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Ballfields still a dream
By TIMES STAFF
Published June 2, 2007
For months environmental groups and Pinellas County officials have locked horns over the county's plan to allow East Lake Youth Sports Association to build ballfields on one of two spots in the Brooker Creek Preserve - either on 38.5 acres off Old Keystone Road or on 46 acres off Trinity Boulevard, the site of a proposed water-blending plant. But late last month signaled a potential shift in the debate. The commission took the Trinity site off the table and county staff said there are at least a half-dozen other sites in Pinellas worth considering. Pasco County also might be interested in partnering to build ballfields in South Pasco. None of the sites are a sure thing, as they're owned by other entities. East Lake wants to build five to 10 ballfields. A look at the potential sites: 1. Tract adjoining Canal Park. About 63 upland acres, mostly owned by the Southwest Florida Water Management District. Swiftmud would retain some acreage, so it's hard to say how many fields could be built. It takes 2 to 2.5 acres per field with parking. 2. Cypress Woods Elementary School. 1.4 acres owned by Pinellas County Schools. Room for one practice field. The school would use the site for overflow parking during school events. 3. East Lake High School. About 1.6 acres owned by Pinellas County schools far to the rear of the school. Probably room for one regulation multipurpose field. 4. Brooker Creek Elementary School. 1.4 acres owned by Pinellas schools. Room for one practice field. 5. Southeast corner of East Lake Road/Keystone Road intersection. 40 acres owned by Pinellas schools for future middle school construction. May have room for four or five multipurpose fields if coordinated with school building plan. 6. Four parcels off East Lake Road and one farther west on Keystone Road. 65.7 acres north of Keystone Road owned privately and 15.3 acres owned by the county. Wetlands may hamper number of ballfields. 7. Tarpon Springs landfill. 41 capped acres south of Tarpon Springs Fundamental Elementary School. Once used as the town dump. Would require approval of City Commission. The site is designed for one multipurpose and four baseball fields, but might accommodate more.
[Last modified June 1, 2007, 23:04:03]
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by Merrill
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06/06/07 03:42 PM
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Please consider everything, the trees, birds, animals, water quality, air quality and all other possitive features of the preserve. The ball fields can be built anywhere. Keep the Brooker Creek Preserve a Preserve!
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by Marilyn
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06/05/07 09:57 AM
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We are so fortunate to have a PRESERVE! Please use other lands for the ball fields. Tarpon offered land, and we have so many other options where you would not be destroying a beautiful preserve and animal & bird habitat.
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by KC
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06/02/07 07:09 PM
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What part of "preserve" don't these people understand?
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by Bill
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06/02/07 05:51 PM
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I'm against the few who have their homes sited on an eco-unfriendly golf course, telling the rest of us we can't use county property for a ball field. It used to be a farm for pete's sake.
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by DM
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06/02/07 03:47 PM
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The NIMBY and heck with kids attitude is going to come back to haunt us as a community in the future. The Friends haven't turned out to be too nice to the kids.The politicians are also failing the kids/families.Put fields in area not long drive away
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by Bill
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06/02/07 08:41 AM
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That area north of Keystone, adjacent to the Crescent Oaks Golf Community, would be ideal for recreation. Isn't there are reason why the sited a golf course there?
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by Sandy
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06/02/07 07:28 AM
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Voters email, call, write your elected officials and let them know you DO NOT want these priveledged few to doze wet lands and put in a parking lot!
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