Heraldnet.com
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2010 2:21 pm
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Midday Snacks
I'd like to have a few "Words" with you
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Recycling food waste is no big deal
Latest gallery

Everett Manhunt
September 1. 2010 (9 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Wednesday


A stroke of kindness for Everett woman
Suspect arrested in Everett manhunt after shots...
New student exams, familiar results
Tuesday


Crash leaves car embedded in Everett Transit bus
County students get mixed grade from superinten...
Stevens Hospital District taxes to stay
Monday


More than a nuisance
Mukilteo's red-light camera fight on radar of ...
Renamed Keystone ferry terminal a coup for Coup...
Sunday


Snohomish County becomes a destination for airp...
You’ll need only 1 flu shot this year
Snohomish County YMCA goal: Healthy kids
Saturday


Marysville's new school getting ready for its f...
When the circus came to Everett ... in 1910
Drop in ferry ridership leveling off
Friday


New flight simulator re-creates 787 for pilots
Berkey calls for investigation into campaign ag...
Crash flips horse trailer on I-5, blocking traffic
Thursday


Heroin increasing its reach in small towns
Everett schools gain; Berkey's deficit widens
Rabbits and chickens move in as Evergreen fair ...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Mark Mulligan / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
People and dogs come to socialize at the Ebey Island off-leash dog park near the U.S. 2 trestle Wednesday afternoon.
Mark Mulligan / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Brian Toivonen of Snohomish pets his dog, Wylie, at the Ebey Island off-leash dog park Wednesday. Toivonen said the 10-month-old rescue dog was skittish at first, but after bringing Wylie to the park every afternoon after work to socialize her, "every day gets better."
 
 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Saturday, November 1, 2008

Man's bark saves Ebey Island dog park

Ebey Island pasture owner wins fight to keep off-leash park

EBEY ISLAND -- If you've been to Ebey Island in the past six months, you might know about this year's bumper crop of wagging tails.

In May, Christopher Newman fenced off a few acres of pasture on the flood-prone agricultural isle east of downtown Everett and called it Ebey Island Dog Park.

Word about the private off-leash park quickly spread, helping it blossom into a regular destination for dozens of doggies and their grateful owners.

"We need a lot more dog parks in the county," said Newman, who owns a malamute-German shepherd, Buddy, and a Rottweiler named Dagger. "It's good for the people and good for the dogs."

After a few months in operation, a Snohomish County code enforcement officer ordered the donation-supported park just north of the U.S. 2 trestle closed.

A dog park, the officer said, is not allowed under Snohomish County code, which deals with activities allowed on rural land. While the code lists community clubs, kennels and public parks as permitted uses, it does not specifically identify dog parks.

Newman was outraged.

Before opening the park, he said he first cleared the idea with county agriculture and planning officials as well as with his neighbors.

After wrangling for a month over the code's interpretation, Newman's landlord was served with an order to stop all dog park activity on his farmland by Halloween or face fines of up to $100 per day.

Newman appealed the order and opted to keep the park's gate, a wooden pallet with hinges, open until his date in front of a county hearing examiner.

"On the face of it, it's just nuts," said Newman, who faced thousands of dollars in fines if his appeal was rejected. "It turned into a no-holds-barred death match."

Newman launched a letter-writing campaign, pleaded for help on his Web site, www. ebeydog.org, and prepared to picket a ribbon-cutting ceremony this morning at a new off-leash area at Snohomish County's Willis Tucker Park.

He also placed a call to County Executive Aaron Reardon's office, which he credits for taking swift action to withdraw the order.

Mike McCrary, county inspection and enforcement manager, had the order and hearing date rescinded earlier this week.

He said the question of a dog park is an "oddity" and the county's land use code is not crystal-clear.

Instead of putting Newman through a formal hearing, McCrary said he has asked the county's chief planning officer to review the law and make a determination by the end of the year.

In the meantime, Newman and the volunteers who take care of Ebey Island Dog Park will be allowed to keep it open.

"We're not walking away from it," McCrary said. "We're just looking at it and making sure we're doing the right thing."

In the center of the field, chew toys and flying discs sit under a canopy weighted down with cinderblocks. Plastic bags for dog waste hang from fence posts and a 50-gallon drum of water with a spigot sits by the entrance.

Donations to keep it open are collected in an old Yuban coffee can with a slit cut in the plastic lid, or given electronically through the park's Web site.

Mary Park, 28, of Lake Stevens, loaded her vocal basset hound, Toby, and great Dane-German shepherd, Taco, into the cab of her pickup truck Thursday afternoon.

"We needed a park in this area. It's kind of cool that one opened up," she said. "It's not the same as it was 20 years ago, when you could let your dog roam around your neighborhood."

Park said she previously took her dogs to off-leash parks in Redmond or Clearview.

Rita Pollardo brought Elvis Aaron, Priscilla Marie and Lisa Marie to the park Thursday afternoon. Elvis, she said, is a Bohuahua – half Boston terrier, half Chihuahua – and the females are pugs.

The Community Transit dispatcher, who had just ended an overnight shift, said she especially likes the "low-impact zone" set aside for small or shy dogs. Elvis hasn't been himself since a recent move, she said.

"This is really good for helping him socialize," Pollardo said.

To advertise his venture, Newman placed a large painted sign facing the often-congested U.S. 2 trestle.

By spring, he plans to open a farmers market, dog kennel and organic farm on 14-acres that he leases next to the dog park at 1923 55th Avenue SE.

Cora Cunningham, who raises cattle with her husband on Ebey Island, said the couple doesn't mind the dog park, provided stray dogs don't start harassing their livestock.

"If people let their dogs loose and chase our cattle, we have the right to shoot them, and we don't want to do that," she said.

Reporter David Chircop: 425-339-3429 or dchircop@heraldnet.com.



COMMENTS | Be the first to comment

Log in or register to post a new comment.


To read other terms and conditions, click here

Other Advertisers
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT