Voters in Cottage Grove will weigh a decision on two referendum questions in the Nov. 6 election asking them to commit up to $13.5 million in bonding for a new aquatic center and bring sweeping improvements to its largest park.
Cottage Grove's aging municipal pool closed last year, and the city was approached by the Cottage Grove Athletic Association -- a volunteer organization that runs baseball and softball programs, among others -- about increasing demands being put on fields and improvements at Hamlet Park.
Plans for a community center in Cottage Grove have been kicked around "well before I got here," said Ryan Schroeder, who has been city administrator for 15 years. Recently, the city discussed a partnership with the YMCA for such a center, but the impending arrival of an LA Fitness Center changed those plans.
Similarly, the city has been talking about upgrading and expanding Hamlet Park, the city's largest park, for a decade, when land was removed from Oakwood Park to make way for Hardwood Drive. Proceeds from a city land sale were put into a trust fund for park improvements, Schroeder said. Those funds paid for the addition of 30 acres at Hamlet Park and other projects. But now there is not enough money in the fund for more work.
Unlike the new $15 million Public Safety/City Hall Building, paid for with city reserves and no property tax increase, voters weren't asked to decide the issue in a referendum. That's because the amenities being sought from the bond proceeds aren't "mission-critical," Schroeder said. And it's why the city is advocating neither for nor against the questions.
"We're not in the business of marketing. We're just asking the question," Schroeder said. The decision is squarely in the hands of voters.
The referendum includes two questions. Voters will decide whether to pass either one, both or neither. If both measures pass, it would cost the owner of a typical home valued at $230,000 about $6 per month -- $74 a year -- in additional property taxes, the city estimates.
Here is how the two proposals and costs break down: