Thumbnail photo courtesy of Del Norte County Florence Keller Regional Park is one of a handful of local spots ideal for teaching kids how to build a shelter in the wilderness, Ron Cole says. For 25 years, Gateway Education of the Wild Rivers Coast, has used the 26-acre park with its redwood grove as an … Continue reading Supervisors Side With Gateway Education Over Florence Keller Use, Reject County MOU Restricting Day Camp Program To Picnic Areas →
Thumbnail photo courtesy of Del Norte County Florence Keller Regional Park is one of a handful of local spots ideal for teaching kids how to build a shelter in the wilderness, Ron Cole says. For 25 years, Gateway Education of the Wild Rivers Coast, has used the 26-acre park with its redwood grove as an outdoor classroom to teach youngsters how to identify plants, move quietly through their environment and build the intuitive skills needed for survival, the organizationâs board president said. âAll of these things are pretty quiet activities,â Cole told Redwood Voice Community News after appearing before the Del Norte County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. âEven the games that they do to practice those skills â the kids are moving as silently as they can because they donât want to be caught â (so) the concerns about noise really werenât justified.â Three members of the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved a renewed memorandum of understanding with Gateway Education enabling the organization to continue to use three campsites and the former ropes course at Florence Keller for its Summer Day Camp program through 2031. County supervisors also rejected a competing MOU Building Maintenance and Parks Director Allen Winogradov submitted that would have restricted Summer Camp activities to the parksâ day-use area where he says they are more suited. Winogradov said he has received noise complaints from visitors who were at the park during Gateway Educationâs Summer Day Camp program. People have also complained about traffic congestion, though he was unable to furnish written proof when District 2 Supervisor Valerie Starkey asked for it. âThe campsites he uses each time are in an area thatâs very congested,â Winogradov said of Gateway Education. âAlmost every time weâve had a complaint regarding parking and weâve had to go out and say, âHey, you canât be parking your cars here. You got to move your cars.â Iâve had campers who have come to me and asked me, âCan I get my money back? I just donât want to be here anymore.â I think he runs a great program, donât get me wrong, but I think the place for it is in the dedicated day-use areas.â Board Chairman Joey Borges voted against the MOU Gateway Education submitted to the county. âI would prefer to see the county MOU where we have our building director-parks director telling us what he needs to make this safe for everyone,â he said. Borgesâs motion died due to lack of a second. District 5 Supervisor Dean Wilson was absent. Del Norte County Risk Manager Whitney Pincombe also raised concerns that because Gateway Education is ârunning a business on our propertyâ a system for inspecting the safety of the area his organization uses is needed as is sufficient insurance. âThe reason the insurance requirements are so important that we revise them is if there were some sort of a catastrophic injury and then some nuclear verdict, a $1 million or a $2 million insurance policy is not going to cover the cost that would be owed to that claimant and then we would be looked at to cover the difference,â she said. âThatâs a risk we would really need to consider when weâre allowing people to run these survival camps on our property.â During her motion to approve the MOU Gateway Education drafted, one that was in place since 2021, Starkey said it should be modified to include the new requirements concerning insurance. Pincombe said that would be doable. Gateway Education charges $475 for its Summer Day Camp. According to Cole, the program is five days long and since kids need to understand that survival skills can be applied anywhere, each day is spent at a different location. Cole said he reserves three campsites for three days, spending a total of about $180 âso we can have them for seven hours on Monday.â Three vans pick the children up at the Del Norte County Library and ferry them to Florence Keller at about 8:30 a.m. Theyâre at the park until about 4 p.m. before theyâre taken back to the library, Cole said. According to Cole, there are about 18 children in the Summer Day Camp. They are divided into three groups of six, each with three counselors. Thereâs also a cook that accompanies the youngsters to the park. Cole said the children eat lunch at the picnic tables at the campsites. âWe have a very strong pack it in, pack it out policy,â he said, adding that there are up to five vehicles including the three vans. âBut when youâre making food from scratch and everything, thereâs no processed food, no packaged art pieces and not much trash. Everything fits into a bread bag.â According to the countyâs website, renting the small picnic area costs $60 per day while renting the large picnic area is $120 per day. Another county park, Ruby Van Deventer along North Bank Road is also a venue for Gateway Educationâs Summer Day Camp. Because itâs alongside the Smith River, the environment is very different from Florence Keller. âIt allows some other activities that can be done,â Cole said. âFor example, when we do tracking exercises⌠you have the whole river area over there. You can turn over rocks, you can make a trail through different kinds of ecosystems and each year we change the location so the kids never know what to expect if they come back.â During Tuesdayâs meeting, Winogradov said he has had to issue refunds âprobably dozens of timesâ and the only time he receives complaints about congestion are during the Summer Camp program. Starkey asked Winogradov if he asked Gateway Education representatives to move their vehicles to which he answered in the affirmative. The parks director said that the MOU Gateway Education had with the county until it expired in September didnât explicitly forbid use of the campsites. There are also signs throughout the campground prohibiting picnicking in the camping areas, though Winogradov said they were put in place before he worked for the county. Starkey noted that campers often hold family reunions with a lot of people taking up three campsites. âOutside of the liability that Whitney (Pincombe) was talking about earlier which is not insurmountable, I would think, I just donât see why the need to insert in your version âindividual campsites are not to be used for day camps,ââ Starkey said. âI donât really understand what the big problem is. You brought up parking, thatâs not insurmountable either. I see there is obviously conflict here, but Iâm not understanding why somebody couldnât rent three campsites and use them during the day.â Following the meeting, Cole said he didnât understand why Winogradov was so insistent that Gateway Education use the day-use areas, which is closer to the highway and is âcounter to what weâre trying to do, which is get the kids in nature.â