Seeking Silverdale and Central Kitsap

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Posts Tagged ‘community campus’

Another Huge Donation to the Silverdale Community Campus

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

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The word today is that Joanne Haselwood, widow of Bremerton auto dealer Chuck Haselwood, has pledged $2.5 million to the Silverdale YMCA project.

The Y is to be the first anchor tenant of the Silverdale Community Campus, which lies between Silverdale Way and Randall Way, north of the Walgreens Drug Store and south of the Regal Cinemas movie theater.

The Haselwood gift comes on top of a $1 million pledge announced by developer Ron Ross and his wife, Nadean, and means the Y project has now raised more than $5.3 million in private donations. The YMCA of Pierce and Kitsap Counties, which is building the Y, says the facility will cost between $15 million and $18 million total.

The organization says the Haselwood donation is the single largest in its 125-year history.

Those two contributions, taken together, represent an amazing level of support for the Y and for the community campus project.

— Jeff


Ross Family Contributes to Silverdale in a Big Way

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

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I hope everyone noticed Friday’s story in the Kitsap Sun indicating that Ron and Nadean Ross have pledge $1 million to the YMCA project that is to be the first tangible development of the Silverdale Community Campus.

It’s an extremely generous gift, and an extremely important one.

First of all, it gets the Y one-fifth of the way toward it’s $5 million private fundraising goal and makes it that much more likely that the project will become a reality. Second, pushing the Y project forward also pushes the community campus forward.

Any project becomes much more solid when the first piece becomes actual, rather than conceptual. The community campus has been stuck in the conceptual stage for many years. Tangible action toward making one part of the campus plan a reality will make it much more likely that other parts of the campus plan will also happen. No one ever wants to be first — the first store in a shopping center, the first one to ask a question in a class. The psychology is strong, but once the ice is broken, the first is seldom the last.

The community owes the Ross family a debt of gratitude for their donation and for what it may ultimately mean for the community campus.

— Jeff


Busy At the Library

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

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My posts on this blog have been a lot less frequent in the past few weeks as the demands of my real job have increased some.

As strategic planning manager for Kitsap Regional Library, I’ve been meeting with community leaders from across the county to gather their ideas about how public needs for library services are changing and what they think the library system of 2015 will have to offer to meet those needs. So far, we have had discussions with all three county commissioners, two of the four mayors, all five of the superintendents of Kitsap school systems and with the chairwoman of the Kitsap Republican Party. Still to come are interviews with a third mayor, the Democratic chairman and with some other leaders.

In each case so far, the representatives of KRL have been given much to think about. From these discussions, we are pulling together a set of vision statements that will become the structure of the library’s new strategic plan for 2010-2015. I hope to be able to share more about this process with you after the KRL Board of Trustee’s retreat next week.

This process, and the resulting action plans the library will create to make the strategic plan a reality, could have significant impact on Silverdale and Central Kitsap. A new library facility in Silverdale is much needed, both for the community and for the library system as a whole (I’ll write more about that specifically in a future post). The intent of both KRL and Kitsap County is to locate the new Silverdale branch library adjacent to the village green that is proposed for the Silverdale Community Campus.

How to make that a reality is a major question that the library is trying to address. I hope to have more to say on that soon.

— Jeff


An Agreement Moves the Silverdale Community Campus Ahead

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

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I intended to post on this news this morning before I left for work, but the server where these blogs reside was down for a while and I couldn’t post until now.

Today’s Sun features a report that the county has signed an agreement with the Pierce County YMCA that will result, if fundraising goals by the organization are met, with construction beginning next year on a new Y at the Silverdale Community Campus, which will lie between Randall Way and Poplars Ave just north of Bucklin Hill Road. The facility, modeled after the one in Gig Harbor, would be opening sometime in the fall of 2011.

Initially, the new YMCA would be surrounded by surface parking lots and look out on a new village green, about the size of a football field. Eventually, the plan is to develop other public and private use buildings around the green and put in a parking structure to serve the Y and other tenants. The Kitsap Regional Library has signed a letter of intent speaking of its plans to eventually build a new Silverdale branch library at the community campus site.

I’ve blogged about the community campus plans before, so I won’t go into detail here. If you want to see past blog posts on it, click on the “Community Campus” tag in the right hand column on this web page.

This is good news for the Silverdale community.

— Jeff


More Coming on Silverdale Community Campus

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

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I wrote April 10 about developments on the community campus project. More is happening.

County Commissioners heard more about a contract with the Pierce County YMCA to build a Y facility on the Silverdale Community Campus at a special study session April 24. Sometime in early May, commissioners will receive a proposed master plan for the campus, which has been subject of work by the Central Kitsap Community Council and BRCA Architects of Tacoma for several months.

