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Due to the weather, tonight’s (Wednesday) planned public input open house at Brethren High School is postponed until further notice.

Tomorrow’s public input open house at Faith Covenant Church is still on, running from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.  The church is located in the City of Manistee at 475 Eighth Street. This flyer provides additional information about the public input open house.  We’ll see you there!

We Need Your Input!

As the Manistee County Planning Commission, in partnership with the Alliance for Economic Success, continues to develop the county’s 5-year recreation plan, input from residents is needed.

County leaders, along with Spicer Group, will gather ideas, hear comments, and listen to suggestions about recreational programs, facilities, and parks in Manistee County.

Two opportunities to provide input will be held at the end of January. These community input open houses will have the same format and are designed to give you flexibility of attending one open house or the other.

Please stop in at your convenience to talk with recreation planners and community leaders. It won’t take long, just 5 to 10 minutes of your time. We want to hear your ideas and suggestions!


Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Postponed due to the weather.

The first public open house will be held on Wednesday, January 30, from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm at Brethren High School. The school is located in Dickson Township at 4400 North High Bridge Road, Brethren, MI, 49619. This flyer provides additional information about the January 30 public open house.

[Edited on January 30, 2008]


Thursday, January 31, 2008

The second public open house will be held on Thursday, January 31, from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm at Faith Covenant Church. The church is located in the City of Manistee at 475 Eighth Street. This flyer provides additional information about the January 31 public open house.


If you cannot attend either of the open houses and have suggestions on how to improve public recreation in Manistee County, feel free to submit your comments via the comment function on this website. All electronic comments are reviewed by the Administrator before they are posted. Anonymous postings are permitted. If you prefer to submit a comment without it being posted to this website, please say so and the Administrator will honor your request.will honor your request.

The next Steering Committee meeting will be held at the Manistee County Courthouse on Friday, December 14 at 9:00 am, located at 415 Third Street in Manistee.  We’re meeting in the Manistee County Board of Commissioners Room.  The following files will be shared with the group:

  1. Agenda - 49 kb PDF
  2. Project schedule – 25 kb PDF
  3. Draft flyer for January 30 input open house in Brethren - 172 kb PDF
  4. Draft flyer for January 31 input open house in Manistee - 288 kb PDF

The implications for Manistee County, with its 25 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline, 9 inland lakes over 50 acres in size, and 276 miles of rivers and streams, should be obvious.  According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in a report called 2006 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation: State Overview that was released this summer:

  • In Michigan, fishing ranked highest for total expenditures, at $1.6 billion.  Other activities included hunting ($0.9 billion) and wildlife watching ($1.5 billion).
  • Among the 50 states, Michigan ranks fifth in terms of the total number of in-state anglers.  We have 1.4 million!  At the top are Florida, Texas, California, and Minnesota.
  • Over one-third of Michigan residents are considered “wildlife watchers” (38%).

Clearly, fishing is big in Michigan!  If you don’t believe it, check out this video of the fishing activity at Tippy Dam Pond on Thursday, October 4, 2007.  Anglers were abundant and the salmon were biting!  What a beautiful day!

The National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation provides estimates of the number of wildlife-related recreationists and their expenditures for 2006.

Over at the National Recreation and Park Association, they have created a Top Ten list of park and recreation values. Those values are the reasons why parks are important in this country. They are listed here as important points to reflect on as the recreation plan is developed over the coming months.

The following summary is from the article, Top 10 Reasons Parks Are Important, by Richard J. Dolesh, Monica Hobbs Vinluan, and Michael Phillips:

  1. Public parks provide millions of Americans with the opportunity to be physically active.
  2. Parks have true economic benefits.
  3. Parks provide vital green space in a fast-developing American landscape.
  4. Parks preserve critical wildlife habitat.
  5. Parks and recreation facilitate social interactions.
  6. Leisure activities in parks improve moods, reduce stress and enhance a sense of wellness.
  7. Recreational programs provide organized, structured, enjoyable activities.
  8. Community recreation services provide a refuge of safety for at-risk youth.
  9. Therapeutic recreation is an outlet that individuals with disabilities have.
  10. Public parks embody the American tradition of preserving public lands.

More detail is provided by the authors in the above link.

The following draft recreation plan files were distributed at the second Working Group meeting on Thursday, November 8, 2007, at 10:30 am:

  1. Table of Contents – Draft, Adobe PDF file (34 kilobytes)
  2. Introduction – Draft, Adobe PDF file (2.7 megabytes)
  3. Community Description – Draft, Adobe PDF file (3.3 megabytes)
  4. Administrative Structure – Draft, Adobe PDF file (1.3 megabytes)
  5. Inventory (Part A) – Draft, Adobe PDF file (2.1 megabytes)
  6. Inventory (Part B) – Draft, Adobe PDF file (23 kilobytes)

Comments are welcome. Anonymous postings are permitted, but they are reviewed by an administrator prior to publication.

Here are three different ways you can review the parks and recreational assets available in Manistee County.

First, you can look at them in Microsoft’s online mapper, Live.com.

Second, you can load an interactive KML file into Google Earth. You will need the Google Earth program to view this file. If you do not have Google Earth, rest assured, this is the same information provided in the Google Maps link above.

And finally, click the aerial image above for a more detailed view of the recreational resources in Manistee County. This is a rather large JPEG image, about 1.3 megabytes in size (33 inches x 27 inches).

This map is a work in progress, so please feel free to post your comments, additions, or suggestions.

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