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<br /> <br />Chapter 11 RECREATION, PARKS, OPEN SPACE AND NATURAL ENVIRONMENT <br />KITTITAS COUNTY <br />Page 135 Comprehensive Plan <br />Although the Parks District does not have taxing authority it is currently engaged in several donation-funded <br />projects in the County that will add to the County’s portfolio of recreation opportunities. According to the <br />District, the biggest projects underway are as follows: <br /> Towns to Teanaway Corridor Project – This is a regional trail network planning process that will result in <br />a Master Plan for establishing a trail network to connect the Cle Elum, Roslyn, Ronald and Suncadia to <br />the Teanaway Community Forest. The first new trail from this project was built by volunteers in October <br />of 2018. <br /> Howard Carlin Trailhead Park – working in conjunction with the City of Cle Elum and The Coal Mines <br />Trail Commission, this project will result in a new park at the entrance to the Coal Mines Trail in Cle <br />Elum. Although this park is located within the City of Cle Elum it supports regional park objectives. <br /> Evergreen SnoPark – This is a five acre SnoPark located south of Woods and Steele Road, off of Forest <br />Service Road #4510 in Cle Elum. It is open to the general public during the months of October through <br />March and is closed and gated during the months of April through September. that provides an <br />opportunity for day-use parking for snowmobile enthusiasts. <br /> RECREATIONAL SAFETY <br />According to the Kittitas County Sheriff’s Department, the Cle Elum River drainage is the number one <br />recreational destination in the Pacific Northwest and Kittitas County as a whole is the number one snow <br />mobile destination during the winter months. In order to provide public safety and law enforcement to <br />remote areas of the County, the Sheriff’s Department has a variety of equipment to support the various <br />recreation activities available in Kittitas County. <br /> POTENTIAL IMPACTS <br />As growth continues to occur both in the urban and rural areas of Kittitas County, there may be increased <br />impacts on existing recreational areas and a demand for additional areas and opportunities. In order to <br />address the potential demands and impacts, Kittitas County has taken the approach that incorporated <br />communities should be primarily responsible for organized recreational opportunities and park systems, <br />while the County is primarily responsible for the unorganized, passive recreational opportunities. <br />The 2016 PROS Plan identifies the projected growth of Western Washington counties and counties adjacent <br />to Kittitas County as having a potential impact on Kittitas County recreation. This is because, according to the <br />PROS Plan, the County’s recreational opportunities are utilized at a high rate of demand by out-of-County <br />tourists, and this tourism traffic is linked to the I-90 and US-2 corridors. The Kittitas County Tourism Plan <br />indicated that 33% of its respondents lived in the Puget Sound Region and another 18% lived in other parts <br />of Western Washington, for a total of 51% of respondents. While growth within Kittitas County will require <br />expanded recreational facilities and opportunities to maintain levels of service and quality of life for Kittitas <br />County residents, the expansion of facilities and opportunities for use by out-of-County residents will be <br />important to the economic prosperity of the County for attracting tourism.