The new masterplan drawings show phase 1 of the campus development with the new Y in the northwest corner of the campus site, fronted by a large village green and otherwise flanks by surface parking lots. But the plan for the final buildout of the campus, which could take 15-20 years, eventually calls for that surface parking to be replaced with a parking structure as other buildings are added to the campus site.

Central Kitsap Commissioner Josh Brown asked for and received this week a letter of intent from the Kitsap Regional Library indicating the library’s desire to participate in the campus development by building the new Silverdale branch library at the site. The conception plan for the buildout of the site gives the library a prime position, adjacent to the village green, on a hill that looks down toward Old Town Silverdale and Dyes Inlet. Brown felt the letter of intent would signal the library’s continued interest in the development to other potential participants. A 20,000 to 25,000-square-foot library building on the campus would combine with the Y to be a considerable draw for any other tenant of the campus, which could well see mixed use commercial development on the part of the site adjacent to Silverdale Way.

As a point of disclosure, I work half time as the Kitsap Regional Library’s strategic planning manager.

The reality is that Kitsap Regional Library will not be able to move ahead with a new Silverdale branch until something happens with its future funding capacity. KRL owns only two of the nine buildings that house its libraries. The rest are owned by local governments (cities, the county, and the S’Klallam Tribe) or by non-profit organizations on Bainbridge and in Manchester that were established to build and maintain the local library branches there. KRL owns it’s central branch on Sylvan Way and the totally inadequate Silverdale branch library on Charlton Street in Old Town.

I say the Silverdale library is totally inadequate because it is one of the smallest branches in the system and serves the largest population area in the system. While Silverdale branch offers 1 square foot of space for each 10 residents of the Silverdale area, the eight other branch libraries average about 1 square foot for each 2.6 residents.

But the only way the library can fund a new Silverdale branch would be to pass a bond levy that would be paid for by residents in the Silverdale area (similar to the process in Poulsbo that resulted in that city’s new library building). A new library of the size envisioned for Silverdale would cost about $8 million. And the only way KRL could operate a larger branch in Silverdale is if it eventually can convince voters to raise the levy lid that now limits the growth in property tax receipts that support the library system.

Even if both things happen, it will be several years before construction could begin on a new library in Silverdale.

But when the conceptual master plan for the campus is released, and the county begins the process of permitting the master plan, Silverdale residents will have a chance to see the vision for the future of their community. It is an exciting prospect, one mentioned by many of the community leaders who have participated in this blog’s “Community Conversations.” Moving forward with the Silverdale Community Campus can help build that sense of community that is lacking in a commercial center that often seems more focused on parking lots for the Mall and big box stores than it is on the people who visit or live here.

— Jeff


Silverdale Community Campus Master Planning Continues

Friday, April 10th, 2009

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On Thursday evening, I attended a meeting of a committee of the Central Kitsap Community Council. It wasn’t a particularly newsy agenda, but it was good to meet a few members of the council committee and to hear what they were saying about the ongoing development of the community campus master plan.

On January 2 this year, Sun reporter Brynn Grimley contributed the following to a wrap up report on items the staff expected to make news during 2009:

Progress Hoped for on Campus
Progress is expected this year on the proposed Central Kitsap Community Campus, a longtime dream of Silverdale residents that could move a step closer to reality.
In their last meeting of 2008, Kitsap County commissioners reached two agreements about the site of the campus, which would be located on a 12-acre plot off Randall Way.
One of the agreements was with Tacoma architectural firm BRCA Inc., which will complete architectural and engineering services for the project. BRCA will be paid $96,000 to figure out how the various possible components of the project — which could include a new library, YMCA, senior apartments, performing arts center and more — will fit together. Conceptual drawings could be ready as soon as February.
The commissioners also reached a preliminary agreement with the YMCA of Tacoma-Pierce County for construction and operation of a recreation facility at the campus. The county is pursuing grants to pay for the YMCA, which could cost $15 million. The county’s share would be $5 million; existing grants already have covered $1.8 million.
Also expected in 2009 is the county’s Silverdale incorporation study, which will analyze the impact cityhood could have on county revenues and services.
Brynn Grimley

According to the discussion Thursday, development of the master plan by BRCA continues, and there may be a public announcement of a specific plan for the community campus area sometime this spring. While past master plans were more conceptual, committee members said last night that the current version is much more specific to the site, dealing with wetlands where they exist and how wetland mitigation will take place. While not every building on the site might be identified for its eventual purpose, it sounds like this plan will include specific building sites and identify for each site the size of the building and what kinds of features it may contain.

