Proposed wildlife refuge park, Discovery Trail link off Sequim's list

By Diane Urbani de la Paz, Peninsula Daily News

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SEQUIM - The much-anticipated purchase of a 45-acre city park and wildlife refuge has fallen apart, Sequim Public Works Director James Bay told the Sequim City Council this week.

"Due to a number of constraints," including the city's 2008 budget and a new property appraisal, "we're not going to be able to pull this program off," Bay said.

During the public hearing on the city's 2008 budget on Monday night, the council removed the park purchase - as well as a planned Olympic Discovery Trail link along Spruce Street - from next year's list of expenditures.

The council added some spending, however, on park improvements, including allocations for renovating a Carrie Blake Park ball diamond and putting in restrooms, a paved path and new signs for the nearby James Center band shell.

All year, Bay and Planning Director Dennis Lefevre had talked with the Keeler family, led by Joe Keeler and Carol Bolduc, about their land stretching along the south side of U.S. Highway 101 west of the Happy Valley Road turnoff.

The family planned to donate 10 acres and sell the other 35 to Sequim for a wildlife refuge in memory of the late Joseph L. Keeler, Joe and Carol's grandfather.

But then the city had the property appraised. The verdict: It's worth $33,500 per acre, or $1.5 million for the parcel.

That's 33 percent higher, Joe Keeler said, than a nearly two-year-old appraisal the city had used when it began negotiations.

The City Council held an executive session Monday night to discuss whether to raise its offer for the Keeler land.

They decided against that, for now.

Too expensive
In interviews Tuesday morning, City Manager Bill Elliott said Sequim simply doesn't have the money for the park.

"We don't want to cast the Keelers in a bad light. They did all the legwork," Elliott added.

"The dollars just got too high."

Said Mayor Walt Schubert, "It really saddens me that it didn't work out."

Joe Keeler was floored Tuesday morning when he heard that the city had aborted its plans.

He said he's still willing to donate 10 acres - and listen to city officials should they want to make a new offer on the other 35.

"That's up to them," Keeler said.

"It may not be a dead issue, at least from our perspective."

Schubert, when asked Tuesday morning whether the City Council would consider further negotiations, said only that he hopes so.

Discovery Trail
The mayor expressed more disappointment with another stalled project: the Olympic Discovery Trail connection through eastern Sequim.

The trail, designed to eventually run from Port Townsend to the West End, has a scenic stretch through the woods around Johnson Creek and into Carrie Blake Park - and then it disappears in the middle of town.

Bay had applied for a grant to pay for paving a leg of the trail along Spruce Street, from the park to Sequim Avenue.

"We didn't get the grant," Elliott said.

But amid all the sadness, the City Council managed to make the Senior Softball Club - and outgoing Councilman Don Hall - happy.

Added to the 2008 budget is $13,000 to partially pay for overhaul of Carrie Blake Park's western ball diamond - so the 82-member Sequim Senior Softball Club can start hosting tournaments.

"All of us old guys feel you're on the right path," Warren Hunt, a member of the coed club, told the council.

He praised the members for allocating $100,000 for the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula's teen programs, and added, "We like to have some fun, too."

The softball club accepts men and women of all levels provided they're age 50 or better.

Softball pledges
Hunt said in an interview that he has $4,000 in softballers' pledges to add to the city's investment.

He's shopping for local companies to provide dirt to replace the gravel that's made the field unplayable, and added, "We're going to use a lot of our own volunteer labor," to revamp the diamond.

Work will start early next year, Hunt said, and the field could be ready by spring.

He's also planning to put Sequim on the national senior softball tournament map - to bring players and spouses to town and generate some motel and sales tax revenue.

In response to Hall's repeated requests, the council members also allocated $30,000 for a handicapped-accessible asphalt path to the band shell just north of Carrie Blake Park, where Sequim has presented outdoor concerts and movies.

Another $10,000 will be spent on signage for the band shell, and $60,000 will go toward restrooms at the adjacent Master Gardeners demonstration garden planned for next year.

Hall, 75, is known for his daily on-foot travels around Sequim.

He'll step down from the City Council after the last meeting of the year on Dec. 10, since Planning Commissioner Susan Lorenzen won his seat in the Nov. 6 election.

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Sequim Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-681-2391 or diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

Last modified: November 27. 2007 9:00PM
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