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The City of Brooklyn Park received $5 million from the Minnesota Legislature to update its community center, specifically, to create some city-owned basketball courts, something the city does not presently have. The addition of three courts, as approved by lawmakers this spring, would come at the cost of one of two ice rinks at the Community Activity Center, and it’s sparked debate among residents.

Sarah Fercho, president of the 86-member Three Rivers Figure Skating Club, says she first heard about the proposal to convert one ice arena into three basketball courts after the funding was requested. Soon after, it was approved.

The plan went through the city’s Recreation and Parks Advisory Commission — which “studies issues relative to public parks and recreation,” according to Brooklyn Park’s website — in Nov. 2022, said Parks and Recreation Director Brad Tullberg in an interview on Monday, adding, it was not a “robust community engagement that we would have typically.”

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Brooklyn Park is looking at converting one of its ice rinks at the Community Activity Center into multi-use courts. Nothing is set in stone yet, but the proposal is attracting community attention. The Brooklyn Park Community Activity Center houses two ice arenas. Ice time is rented out by groups and clubs, and community members can come to the space to free skate. It also has a gym that is shared with the National Guard. Families who use the rinks say they are concerned about the conversion because they already struggle to find ice time, while families in search of court space think this could offer a sense of relief. Both say more space overall would be ideal. A PLACE TO PLAY Athletics give kids the freedom to play. Rachel Lorenzen is a member of the Park Center Traveling Basketball League. She said basketball is a vital resource for Brooklyn Park kids, but access to courts for both clubs and pickup hoops is scarce. “I just think, on an everyday level, these kids are just doing better because they are engaged,” Lorenzen said. “There should be a means for them to go play pickup, and we don’t have that in this community for our kids.” As the parent of a 7th-grade basketball player, Lorenzen said she and the club spends years searching for spaces for the kids to play. Every space they’ve found so far, she said, is temporary. Lorenzen said many club parents struggle to pay the fees associated with travel basketball. Ever-changing practice locations due to high demand for court space offer another hurdle. “Parents who have the means help parents who don’t have the means,” Lorenzen said. “It is that bad here in this community.” CAC IMPROVEMENT PROJECT Recently, Brooklyn Park proposed a change to its Community Activity Center. That change could alleviate some of the club’s need for space. Brad Tullberg, recreation and parks director in Brooklyn Park, said the CAC improvement project would cost $15 million total. It contains three components, which he presented at the Brooklyn Park City Council’s work session on Sep. 5. The first component is a $6.1 million improvement to entrances and corridors at the CAC. Another one is a $2 million improvement to the parking lot and exterior grounds. The third is the conversion of Arena One to multi-court gym space, which would cost $6.5 million. Arena One, which is not used in the summer, would be converted to three multi-use courts. Those uses include basketball, voleyball, pickleball and use for other events. Tullberg said this plan has been in the works for awhile. The 2018 park system plan focused on aquatics and the possible addition of a gym and fieldhouse. The department considered constructing a new space for gyms and keeping both rinks. That was proposed to cost $12.5 million in 2018. Tullberg said ice participation numbers are declining and the need for courts is there. “Community gym space is just as tight as ice space in our community,” Tullberg said. ICE TIME Three Rivers Figure Skating Club is one of those groups fighting for ice time. Club President Sarah Fercho said taking away one rink from Brooklyn Park leaves skaters out in the cold. “I think it is important to offer activities across the spectrum,” Fercho said. The Three Rivers Club, which is comprised of skaters from both in and outside Brooklyn Park, takes up most of the activity center’s annual ice time. Hockey teams use it too. Its mostly groups based outside Brooklyn Park, including Totino-Grace High School and Wayzata’s Youth Hockey Association. She said she doesn’t want the argument to be hockey vs. basketball. “This should not be pitting one sport against the other, this should be talking about what’s the best thing for this community,” Fercho said. Brooklyn Park CAC plan ice rink If Brooklyn Park’s current improvement proposal goes through, the CAC will be down to one rink. Fercho feels the city has not been communicative about the project. To spread the word, Fercho is a part of the Save Rink One organization. Fercho said the organization is asking for both rinks and courts and asks that it considers building a new space for courts. She said the petition had 900 signatures as of Monday night, when the organization brought it to the city council meeting. UP IN THE AIR Tullberg said the proposal is more tailored to Brooklyn Park. “We have another need,” Tullberg said. “We have just evaluated that opportunity for the space we currently have that could be used in a different way.” The proposal is at a pause currently as the city waits to decide what to do with its fire station. Tullberg said if the fire station moves to the old library location, the then-former fire station could be used as a senior center. That movement could change the look and plans for the Community Activity Center. Tullberg said he hopes to improve community engagement as the project continues.

