Salt Lake City may set new rules for dogs in Parleys Historic Nature Park

Published: Monday, Aug. 30 2010 10:17 p.m. MDT

Ocyress and Amber Drake play in Salt Lake City's Parleys Nature Preserve, where some want dogs to be kept on leashes.

Laura Seitz, Deseret News

SALT LAKE CITY — If there's a heaven on earth for dogs, Sam, the golden retriever, may have found it on a recent Friday morning.

Knee-deep in the creek at the Parleys Historic Nature Park, face covered with mud and tongue lolling, the 3-year-old companion of county resident Becky Schumacher, had a look of bliss about him and, if it's possible, a smile on his face.

Schumacher said she's been exercising Sam at the park, located at the north edge of Millcreek's Canyon Rim neighborhood, since he was a puppy. She said the 63-acre city-owned tract is a "blessing."

"We live in an apartment that has virtually no lawn at all," Schumacher said. "We're here almost every day. ... If Sam doesn't get a good run in, he goes crazy."

The park is one of the biggest municipally operated off-leash areas in the Salt Lake Valley, attracting an average of 1,000 visitors a day.

Sweeping changes may be in store for the land, though. There may soon be new limitations on access to Parleys Creek, which runs the length of the property (roughly paralleling I-80 at the mouth of Parleys Canyon). Off-leash activities near the creek may also be restricted, with access relegated to 10 acres of land in two areas on the east and west sides.

After years of use and little maintenance, the area is noticeably run down, with creek banks stripped of vegetation, garbage accumulation and, according to a just-completed $100,000 study of the park, sensitive habitat in danger of permanent damage.

Sharen Hauri, the consultant who conducted the survey, told the city council Tuesday that the park is in critical need of protections.

"The current resources in the park are unsustainable ... and slowly going downhill," Hauri said. "We have to change the way it's managed to make it sustainable."

While Hauri presented a variety of proposed management options for the park, the version being backed by Mayor Ralph Becker's office is extensive and provides for a preserved natural area, protections for the riparian corridor, the two designated off-leash areas and continued accommodation of other activities at the park, such as hiking and BMX riding.

Some council members felt Hauri's proposal goes beyond what the board was looking for when they approved the study and hired her in 2008.

"I don't think the council charged the administration with transformation of the park," said Councilman Luke Garrott. "It seems like the plan has gone much further than we intended to take it."

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