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• Be reasonably, feasibly, and safely accommodated without detriment to existing uses as <br /> determined through master plans or through policy board decisions of regional park <br /> implementing agencies. <br /> • Protect the environment/ecology of the site and not negatively impact its natural resources. <br /> Based on the criteria above, activities that should be accommodated in the Regional Parks System <br /> include: <br /> Boating Horseback riding <br /> Bicycling Nature appreciation <br /> Camping Picnicking <br /> Cross country skiing Snowshoeing <br /> Cultural or historical interpretation Snowmobiling (in some cases) <br /> Fishing Swimming <br /> Hiking/walking/trail running Wildlife viewing <br /> This list does not include unique activities such as those offered by the Como Park Zoo and Marjorie <br /> McNeely Conservatory, because these two facilities are, by law, to be included in the Regional Parks <br /> System as Special Recreation Features. <br /> The regional activities selected require large tracts of land, or land endowed with unique natural <br /> resources, or both. The land needs are easier to meet at the regional level than at the municipal level <br /> and the associated activities are more likely to be developed or provided at a regional level than by <br /> cities and townships. <br /> When it was established in the 1970s, the Regional Parks System included several existing parks that <br /> had activities not currently considered appropriate for inclusion in the regional system. Many of these <br /> activities continue to operate legitimately today, such as ball diamonds and tennis courts, but they are <br /> not eligible for regional funding for improvement or expansion. <br /> Land is acquired for the Regional Parks System with the intent that it may eventually be developed in a <br /> way that provides for the recreational activities listed above. Adherence to this basic list of activities has <br /> served the regional system well over the last 40 years and has helped to fend off efforts to acquire and <br /> develop Regional Parks System lands for other ventures. <br /> Regional park agencies should consider various factors when determining whether other uses, <br /> described below, should be accommodated in regional parks and trails and included in regional park or <br /> trail master plans. <br /> • Inline skating and roller skiing. These activities require a treadway wider than eight feet if <br /> pedestrians, bicyclists and inline skaters are on the same treadway and traveling in opposite <br /> directions. Inline skating and roller skiing also require a smoother/harder surface than bicycling <br /> and pedestrian uses. Inline skating and roller skiing are more popular on flat-terrain trails, such <br /> as abandoned railroads, than on hilly terrain trails going cross-country. <br />