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Olson: Schools, parks and annoying buzzes

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“I would like to say we’re in acquisition mode, but we’re taking care of infrastructure issues now,” she said. “We have aging facilities that need attention.”

The district’s last tax-increase referendum was in 2010, asking to create a new, vastly improved aquatic center at Hopkins Park. That’s one of the park district’s marquee amenities, and voters shot it down by a 3-to-1 margin.

There aren’t enough soccer moms and dads to push through a referendum to buy Kiwanis Park in what Bill O’Reilly likes to call the “Age of Obama.”

Meanwhile, if the school district were to keep the land and put more pressure on its finances, critics would certainly bring up that they were paying $42,000 a year – about the price of a new teacher – to a developer for land they aren’t using now and do not plan to use in the future.

I’d be among them.

So it’s a shame that the school district can’t hang on to the property. Youth sports are important and we all want them to have a place to play.

But property owners shell out a lot in taxes to the school district already, and it’s not to provide park land. At a time when District 428 is running a $2.3 million deficit, they don’t have the luxury of throwing money away.

This might not be the best change for the soccer leagues. It will probably mean changes in the future to where they play and how their schedule is structured. But as long as they can have space to play, they will be OK.

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About that pool: Although the DeKalb Park District won’t be building the aquatic center complex envisioned in 2010, Capek said there is a plan to fix the pool at Hopkins Park.

The pool there now was built almost 40 years ago and is nearing the end of its useful life. The park district pursued a grant for the work, but missed out in the face of stiff competition, Capek said.

“The board made the commitment to do that within existing financing,” Capek said. “The project will move forward at end of pool season in 2014 and they hope to have it open for the 2015 season.”


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