Orange County NC Website
n <br /> Potential Joint Capital Funding for Parks <br /> Summary -- October 30 , 2000 <br /> i <br /> Earlier this year, each elected board adopted resolutions asking that; in follow-up to the <br /> 1999 Joint Master Recreation and Parks (JMRP) Work Group Report, the Managers from <br /> each jurisdiction develop a report on potential for joint capital funding for parks needs . <br /> Three reports in the past five years have explored different aspects of parks and <br /> recreation facilities and service in the County. All of the reports have pointed to a <br /> mechanism that establishes Orange County in a coordinating role for parks and recreation <br /> initiatives . In addition, the Memoranda of Agreement between the school boards and the <br /> ide an important precedent for collaboration in this area. <br /> local governments prov <br /> Having identified parks needs in the 1999 JMRP report, the current park projects in the <br /> Capital Improvement Plans (CIP ' s) for each jurisdiction were examined. In general , <br /> while significant headway has been made, there are identified - parks and recreation needs <br /> in the , County and Town CIP ' s totaling $ 63 million . Only 25 % of those projectso are <br /> funded at this point in time, leaving $ 47 million in unfunded parks projects . <br /> There are several potential sources of funding for parks needs, ranging from bonds to . <br /> State and Federal grants to special reserve funds and even impact fees (not currently <br /> implemented, but authorized by the General Assembly) . Orange County ' s new Lands <br /> Legacy Program was developed concurrently with the 1999 JMRP report, and the <br /> potential may exist for using the County' s Lands Legacy Annual Action Plan process to <br /> 1 ) identify parks projects that are collaborative opportunities for multiple jurisdictions <br /> and 2) pursue acquisition of parkland needed for the project in question. The Memoranda <br /> of Agreement on co4ocation between the schools and local governments , and the new <br /> School Capital Funding Policy, offer significant opportunities to explore joint projects . <br /> In considering parks projects that are most appropriate for joint ventures , the previously. <br /> mentioned Memoranda of Agreement provides a frame of reference in determining when <br /> co4ocation may be desirable . In addition, the Board of Commissioners has noted that the <br /> most- appropriate types of joint park ventures are larger- scale parks that provide a broad <br /> range of opportunities and can serve both rural and Town populations . <br /> In reviewing the parks and recreation . reports , there may be an emergent delineation of <br /> roles for joint park projects . The Towns currently expend substantial capital and <br /> operating funds on an annual basis to operate and maintain existing parks , and are often <br /> challenged to provide capital funds for new park facilities . Orange County, in its 1997 <br /> Parks bond, attempted to address both Town and County by allocating bond money to <br /> parks projects inside Chapel Hill and in western Orange County. Even so , the County' s <br /> burgeoning population (currently estimated at 111 , 000) makes the need for land-banking <br /> for parks a pressing one, as illustrated by the unfunded parks needs . With this being the <br /> case, the County may be in the best position to provide capital funding for parkland <br /> acquisition and facility development for larger- scale joint parks . <br />