations: <br />Aside from dog walking on sidewalks and trails, two locations are far and away the most popular <br />destinations for pet owners — the south half of Rivers' Bend, and Alpine Park. This is in part due <br />to their proximity to Ramsey's urbanized area, which includes housing with smaller lots. Of the <br />two parks, Alpine sees even more patrons arriving by auto than Rivers' Bend. <br />Last fall, utilizing the city's Lawful Gambling Fund program (wherein up to $5,000 is made <br />available to leverage park improvements), outfield fences were added Alpine's baseball fields. <br />During the evaluation of the proposed homerun fences, it was acknowledged that while there was <br />clear benefit to the baseball program — there was some utility, or flexibility lost relative to the <br />interruption of the large expanse of open turf resulting from the fences. As it turns out, the <br />fences may have provided an unintended benefit. <br />By adding two fence sections, five or six gates, and connection to the State's fence on the south <br />line of Alpine Park, an off -leash area is created beyond ballfields #2 and #3. The attached exhibit <br />demonstrates this area. The following are some of considerations that support the concept: <br />• Alpine Park is already one of most popular destinations for dog owners <br />• The space is presently underutilized <br />• The site has areas that have great turf, as well as a `rough', and a small woods <br />• While the fencing would interrupt the movement of wildlife in between the two half's of <br />Alpine; wildlife disturbance may be lessened in other places by a designated off -leash <br />area <br />• The entrance to the dog park area (at the cell tower driveway) is far from the active use <br />areas of the playground, shelter and backstops <br />• The location has no immediate impact to neighbors <br />• There is no designated off -leash area presently convenient to Ramsey residents <br />—265- <br />