THREE RIVERS FIGURE SKATING CLUB RESPONSE TO CCX STORY ABOVE

Ice users are grateful for the local media attention related to community rec amenities. It’s important to inform citizens, creating understanding of the opportunities and consequences involved in removing Ice Rink 1 to create courts.

As regular users of the CAC, here are important points not expressed in the CCX segment:

  • The City presented the removal of Rink 1 as the only option to gain courts. What other avenues were exhausted before opting to deconstruct an existing amenity? Were Armory gym upgrades, Zanewood or other existing sites explored? PLEASE EXPLORE OTHER OPTIONS.

  • Rinks are highly utilized by area OMEGA and Champlin Park hockey clubs, whose footprint are clearly part of our city, due to school district boundaries. Those hockey clubs have requested more ice. Stating most clubs utilizing the CAC are based outside the city is misleading. "Declining enrollment" is also misleading without reviewing investment in existing programs.

  • Rink 1 currently drives traffic and revenue to our city via 2 sheet hockey tournaments hosted from mid-August to mid-May, and through rental revenue.  Loss of tournaments and traffic is a loss of revenue to business in our community.

  • While residents clearly supported aquatics and courts in the 2022 Parks and Rec survey, the direction of questioning omitted removal of current amenities. The 2022 City survey overview can be found HERE, but with no reference to continued community engagement as internal planning evolved.

We express continued alarm regarding the City’s due diligence investigating, researching and surveying the community to best serve our youth and residents at large. We urge the City staff and council to pause the proposal for reflection on BOTH what is gained and what will be lost.

Rinks and Courts – Let’s be a city with both.

Potential removal of rink one results in council clash over community engagement in Brooklyn Park.
SunPost Story from 9/12/23

Redesign talks for the Center began in 2018 after 63% of Brooklyn Park voters passed a park bond referendum for various projects. The referendum was for $26 million. In the Brooklyn Park City Council work session on May 2 of last year, improvements to the Center included an aquatics facility and a water park. However, in July of that year, the council decided to give priority to the fire station construction. By Jan. 3, designs for the project excluded the aquatics facility and water park and city staff began discussing the possible conversion of an ice arena into a gym. By February, the final designs were complete.

“There has to be community engagement. There has to be transparency and we’re asking for more than one plan,” Fercho said. “At the end of the day, if we lose rink one, I want it to be because that was the best thing for the community and that there was community engagement in the process.”

A survey was done in 2018 that asked Brooklyn Park residents what they wanted more of, and what they already had that needed fixing.

“I can’t tell you what happened, from the turn-down of the aquatics center to this plan that was put in place to remove the rink because quite frankly, it was done without any community engagement. It was done without any engagement with current ice users and I have to assume it was done without the engagement of the basketball community too because they just found out about this,” Fercho said. “I would expect that organizations that would benefit significantly from this project that they would’ve had a seat at the table. I also expect, as current users of the Community Activity Center, and our organization has been there for over 30 years, that we would’ve had a seat at the table.”

Did you know Rink One?
KARE11 story from 8/30/23

"It’s a pretty big expenditure to not have any community engagement," said Three Rivers Skating Club President Sarah Fercho. 

The club has been skating at the activity center for 30 years and currently has 70 members that Fercho says use the rink more than 40% of the year. 

"We will take whatever ice we can get," said Fercho. "There's a huge demand and people will drive from far away to get ice."

Add in several schools and other organizations that use the rink year-round and Fercho can't figure out why the city is considering the project. She's asking city leaders for more transparency as the process unfolds, saying there haven't been any public hearings. 

"There's space to add on, there's other space in Brooklyn Park, but the city has only brought one proposal forward with no input from anyone in the Brooklyn Park community," said Fercho.

Watch the FULL STORY HERE.

What's Going On With Our Rink?

The attached email was sent today (8/26/23) to the entire City Council, the City Manager and the Director of Parks and Recreation.  This is the direct result of a lack of attention to our expressed opposition to the project that will permanently remove Rink One from the Brooklyn Park Community Activity Center. (BP CAC).  The full BP CAC remodel project is estimated between $12M- $15M of public money (estimated $6M of that to remodel the rink) and will result in the addition of 3 multi use courts (basketball, volleyball and pickleball).  Please read the attached for the project history and our request for community engagement on this matter.

If you are a Brooklyn Park resident and you support the Save Rink One collation of organizations stance to oppose this project, please take action as soon as possible to contact your City Council members and Sign this Petition.  Even a short note will go a long way to show that there is a need for community engagement on this project.  Please share with your friends and family that may not be aware of this spending plan without community engagement.  Even if they don't use the ice they should care!  Decisions are being made quickly and we need your voice!

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