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Tom Hagen and North Mankato Councilwoman Diane Norland discussed plans to add a sandy shoreline and restore an historic artesian well to Spring Lake Park.
Pat Christman / The Free Press


Published August 11, 2008 05:29 pm - The North Mankato Parks and Green Spaces Advisory Committee will be working with a Minneapolis consulting firm on a $40,000 master plan for Benson Park.

Parks committee members optimistic


By Mark Fischenich
The Free Press

NORTH MANKATO

Tom Hagen has volunteered for enough advisory committees and planning groups to be sufficiently dubious about whether the gatherings will generate anything more meaningful than a stack of meeting minutes and a soon-to-be-forgotten action plan.

So that was Hagen’s attitude when he agreed to join the North Mankato Parks and Green Spaces Advisory Committee last spring. Now, 15 months later, he’s feeling more optimistic the new panel will bring noticeable improvements to his city.

“We’re relatively new, so I’m not sure how it will all pan out,” said Hagen, an instructor at Minnesota State University. “ ... I always have a lot of skepticism.”

But it’s starting to look like the committee is having an impact on city parks.

It provided financial support to the community-wide Million Tree Project, which planted thousands of saplings in Mankato and North Mankato last spring.

It will be working with a Minneapolis consulting firm on a $40,000 master plan for Benson Park, a largely undeveloped 70-acre piece of mostly bare land and water on the city’s north side.

It has become a permanent committee of North Mankato’s city government and will be making the recommendations to the City Council on what park projects should be in the city’s five-year capital improvement plan.

It has set up an endowment fund for city parks and is working to generate donations.

And it is moving forward on some smaller projects that could be done this fall or winter in Spring Lake Park.

“So I think you’ll see some changes in the next six months,” Hagen said.

He credits freshman Councilwoman Diane Norland for the committee’s progress.

“She’s the one who spearheaded this and said — rather than just do these things, we need to get some community input.”

The committee’s input was ambitious in an overall plan released in October. It included suggestions of a water park, ice rinks, massive tree plantings and countless smaller improvements to city parks.

The idea was to think big and implement the plan over as many years as it took. Norland, however, said people can be asked to wait only so long before seeing results of their work.

“With some things, sometimes it takes way longer than I have patience for,” Norland said.



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