While this particular phase of the development of the plan hasn’t been open to the public, this has been a very public discussion over a long period of time. There has been much public comment about what kinds of services should be featured in the community campus. Unless there are serious fundraising snags, the first building on the campus site will be the proposed YMCA. Committee members last night were saying the intention is still to try to break ground on the YMCA facility by the spring of 2010. The tentative budget for the Y is about $15 million, with $5 million coming from government grants, $5 million from bonds sold by the YMCA, and $5 million raised from public fundraising. If the project actually will begin in about a year, expect to see a major public fundraising push begin soon.

Of course, there are other components of the community campus.

The campus is seen as the location for the new Silverdale branch of Kitsap Regional Library. (Disclosure: I am an employee of KRL.) KRL has nine branch libraries. It only owns two of the buildings where those branches are located, the Sylvan Way main branch and the Silverdale library building on Carlton Street. Three of its nine branches are city owned (downtown Bremerton, Port Orchard and Poulsbo); one is in a county building (Kingston); one is owned by the S’Klallam Tribe (Little Boston) and two are owned by independent charitable groups (Manchester, Bainbridge Island). To pay for a new branch, KRL would probably have to sell its existing building and still come up with additional funds. So it’s unclear how soon a library could be under construction at the Silverdale community campus site.

Also mentioned in past years for the site have been senior housing that was to be built by Kitsap Consolidated Housing Authority. But the KCHA has been so damaged by the impact of the economy on its waterfront condo development in Bremerton that its not in any position to begin work on something at the Silverdale campus.

And there was at one time talk of a performing arts center at the site — something I assume that could be the new home of CSTOCK as well as a venue for live music and dance— and possibly a teen center.

Whatever is next, I hope that the people who are involved in the planning are looking for ways that various tenants of the campus site can share facilities. It would seem to make sense that every institution or organization that becomes a tenant on the campus should somehow form partnerships with each other to maximize the use of the facility and minimize the need to duplicate building spaces that they could share.

Here are some links to past stories in the Kitsap Sun about the Silverdale community campus:

This story focuses on prospects for the Y.

This July 2007 story talks about the community council’s frustration with lack of progress on the campus project and the impact that the failed 2007 library levy had on plans for the library being the “anchor tenant” of the campus. This was before the Y emerged as a possible tenant at the campus site.

This February 2007 story was about the public getting its first chance to comment on the conceptual design plan.

Please feel free to comment on whether you think the Silverdale community campus is a good idea, what you think it might contribute to the community, and what should be part of the campus.

— Jeff


Community Conversation — with Josh Brown

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

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This week’s community conversation is with Kitsap County Commissioner Josh Brown, who represents Central Kitsap on the three-member county board. Brown is beginning his third year as County Commissioner. His family moved to Kitsap County in 1994 after his father, a pipefitter, was transferred to PSNS. He grew up in Poulsbo and graduated from North Kitsap High School.  While he was in college, his family moved to Silverdale. After working in commercial real estate, Brown returned to Kitsap, ran for the commissioner’s post, and won. He owns a home off Anderson Hill Road, slightly outside the Silverdale UGA.

Q: How do you see your role as it relates to the Silverdale/CK community?
A: 
As the County Commissioner that represents Central Kitsap, I believe my role is to be responsive to the needs of the unincorporated areas of my district.  If the Silverdale and Central Kitsap UGA’s were combined,
they would total over 40,000 residents — more than Bremerton, the largest city in Kitsap County.  Providing a safe community, investing in infrastructure such as roads and parks, as well as building a sense of community are my priorities.  I know my constituents rely on me to make sure that their voices are heard.  
Q: What’s your favorite thing about Silverdale/CK?
A:
 The people.  The thing that I enjoy the most about my position as County Commissioner is being able to meet the great residents that make up our diverse community.  From Silverdale to Seabeck, Illahee to
Crosby, we have an amazing amount of people who are dedicated to making their community a better place to live, now and in the future.  I think part of this is because we have a lot of military families in Kitsap who — after travelling around the country and world — choose to  live and retire here because of its natural  beauty and quality of life. These folks have been dedicated public servants in their professional lives, dedicated themselves to their community is a natural extension.

Q: If you were “mayor” of Silverdale, what’s the first new policy you would implement?
A:
 Since Silverdale is unincorporated, the County is responsible for providing local services.  While it’s not a policy per say, I have devoted a lot of attention to ensuring the Harrison Hospital expansion in Silverdale is a success.  This project will not only add a new 90 bed hospital in our community, but will provide hundreds of family wage jobs, access to vital medical facilities and spur ancillary development that will transform Silverdale into the health care center of Kitsap County. We have added flexibility to our planning code and are examining ways to enhance infrastructure to support this development. 

Q: What place do you consider the public gathering place of Silverdale, and what do you think that says about us?
A:
 Some might say the Mall, but I would disagree.  I think Old Town Silverdale is the public gathering place.  The shops, restaurants, along with Waterfront Park provide a quintessential small town feeling. The library and Linder Field provide additional amenities for people to enjoy. I really enjoy it!  A close second in my mind would be the Clear Creek Trail system.  I know many folks who routinely use the trail to visit with friends while enjoying the fresh air. 

