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lrango Herald Online <br />Tmi DRANG0 HERALD <br />loating Ideas <br />,urango set to begin debate on controversial boat-park issue <br />Page 1 of <br />Ubruary 12, 2006 <br />y Dale Rodebaugh I Herald Staff Writer <br />urango officials are set to enter the controversial statewide recreational -water debate Monday when they host the first of three meetings <br />)ncerning the construction of a boating <br />park on the Animas River. <br />Boating park meetings <br />Two locations for controlled flow are being considered for a white -water course: Smelter Rapid near Sani <br />Bridge <br />Rita Park, where kayakers have competed for years; and at Schneider Park, near the Ninth Street <br />The city of Durango has scheduled ! <br />"A lot of residents are interested in the river," Cathy Metz, the city parks and recreation director, said last <br />three meetings related to the <br />week. "We'd like to hear their opinions." <br />- onstruction of a boating park on <br />the Animas River near downtown. <br />The boating park, designed to handle all water craft, requires a man -made structure in order to petition a <br />Two locations - at Smelter Rapid, <br />water court for a Recreational In- Stream Diversion, an authorized flow of water. As the popularity of whitE <br />Nhere a white -water course now <br />water recreation has surged, requests for court- granted flows have caused run -ins statewide between <br />E)xists, and at Schneider Park at <br />boating interests and traditional water users. The issue has reached the state Supreme Court. <br />the Ninth Street Bridge - are being <br />- onsidered. The meetings will <br />Durango officials surveyed the Animas River for a boating park site from the 32nd Street Bridge to the <br />nclude: <br />intake of the Animas -La Plata water project below Smelter Rapid, Metz said. The chosen location will <br />have boulders grouted in place in- stream and along the banks to channel water. The mid - channel Ninth <br />presentation by the park <br />Street Bridge abutment would be modified so as not to collect debris or obstruct water craft. <br />de signer starting at 5:30 p.m. <br />Monday at the Durango <br />Community Recreation Center, <br />Casey Lynch, a member of the Animas River Task Force, a group interested in the long -term health of th <br />2700 Main Ave. <br />river, said there is good and bad about each site. <br />-A City Council study session <br />A park at Smelter Rapid could stabilize a stretch of river that is pummeled by heavy runoff, he said. A pai <br />starting at 4 p.m. Tuesday at City <br />at the Ninth Street Bridge is attractive if a proposed underpass beneath Camino del Rio made the area <br />Hall, East 10th Street and East <br />readily accessible to the downtown. But fisheries in that stretch of river must be protected, Lynch said. <br />Second Avenue. <br />The city employed two consultants for the project. Scott Shipley of Recreation Engineering and Planning <br />, The regular City Council meeting <br />of Boulder designed the courses. Gary Thompson of W.W. Wheeler and Associates of Englewood <br />performed a hydrology study that included the availability of water, how much water is required for white - <br />at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 21 at City Hall. <br />water sports and water rights of upstream users. <br />Shipley will open the meeting Monday with a description of the courses. Thompson will not attend. <br />o one knows how much water - measured in cubic feet per second - the city would ask from the water court, Metz said. Thompson recommended <br />flow varying from 185 cfs to 1,800 cfs at Schneider Park and from 185 cfs to 1,400 cfs at Smelter Rapid. The flows correspond to the natural flow <br />the Animas - high in summer from snowmelt, low in winter. <br />letz said the estimated construction cost of the approximately 1,600 -foot Schneider Park course is $444,238. Construction of the approximately <br />30 -foot Smelter course is estimated at $244,694. The Schneider project is more expensive because of the width of the Animas at that point, she <br />aid. According to other white -water park operators, a boating park requires little maintenance, Metz said. <br />ne city has paid Shipley's firm $19,700 for consultation. The Wheeler consulting fee was $24,000. <br />ity officials have been discussing a water park for a year, Metz said. Wherever the course is installed, a permit from the federal Army Corps of <br />ngineers is required. The city also has discussed the boat park with the Colorado Division of Wildlife, the Animas -La Plata Water Conservancy <br />istrict and the Southwestern Water Conservation District. <br />ara Hellige of the Corps of Engineers said Thursday that she has talked to the city about the boating park in conceptual terms. She will attend <br />londay's meeting. <br />ttp: / /www.durangoherald.coml asp- binlprintable_article_ generation. asp ?article _path= /news1061news0602l2... 2/13/200 <br />