El Dorado News-Times

Complex Board to seek funding for expansion project from A&P panel

- By Tia Lyons Staff Writer

The El Dorado-Union County Recreation Complex Board is continuing to seek out funding to complete the first phase of a major renovation and expansion of the facility on Champagnol­le Road.

During a Board meeting Friday, chairman Greg Harrison said the group has been added to the agenda for the August meeting of the El Dorado Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission.

Harrison said the Board will present a funding request to the A&P Commission to help finish phase one of Complex improvemen­ts.

The two-phase project includes the first major upgrades and improvemen­ts that have been undertaken at the Complex since it was built in the mid-1980s.

The facility includes eight softball and baseball fields, two pavilions, two small children’s playground­s and RV sites.

The first phase of the master improvemen­t plan got under way last year and has largely been completed.

The work entailed the completion of two existing youth baseball and softball fields, the constructi­on of two new

youth fields on the south end of the complex and the installati­on of turf, lighting and fencing on four older fields on the north end of the facility.

The project is being covered by $2.6 million from the El Dorado Works tax, which is earmarked for economic developmen­t, municipal infrastruc­ture and quality-of-life projects.

The remainder of phase one calls for a new concession­s plaza and two new youth soccer fields to accommodat­e the ever-growing popularity of the sport in South Arkansas.

Both facilities will also be built on the south end of the Complex.

Engineerin­g plans have been approved and bids recommende­d and certified for the soccer fields and concession­s plaza, which will include a concession­s area, changing rooms for umpires, public restrooms and an office for the complex manager, the Boys and Girls Club of El Dorado.

Diversifie­d Constructi­on and Design submitted the low bid of $671,824 for the soccer fields and the low bid for the concession­s plaza came in at $343,989 from Milam Constructi­on.

Funding for the projects have hit a snag.

Complex Board members previously said approximat­ely $400,000 remains in the project budget, explaining that unanticipa­ted engineerin­g costs took a part of the balance.

During an El Dorado Works Board meeting July 14, Jason Haley, of A.L. Franks Engineerin­g Inc., who is designing and overseeing phase one, told board members that costs for constructi­on, engineerin­g and final inspection fees came to $2.09 million.

Haley also the EWB that the nearly $700,000 proposal for the soccer fields is a base bid and the bid package came with a deductive bid of $581,000, which would exclude parking lot improvemen­ts near the site where the fields will be built.

Robert Edmonds, director of public works, said the city will fold the parking lot improvemen­ts into its 2020 street repaving and drainage improvemen­t program, a move that will save tens of thousands of dollars.

EWB members agreed with Edmonds, who said completing the soccer fields should be prioritize­d over the concession­s plaza.

Greg Downum, chairman of the EWB, said the board will consider a request for more funding after additional informatio­n and a final cost estimate, including utility work, is presented for the completion of phase one.

In the meantime, Harrison said the Complex Board will look to the A&P Commission, who has discussed providing financial assistance for the Complex project.

The work falls under the authorized uses for revenue that is collected by the A&P. The Commission’s income is generated by a 3% lodging tax.

A&P Commission­ers have scheduled their next regular meeting for 2 p.m. Aug. 6. The location of the meeting has not yet been determined.

Phase two of the master plan includes a new baseball field for older teens and college players and major improvemen­ts to the parking lot at the Complex.

The Complex Board is also looking into routine maintenanc­e issues at the Complex, including outfield windscreen­s in fields 1 - 4 on the north end of the Complex.

In an email last week, Board member Phillip

Lansdell notified other members that he would be unable to attend their regular meeting Friday and he advised them about the issue with the windscreen­s, which are loose and susceptibl­e to wind damage.

Lansdell noted that the screen on Field 2 has already been ripped at the bottom.

The problem was clearly visible Friday as the Complex Board held its meeting outdoors in the Dumas Pavilion during a thundersto­rm that brought heavy rains and high winds.

Harrison said he had spoken with Haley about the issue and inquired about a warranty, noting that the screens are less than a year old.

“The windscreen­s that were installed, they’re supposed to have a small little circle with a piece of metal in the middle, kind of like a hole punch, so that they won’t rip,” Harrison explained.

“Instead of having those little punches, they poked a hole in it and used zipties and it wears out quicker, especially when we have weather like this,” he added. “You don’t want anyone out there playing with those windscreen­s flapping around.”

Board member Chris Nale used his cellphone to take a video recording of the winds violently whipping the screens about and asked Harrison to send the recording to Haley.

Board members also said they wanted to address an issue with water pooling up at and flooding the entrance to the field area.

Pointing to weather conditions Friday, Harrison noted that new turf that was installed on the fields would help with a girls’ softball tournament that was scheduled to begin at the Complex Saturday, saying that the turf is designed to dry quickly in the event of a downpour.

“Once the rain stops, in about 15 minutes, they should be ready to play,” he said.

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