240th Street SE runs east-west through Wellington
Hills Park.
The following photos were
taken approximately mid-way on 240th – The first one is from the north side of the street, looking westward. The second is of the south side of 240th.
If Snohomish
County's Department of Parks gets their way, Wellington Hills Park - what
you see in the panoramas - would be nuked
out of existence and replaced … not with the
park people have said they want … but with a real pork barrel project - a tournament-level sports complex.
Play any
Orwellian word game you want - their plan is NOT a community park - it is
commercial development meant for the benefit
of for-profit sports businesses.
If you search
this blog's archives, you'll find lots of scenic views of Wellington Hills Park. What I can't show are the many hundreds of hours
spent by average workaday people delving into the mysteries of the County's
bureaucracy in order to counter the County’s sports complex plan.
Yet we
persist because we want
to save a natural landmark from inappropriate development and we don't want our
community mugged by excessive and unnecessary “pollutions” – traffic congestion
on the single road this area depends upon, evening and weekend crowds and
noise, stadium lights and the constant
churn produced by parking lots for over 750
cars.
Fundamentally we believe: Neighborhoods should have a voice in what happens to their
community. Special interest groups may have lobbyists and easy access to
bureaucracy, but that doesn't necessarily
equate with "doing the right thing".
We are not opposed to sports or sports
fields - that has never been our issue. What we object to is the
inappropriate development of Wellington Hills Park and the slick way our community has been treated.
Sports fields have specific requirements, none that occur in Wellington Hills Park. Those basic needs are: open space, quick
access via decent roads, large parking lots, sewer lines, etc.. Sports
fields should also not disrupt or negatively impact their surroundings - which the Dept. of Parks' plan will do in bucket fulls.
In many ways, the
proposed “tournament level sports complex” is no different than when a big box store elbows its way into a quiet rural town … and disrupts and impacts the
quality of life and the daily life of established neighborhoods.
I close with
these questions:
• Should taxpayer
money (in this case, $27 million) be used to build an expensive sports complex
to benefit for-profit sports businesses?
• Is this situation any different than when
professional sport teams owners expect taxpayers to pay for expensive stadiums,
arenas and ballparks?