Published November 27, 2009 05:20 pm - Like everyone else, the Slippery Rock Park and Recreation Board is struggling with increased costs and decreased revenues.
Following the auditor’s report and recommendations, the board will implement fee increases in 2010.
Tough economy impacts park, recreation in Slippery Rock
By Carol Ann Gregg
Allied News Staff Writer
Like everyone else, the Slippery Rock Park and Recreation Board is struggling with increased costs and decreased revenues.
Following the auditor’s report and recommendations, the board will implement fee increases in 2010.
“It has been several years since we have increased the fees for any of our programs,” said Mary Messer, executive director of Slippery Rock Park and Recreation. “We are also going to implement a two-tiered pricing system similar to what was suggested in the proposed Northwest Butler County Regional Park and Recreation Plan.”
Tier one will be the base fee that anyone within the Slippery Rock Area School District will pay. That will be raised beginning in January.
Tier two will be the basic fee plus a 20 percent additional fee for people living outside the school district.
“We never turn people away,” Messer said. Many kinds of programs are available, and they change as people’s interests change.
Some of the core programs include Playsafe, which is a before- and after-school day care program at the three elementary schools in the district. A pre-school program meets in the recreation center in Slippery Rock Community Park. Recreational sports teams include baseball, softball, soccer, football and basketball.
“Our target market is the children,” Messer said. “Our hardest market to reach is the teens.”
Messer said that while kids are in grade school they participate in recreational sports through the park and recreation programs, and the more talented athletes go on to participate in sports. “We haven’t found programs that attract this age group,” she said.
Park and recreation is responsible for the school plays at the high school and the students do participate in that, she said.
The programs wouldn’t be available if it wasn’t for 20 to 30 part-time employees and the many volunteers who help.
The park offers many other things. For example, the Butler County Master Gardeners have installed and maintain a flower garden that will attract pollinators. Over the winter, the garden provides shelter for wildlife and seeds on some of the plants attract birds to the garden.