COBirders,

*El Paso County Parks has proposed to develop a number of the natural areas
within Fountain Creek Regional Park (FCRP).* A public meeting on April 28,
2016 presented the plans, which include: dog park in sensitive riparian
habitat, singletrack mountain biking trails, disc golf course,
amphitheater, new athletic field, playgrounds, a creekside “beach”
recreation area in an isolated riparian grove, new parking lots, creek
realignment through Area 7 (Hansen Natural Area), and additional “forest
management” areas. A number of these development plans will adversely
affect important bird and wildlife habitat.


*Have you birded FCRP or heard about its importance to birds and other
wildlife? This email is to request that you send quickly to park personnel
your impressions and comments regarding the proposed development plan.* We
need a substantial response, as they don’t seem to appreciate the
importance of undisturbed habitat, both canopy and understory, in a major
riparian corridor. The development plan is available at
*http://adm.elpasoco.com/CommunityServices/planning/Pages/default.aspx
<http://adm.elpasoco.com/CommunityServices/planning/Pages/default.aspx> or
at
http://adm.elpasoco.com/CommunityServices/planning/Pages/FountainCreekRegionalParkPlanning.aspx
<http://adm.elpasoco.com/CommunityServices/planning/Pages/FountainCreekRegionalParkPlanning.aspx>*.
*Figure 36 on page 42* shows the scale of proposed development.


The window to respond is narrow before the County Park Commissioners will
review the proposed development plan. *The deadline for public comments is
MAY 19,* but we need momentum before then so that they aren’t thinking that
they have a green light. We offer some ideas to highlight below, in your
words. In particular, we focus on two specific developments that we think
will most significantly compromise habitat for bird residents and migrants.


Summary of key points:

·         Proposed location for dog park would damage sensitive primary
habitat and fragment the corridor

·         Other proposed management areas are primary cottonwood groves
that don’t need management.

·         “Management” invariably disturbs important understory elements of
riparian corridor



First, a dog park is planned for the forested area known as “Mile Marker
18” or “Area 2,” abutting “The Spa.” The dog park will cover the habitat
between the creek and the adjacent private land to the east, extending from
the Willow Springs Ponds south to the Mile 18 marker (6 acres). This area
hosts some of the richest bird life in the regional park, especially during
migration. It is also a region where species seek refuge and nest *away*
from the regional trail. A dog park, with a network of trails, tree
removal, understory and grass degradation (e.g., see Bear Creek dog park),
bathrooms, and expanded parking would severely compromise the quality of
habitat. We think that this is a priority. We are not against a dog park,
but it should not be in this valuable habitat and in the floodplain. They
can re-organize proposed uses outside of the floodplain, or acquire land
adjacent to the park that is already compromised.


Second, the development plan targets several primary riparian tree clusters
for “forest management.” The park planners indicated that this involves the
removal of dead cottonwoods, which are a major resource for nesting birds
and other wildlife. For example, cottonwood groves such as the proposed
“creekside recreation area” (“Area 6”) currently are relatively
undisturbed, remote, primary cottonwood groves. Such management invariably
damages understory. Similarly, a proposed realignment of the entire creek
would transect Area 7, at the south end of the regional park.


Amazingly, none of the $1.65 million planned for park development has been
allotted toward restoring or reclaiming wildlife habitat, or for
controlling invasive species.


*We ask that you write an email to share the importance of maintaining
Fountain Creek’s riparian corridor (canopy and understory) and avoiding
development in sensitive areas.* We hope that an overwhelming response from
the birding community will be hard for the county planners to ignore.
Describe what the park means to you, how often you visit, where you live,
and how far you travel to visit. If you would like to highlight some of
your experiences or bird sightings in the park, that’s great, too! In
particular, a priority is not turning key parts of Area 2 into a dog park,
and further fragmenting the riparian corridor.


At your soonest convenience, please send your comments to Mr. Ross
Williams, Park Planner, at [email protected]. It is good to be as
specific as you can, if even in a short message.


Also, please also forward to us the email you send to Mr. Williams so that
we can record the scale of response from the birding community. And feel
free to contact us with any questions.


Tyler Stuart

Steve Getty

Colorado Springs, CO

FCRP Bird Count Leaders

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