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For the Rio Vista Natural Resource Park Page

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Rio Vista Master Plan – Post settings test

Master Plan Timeline Unveiling of Parks and Recreation Department’s Draft Master Plan, September 7, 2022 Please visit NEWS/EVENTS tab for the story. Meeting with Councilmember Kevin Dahl, Ward 3 Office, November 1, 2022 On November 1st, Lindy Brigham, Jennifer Shopland, David Tiers and Mary Bird met with Councilmember Kevin Dahl and Council Aide CJ Boyd to discuss reasons for removing the dog enclosure from Rio Vista’s master plan. Kevin started off the meeting stating that the “dog park is off the list and off the budget.” CJ confirmed with Parks and Rec that it is only mentioned in the survey and nowhere else in the master plan. Updated Master Plan, November 2022The Tucson Parks and Recreation Department has updated the Rio Vista Master Plan in response to feedback received and in preparation for the Tucson Parks and Recreation Commission Meeting on November 30, 2022. Read the entire document here: Rio Vista Master Plan, Nov 2022 Rio Vista Master Plan Is Approved, March 21, 2023 At the March 21st Mayor and Council Meeting, the Rio Vista Master Plan was approved.Now the work begins!   RBNA President, Lindy Brigham, addresses the Mayor and Council. She thanked Parks and Recreation and the Ward 3 Office for their support. Overview and Next Steps, April 2023Tom Fisher, Project Manager, submitted the attached document April 7th. Next Steps

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Restoration Celebration of Rio Vista Natural Resource Park, January 25, 2025

Over 60 guests gathered at the Park to celebrate the restoration. Voted in as part of Proposition 407, the Park received $330 K. The community fought for the resources to go towards renovating the natural side of the park, and Parks and Rec listened! It was a glorious day to celebrate. John and Jeanne Ronstadt serenaded folks as they arrived, and several Commissioners were present. Ron Spark, from the 2018 Park & Connectivity Bond Oversight Commission spoke of how open space is healing. So true. Fun photos from the Celebration!

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Planting Event at Park, October 5, 2024

For the second planting event, volunteers showed up to help plant and learn about the park. And, it was hot! Carianne Funicelli of Strategic Habitat Enhancements instructs the volunteers. Carianne Funicelli assists Murray and Sue DeArmond placing the spaghetti lines around a cat’s claw. It was ninety degrees by 9 a.m., but we had the Catalinas––and even a few horses––as a backdrop while digging the holes. Matt Christman, Parks and Rec’s project manager, helps make cages.

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Planting Event at Park, September 21, 2024

About 25 neighbors, friends, and staff convened at Rio Vista on Saturday the 21st to help beautify the main entrance of the park with trees and small plants. The plants were selected by Carianne Funicelli of Strategic Habitat Enhancements (SHE), https://www.strategichabitats.com/, who is on contract to design the native restoration plantings for the park. The plants including native trees like Desert willow, Screwbean mesquite, and Canyon hackberry as well as native plants including ocotillo, Thurber’s desert honeysuckle, desert milkweed, desert lavender and more are drought resistant and were raised locally. The drip irrigation from the existing system was extended to each plant.​Under the direction of Carianne with support from Watershed Management Group project staff, the group was split up into three groups: one for planting trees, one for planting small plants, and one for making wire cages. With varying skills but all with the same eagerness and goal to help their beloved park, the teams got to work. By the end of three hours, the teams were experts! More planting restoration events are scheduled for Saturday mornings on Oct 5, Nov 2, and Nov 30 in different focus areas of the park, so come out and enjoy the camaraderie. Visit https://watershedmg.org/event to register.

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Monsoon rains have transformed Rio Vista Natural Resource Park, August 2024

With over four inches of rain so far this summer, our park has been transformed. The timing could not have been better. The work by Parks and Rec and the teams that Watershed Management brought in made it possible to capture all this lovely rain. Not only are we are giddy with excitement over how beautiful the park looks, but also the wildlife and plants are happy! Visit our NEWS page to read WMG article in their quarterly newsletter. And read more about the Park in our RillitoBend Rambles blog! photos by Jim Altenstadter, Mary Bird, Estelle Stern-Eilers, Sue Ann Breems Check out these wonderful photos!

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Watershed Management Group (WMG) features RillitoBend’s efforts to keep Rio Vista Park natural, Summer 2024

In Watershed Management Group’s quarterly newsletter, Rio Vista Natural Resource Park is featured. Why? Because it shows how a neighborhood can come together around a shared vision of a natural resource park in the city. And with the implementation of the Master Plan and recent rains, the park has been transformed. ​Resident Catlow Shipek of Watershed Management Group (WMG) has been hired as a consultant to Tucson’s Parks & Rec Department to shepherd the restoration of the Park. Click on the links below to read about the efforts and see how the Park has been dramatically improved. For further information, read about the park on our Rio Vista Park page in our blog, RillitoBend Rambles. There are some lovely photos!   Read the WMG article HERE

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Meet Matt and Catlow, May 2024

Matt Christman, Project Manager COT Matthew ChristmanMatt was hired in early November 2023 as a Project Manager for Tucson’s Parks & Recreation Department. Rio Vista is one of seven projects that he currently manages. The Rio Vista project came about because the City of Tucson voters approved Proposition 407 in November 2018, a $225 million bond package aimed for capital improvements. Approximately $330K of the monies is earmarked for Rio Vista, and we have been closely watching the progress. Matt is originally from Wisconsin but calls Arizona his home. He has worked for over ten years in Parks and Recreation departments, seven of which were for Marana’s Park System. He is happy to be back in Arizona (after a few years in Texas and South Carolina). He has picked up where Tom Fisher left off, managing all aspects of the park’s implementation plan—from upgrading the natural aspects to improving the signage, fencing, irrigation and more. He has been very responsive to neighbors’ requests, a real team player. The project is on schedule and under budget, so we are thrilled to have him on board! Catlow Shipek, Watershed Management Group Catlow ShipekMany of you may have seen Catlow biking or jogging in the neighborhood. His love of the outdoors and the environment permeates his life both at home and at work.  As Senior Program Director at Watershed Management Group, Catlow takes his passion for saving our planet seriously. His home next to Rio Vista is a model for Sonoran Desert living. He bikes or takes the bus and doesn’t own a car. His knowledge of applied watershed management, planning and policy specializing in urban applications like water harvesting, green infrastructure, stream restoration, and eco-sanitation is extensive. Catlow has assembled a fantastic team of local restoration experts passionate about their work. ◦ The excavators. Jeff Rhody from Dryland Design is a local landscaper specializing in water harvesting and making the world more sustainable. ◦ The trails people. Arizona Conservation Corps (AZCC) is renowned for connecting young adults and recent vets with conservation service work.  They work in almost any terrain. ◦ The plant/habitat people. Tucson Audubon has started work of removing invasive plants such as Rhus lancea (African sumac). They will be back in October. And Carianne Funicelli of Strategic Habitat Enhancements (SHE) who designed the planting, will begin seeding and leading volunteers with planting in late August. What a dream team! We want to acknowledge all the wonderful work Tom Fisher did for us and the park. His last day was in late August. 

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Update from Tom Fisher, Project Manager, June 2, 2023

SignageAttached is a draft sign frame which is based on your collective feedback over the last few months. We decided to keep it simple and go with a two-post frame made out of steel with rust finish to match what is already in the park. I added a decorative mountain motif at the top but we can remove or change if needed. Maybe horse shoes or animal cut-out? Just trying to give it a unique look. I met on site with with one of our contractors Bill Baker who does fencing and signage. We walked the park to check locations of proposed signage and he will give me a quote for 10 frames (7 locations of which 3 will have double sign frames). We can add or subtract locations after I get the quote and we finalize the scope of work. I also asked for a quote to add some smooth-wire fencing along NE corner of park and remove several old posts with barbed wire in the middle of the park. We need to eliminate those potential hazards and liability for injury. Also attached is the draft park rules sign which has been modified to include a few things specific to this park. The entry sign will need to be in both english and spanish per our City standards. A second sign has been proposed by this group to show the park map in a more artistic design with more informal rules and information to orient users. I will be working with a graphic designer/sign company soon to get them going on a draft. Once we have an initial design (a few weeks?) I will send that to you for review. Trail and Landscape ImprovementsI met with Catlow on site yesterday to discuss final changes to the plans based on your collective feeedback. Overall, everyone is in 95% agreement on trail closures, trail upgrades, and trail sharing strategies. Once Catlow makes the next round of plan edits I will get that to you for review. We are getting super close to finishing the plans for bidding. An accessible trail has been identified to meet federal ADA requirements. We will also identify recommended equestrian trails and share that during the next review. The other component which we haven’t discussed yet is the landscape plans being developed by Carianne/Strategic Habitat Enhancements. We will hold another meeting to review with the landscape plans with the draft trail network plans. Perhaps later this month. TimeframeIf we can wrap up the trail and landscape plans by end of June then I can bid them out for construction by early July. If there is agreement on the sign frames and cost proposal, then I can get that work under contract in a few weeks.

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