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re_ Tennis courts_ 4_RedactedFrom:Rhodes, Alison To:Warrington, Dennis Subject:re: Tennis courts Date:Thursday, September 21, 2023 4:14:00 PM Attachments:image001.png Hi Dennis – Please see below. Can you please make sure that there are not unsafe conditions on the courts at A- Ridge, and if there are, mitigate appropriately until the construction project in 2024? THANK YOU! From: Rhodes, Alison <rhodesa@bouldercolorado.gov> Sent: Thursday, September 21, 2023 3:54 PM To: Bob Yates <bobyatesboulder@gmail.com> Subject: RE: Tennis courts Hi If you scroll down on the Court System page referenced in my last email, copied below, you’ll see that we have planned to spend $200,000 next year at the courts at Arapahoe Ridge Park near Eisenhower Elementary. This funding will allow us to completely rebuild them on a post-tension concrete foundation, making them more durable in the long-term as the current asphalt slipsheets that were popular in the 70s and 80s lead to the movement and subsequent cracking we see across our system. While the team has recently evaluated all our courts, I will make sure we have eyes on them again soon to make sure they are not unsafe. Thank you for your interest in helping us advance this project. We just signed the contract and the project will pick up steam in October – by signing up for the email list linked on the Court System Plan page, you’ll be sure to be notified about the first Open House. My best, Ali Rhodes Director she/her O: 303-413-7249 rhodesa@bouldercolorado.gov Parks and Recreation 3198 N. Broadway | Boulder, CO 80304 1. Develop short-term actions about how the department manages and invests in BPR’s current courts. This includes informing how we will spend $2M over the next five years to make sure that all of our courts are in good condition. On the page linked above, I hope you’ll appreciate the summary of the $400k invested this year to address poor condition at Tom Watson Park, North Palo Park and to do warranty work on recent improvements at Chautauqua and the North Boulder Recreation Center. We are committed to “Taking Care of What We Have” better. 2. Inform long-range investment opportunities in BPR’s court system. This will identify locations where additional courts may be possible with additional funding. While we do not have money for new courts, we want to be ready if/as funding opportunities become available. 3. Define if and how BPR may play a role in a potential indoor/outdoor facility. The changes in the private market you mention below as well as other market factors beg us to consider if the city should play any role in developing and/or operating a court facility. Our policies require that we conduct a thorough feasibility study for such ventures. Long story short, while we agree with you that we’ve been a bit behind the curve, we’re getting up to speed fast. By the end of the year, we’ll have recommendations on deliverables 1 and 2. A the bottom of the page linked above, you can sign up for project updates and I encourage you to do so. Thank you, Ali Rhodes Director she/her O: 303-413-7249 rhodesa@bouldercolorado.gov Parks and Recreation 3198 N. Broadway | Boulder, CO 80304 bouldercolorado.gov-- -----Original Message----- From: Yates, Bob <YatesB@bouldercolorado.gov> Sent: Monday, September 18, 2023 9:02 AM To: Cc: Rhodes, Alison <RhodesA@bouldercolorado.gov> Subject: Re: Boulder City Parks and Recreation issue Thanks for your email about tennis courts. First, I’m not sure that it’s accurate to assume that the University’s tennis courts at CU South will be eliminated. The University is several years away from forming a plan (let alone implementing it) for CU South, and it would be speculation for us to assume that the University’s tennis courts there will be eliminated. I am aware that the private courts behind the Millennium will be closed in the next couple of years. The city’s Parks staff is looking into whether it is appropriate to spend taxpayer money for the city to create public tennis courts to replace private ones that will be closed. If so, we would have to consider what other Parks infrastructure (pools, rec centers) would have to be sacrificed in order to build new public tennis courts, given the city’s zero-sum (and declining) budget. I’m copying Parks Director, Ali Rhodes, who can tell you about the status of that evaluation. Best, Bob > On Sep 18, 2023, at 8:47 AM, > wrote: > > > Bob, > > We covered this lack of tennis court issue in the past, but as of today nothing has changed other than there are fewer tennis courts. > > The Park and Recreation, or Boulder School system has done nothing and the situation is a disaster. There is a mindset that the few horrible tennis courts that do exist can be fixed for $5- $6,000. Bob, these courts are such a disaster that they are beyond being fixed they need to be rebuilt at a cost of $80-$100,000 each! The only maintenance that has been done is replacing nets. This situation is way beyond hanging nets. > > For the record the wait list to get into the Meadows Tennis Club is 7[ SEVEN] years. > > Soon there will be 25 courts taken out of play. 12 at South Campus and 13 at Rocky Mountain Tennis at the Millennium. Before these courts are destroyed it should be known that there already are incredible shortages. Boulder and Boulder County are the most underserved tennis communities, for their size than any areas of their size in the entire US. > > CU women's tennis as well as all local high schools will have no places to practice in the winter within an hour drive. Which is not recommended for girls, or boys, who have to practice at night > > The lack of tennis is embarrassing and when we throw in Pickle Ball and the new sport Padel, Boulder becomes a joke. > > I wish you well on your campagne to be Mayor. We've sent the Maximum $200 and would do more, but don't wish to break any laws. We just want you to be Mayor. > > > >