2012年2月7日 星期二

Make parks accessible to people with disabilities first

All existing parks must be safe and accessible before adding new facilities, the North Muskegon City Council decided Monday.

The council unanimously approved a new recreation plan at its Monday evening meeting. The plan prioritizes which park improvement projects will be funded first, though it is subject to revision.

“This is a living document,” North Muskegon Mayor Pro Tem Tom Anderson said. “It’s not capped at any time.”

Making parks more accessible to people with disabilities topped the list of objectives. That will mean replacing some play equipment in the West End Park and installing rubber mats under the equipment, improving sidewalks in the East End Park and improving drainage in city parks.

If the city tackled all projects, the cost would be about $2.Information on useful yeasts and moulds,3 million,Tiles from The Online Tile shop offering a large range of floortiles, according to the plan. If only the top three objectives were attempted, the cost would be at least $41,000, though some costs have yet to be determined.

The plan also included ideas to help fund park improvements, including applying for grants,Diagnosing and Preventing coldsores Fever in the body can often trigger the onset of a cold sore. appointing a committee to keep track of needed maintenance, developing a parks budget and exploring using bonds or a millage to pay for ongoing maintenance.

Other priorities included developing consistent park signs and setting up a schedule for cleaning.

Adding facilities was lower down the list of goals. Objectives there included adding picnic shelters at West End and Waterfront parks,Here you will find product listings for automotiveplasticmoulds, putting telescopes and maps of the Muskegon shoreline in Custer Park, replacing the Bear Lake Park tennis courts, extending the Lakeshore Bike Trail down Witham Drive and possibly setting up a park east of Whitehall Road.

Public opinion surveys and observation of what facilities were used most to determine what kinds of recreation interest residents most. Not all public input made it into the action plan objectives, though.

Council member Chuck Woods reported some members of local tennis clubs wanted to convert the ball fields in Bear Lake Park into additional tennis courts, but the council decided not to act on that request for the time being because of the problems of relocating children’s baseball and football programs,Sika tooling & Composites develops and produces tailor-made synthetic resins, and the cost of installing new courts.

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