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5.1 HPSR 02-20-2014
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5.1 HPSR 02-20-2014
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Bailey Point Nature Preserve gets its wings <br />byJoni Astrup, Associate editor <br />Bailey Point Nature Preserve, Elk River's newest park, is officially open. <br />Mayor John Dietz and Musz Bailey, accompanied by her son Tim, <br />cut the ribbon during a ceremony Aug. 14 at the park entrance. <br />The park is located at 1 Morton Ave., west of downtown at the <br />confluence of the Elk and Mississippi rivers. <br />"This is a great day for the city," Dietz said. "This is just a <br />jewel of a piece of property." <br />The park will be left largely in its natural state, offering <br />walking trails and a fishing area. About a dozen <br />members of the Bailey family were on hand for the <br />park's opening. The Baileys owned the point for many <br />years. The family was involved in the founding and <br />operation of Cretex in Elk River. <br />"They were very active in the community for many, <br />many, many years so I think it's very appropriate that we <br />name this Bailey Point Nature Preserve," Dietz said. <br />John Bailey Jr. said the Elk River community has been <br />wonderful to the Bailey family and they will enjoy the <br />park for generations to come. <br />"It's almost like a gift to the family," Bailey said. <br />City Administrator Cal Portner and Elk River Parks and <br />Recreation Commission Chairman Dave <br />Anderson also spoke. <br />"Standing here, doing this has been a dream of mine for <br />I can't tell you how long," Anderson said. <br />He called Bailey Point a "fabulous piece of property." <br />He thanked John and Nancy Babcock, who had owned <br />Bailey Point since 2003 and sold it to the city last year, <br />for making the park a reality. <br />11 <br />Exhibit D <br />Anderson also noted that there has been a mayor, city <br />council and city staff in place willing to seize the <br />opportunity to acquire the land when it was available. "In <br />another day and another time, this opportunity may have <br />been missed out on," he said. <br />Elk River Parks and Recreation Chair Dave Anderson (left) talked <br />about Bailey Point as Mayor John Dietz watched. <br />There also was an element of luck, Anderson said. He <br />described how he got a call one day from the city's <br />former parks and recreation director, Bill Maertz, who <br />had moved on to a job in California. Maertz had been <br />notified by a former colleague in Ramsey, telling him <br />about the possibility of Minnesota Land Trust money <br />being available for purchases such as Bailey Point. <br />That's really what helped turn the tide, Anderson said, <br />spurring negotiations and making the park happen. <br />Both he and the mayor recognized the volunteers, many <br />from the neighborhood, who have put in hundreds of <br />hours at the park since the city purchased it. Anderson <br />said they took down the white wooden fence, removed <br />miles of barbed wire and hundreds of fence posts and <br />installed new fencing. <br />Old entrance gates were sandblasted by Elk River <br />Machine, repainted and reinstalled at the park. <br />"It's this effort of community that is going to continue to <br />make this great," Anderson said. <br />
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