Orange County NC Website
14 <br />Orange County Comprehensive Parks and Recreation Master Plan <br />CHAPTER 1- Summary of the Plan <br />Recommendation 6 — Build More Trails and <br />Connect Open Spaces: <br />One of the clear messages of the Community Needs <br />Assessment surveys is that county residents want to <br />get out into nature and walk, hike and bike more. <br />There are several mechanisms in place that will help <br />with this, buy virtue of building the planned future <br />parks (see Recommendation 2). Determining a <br />solution to the MST segment in Orange County, and <br />providing trails at nature preserves are additional <br />measures that are planned /proposed. Additionally, <br />there may be ways to connect trail systems that <br />exist in Duke Forest and Eno River State Park to <br />town and county parks and trails. The local <br />governments that would mutually benefit from a <br />connected trail system should look at joint funding <br />mechanisms. <br />Recommendation 7: Improve Access to Parks and <br />Trails, and incorporate Healthy Lifestyles Design: <br />Over the last 15 years, most parks have been <br />constructed with an eye to providing access to the <br />public, and activities for individuals to develop and <br />maintain healthy lifestyles. However, an emerging <br />issue in the fields of public health and parks <br />planning is the integration of these concepts at the <br />design level — parks designed with an eye to <br />maximize opportunities for enhancing public health. <br />Likewise, the potential for public transportation <br />access to County parks is a consideration, but in a <br />rural county with a need to provide service to <br />different portions of the county, this type of access <br />is problematic. Working park- and -ride lots into <br />future parks, and looking at parks as possible transit <br />stops are two mechanisms that warrant closer <br />examination and should be part of future planning <br />for new parks. <br />Recommendation 8 — Look to Add Programs in <br />Areas Where Residents Have Identified needs, <br />Consider Partnerships: <br />Flexibility and responsiveness is critical to providing <br />public recreation programs. Needs and interests <br />change over time, and systems must be prepared to <br />change with the times. While it is not practical to <br />provide every program that is desired by members <br />of the community, the Community Needs Assess- <br />ments provide a look at current needs and desires. <br />Follow -up surveys should be conducted to deter- <br />mine the depth of interest in new program areas, <br />and at the same time, existing programs should be <br />evaluated to see if resource allocation should be <br />altered. The County has partnered in recent years <br />with private non -profit recreation providers for <br />certain programs. A "partnership template" being <br />developed will help determine whether a partner- <br />ship is desirable or warranted, and opportunities <br />with the school systems in this area may be fruitful. <br />Financing and Capital Investments <br />As shown in Table 10 -1, Orange County has posi- <br />tioned itself through careful and proactive planning <br />to know what park and recreation facilities are <br />needed, and through its Capital Investment Plan <br />(CIP), a possible sequence of construction to fulfill <br />the master plan outlined within these pages may be <br />glimpsed. The funding needed for parks and recrea- <br />tion opportunities includes: new construction of <br />planned parks, future phases of existing parks, <br />replacement and repair of aging facilities, and <br />operating and maintenance funding. Approximately <br />$10 million in park and public open space funding is <br />identified in the current CIP through 2018, and an <br />additional $36 million is expected to be needed <br />beyond 2018 to complete the vision of the park <br />system outlined in this plan. An additional $467,000 <br />within two years, and $923,000 in two to five years, <br />is projected to be needed for renovations and <br />' improvements or repairs. As future financial plan- <br />ning is undertaken, the manner in which these <br />needs may be funded will become more clear, as <br />will the potential sources (including several potential <br />grant projects). <br />1 -11 <br />