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KPMPD sets dreams on
waterfront park
By Rodika
Tollefson, KP News
The Key Peninsula Metropolitan Park
District hopes to acquire a shoreline property that
would be used for a passive recreation park. The 39-acre
property, located at the head of Taylor Bay, is one of
the last large undeveloped pockets of land on Puget
Sound water.

KPMPD
commissioners Kip Clinton and Elmer Anderson
watch Haylie Gallacher and Kealin
Shrewsberry play
during a recent visit to the Taylor Bay Park
Property.
Photo courtesy Scott Gallacher |

Taylor
Bay
Photo courtesy Scott Gallacher |
In collaboration with The Trust for
Public Land, a national conservancy group, KPMPD is
seeking $1.6 million worth of grants to acquire the land
in three phases (one-phase acquisition, if funds can be
raised in time, would cost less).
The Trust for Public Lands has been
working for several years to protect key Puget Sound
shoreline properties, and has been collaborating with
The Nature Conservancy and People for Puget Sound. The
three-member coalition, called The Puget Sound Alliance,
has identified five properties for protection, and plans
to identify five more. The alliance launched a
three-year, $80 million shoreline-protection campaign in
June 2006 with a $3 million donation from the Gig
Harbor-based Russell Family Foundation.
Currently, the Taylor Bay land is
the only property on the west side of the Tacoma Narrows
in Pierce County (two others have been identified in
Kitsap and Jefferson counties).
“We are seeking multiple funding
sources (including) federal and state,” said Peter
Dykstra, The Trust for Public Land Washington state
director. “We are working with as many funding sources
as we can identify.”
So far, grant requests have been
submitted with the Salmon Recovery Funding Board
($500,000) and Pierce County Conservation Futures ($1
million). At its regular August meeting, KPMPD
commissioners adopted a resolution dedicating $50,000 to
“Taylor Bay Park,” and Executive Director Scott
Gallacher said most likely a large portion of those
funds would be used to pay for back taxes (which will
result once the property changes its use).
The site has 1,000 feet of
beachfront, a fish-bearing creek and wetlands that spill
into the mouth of an estuary. The creek is home to
several protected species of salmon, including Coho,
Chinook, Chum and Steelhead. Other species observed at
the site are herons and kingfishers as well as various
sea life like clams and oysters. A preliminary
evaluation showed that the property may also be home to
significant fern species.
“When I first visited the site, I
really wasn’t prepared for how beautiful and unspoiled
the land would be,” said Rinee Merritt, project manager
in charge of the assignment for TPL. “It’s amazing how a
small piece of land can be surrounded by housing and
still maintain its natural character.”
A presentation was made to the SRFB
in July, and at press time commissioners were expected
to make their presentation before the Pierce County
Conservancy board at the end of August. The board has
received 19 applications for this funding cycle, with
$1.3 million in total funding available so far. The
board has had delays due to low member attendance at
meetings, but is expected to make its recommendation to
the Pierce County Council by the initial timeline of
October.
The TPL has secured an option to
purchase the property, and the first piece, 32 acres,
must be purchased by January 2008. The other two pieces
have separate deadlines of late 2008.
“If we’re successful in our grant
applications, we can give the owner fair market value
for the property, and pass the property over into the
care of the property to Key Peninsula Metropolitan Park
District,” Merritt said. “We think Taylor Bay is pretty
much a perfect fit for both of these grants, so we’re
hoping to get the green light and be able to announce
that we’ve protected this magnificent piece of land for
everyone to treasure by the year end.”
If the acquisition is successful,
this would be the second park with waterfront access in
care of the local park district. The other one is Maple
Hollow, which is expected to be transferred to KPMPD
next year under a 50-year lease agreement.
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