Q:. What things do you think stand in the way of building a better sense of community in Silverdale/CK, and what would you do about them if you could?
A:
 For many years, the community has been desirous of developing the Central Kitsap Community Campus which would be home to new Silverdale branch library, recreation/community center facilities, a performing
arts venue, and senior housing.  This past year, we completed the acquisition of a vital parcel to develop the Campus.  The Kitsap Regional Library is committed to developing a plan to build a new library in Silverdale and we have focused on developing a partnership to build a new YMCA which would have the potential of serving 15,000 residents. The County has engaged the same firm that developed the Gig Harbor YMCA to assist with site planning and developing a YMCA in Silverdale.  Making progress on the Community Campus in 2009 is my main focus as County Commissioner.

Thanks to Commissioner Josh Brown for participating in the blog Q&A. You can see previous interviews by clicking on the “community conversation” tag, listed under “tags” in the right hand column of this page.

I am working from a growing list of people who I hope to interview for the blog to discuss building a sense of community in Silverdale and Central Kitsap. If there’s someone you think should be interviewed for the blog, please send your suggestion to me at seekingsilverdale@gmail.com.

— Jeff   


Community Conversation — with Carl Johnson

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

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This is the third in a series of posts in which leaders of Silverdale/Central Kitsap have an opportunity to answer some questions about the area and their thoughts about building a sense of community here. You can read the posts in this series by clicking on the “community conversation” link in the list of tags displayed in the right-hand column on this page.
Today’s guest is Carl Johnson, who has served on the Central Kitsap School Board for 14 years and served 8 years on the Central Kitsap Community Council. After being semi-retired for several years, three years ago Carl accepted an invitation to become community relations director of Abiding HomeCare. Hecoordinates marketing, advertising and public relations for the company. He is also earned the designation of Certified Senior Advisor and is writing a monthly column on aging for the Central Kitsap Reporter. He is also on the board of elders of Peninsula Bible Fellowship and conducts a marketplace ministry, known as Marketplace Crosstalk, for business people who want to discuss marketplace issues from a biblical perspective. He has lived in the Loretta Heights neighborhood of Silverdale since 1985.
 
 
Q: How do you see your role as it relates to the Silverdale/CK community?
A:  To serve. To be active in community development and building relationships that will strengthen the bond that defines a healthy community.  Silverdale has a great future, and I welcome the opportunity to contribute to the heritage and foundation that has already been laid by dedicated men and women over the years. 
 
Q: What’s your favorite thing about Silverdale/CK?
A: Its natural beauty, and the opportunity to enjoy all of its venues. I especially enjoy my runs on the Clear Creek Trail. 
 
Q: If you were “mayor” of Silverdale, what’s the first new policy you would implement?
A: Clearly identify the distinctive characteristics … the ”face” …  that defines a community. Establish well-defined building guidelines and a “plan” for growth that encompasses transportation, population density, and infrastructure, as well as maintaining the integrity of the environment. I would also make it a first priority the completion of a Community Center … a hub for the social, cultural, education, and recreational activities that contribute to a healthy community. 
 
Q: What place do you consider the public gathering place of Silverdale, and what do you think that says about us?
A:  Today … that “place” is the Kitsap Mall. Unfortunately, it says that we truly don’t have a ”hub” for the social, cultural, education, and recreational activities that gives a community its identity. As a result, Silverdale continues to drift along as a “cash cow” for the county, lacking a well-defined purpose, and yet attracting substantial business investment. What I think this says about us is that we’re conflicted and confused, and in need of some clear direction.  
 
Q: What things do you think stand in the way of building a better sense of community in Silverdale/CK, and what would you do about them if you could?
A:    1. Incorporation … support the effort to bring this issue to a vote by the citizens living within the boundaries of the Silverdale UGA. 
2.  Develop a Community Center (i.e. Library, recreational facility, performing arts, etc.) … support the efforts already in progress to raise capital (private and public), and identify stakeholders that will make such efforts a reality. 

Thanks to Carl for his thoughtful answers and for being willing to accept the e-mail interview challenge. I am working from a growing list of people who I hope to interview for the blog to discuss building a sense of community in Silverdale and Central Kitsap. If there’s someone you think should be interviewed for the blog, please send your suggestion to me at    seekingsilverdale@gmail.com.

— Jeff

 



Jeff Brody
It's relatively easy to find Silverdale and Central Kitsap on a map. What's harder is to identify things that help residents form a common bond. Silverdale resident Jeff Brody is writing this blog to help build community in Silverdale and Central Kitsap.