Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District

{{Short description|Special parks district Oregon}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox government agency

|agency_name = Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District

|logo = ThprdLogo.png

|logo_width = 200px

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|formed = 1955

|preceding1 =

|dissolved =

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|jurisdiction = Oregon

|headquarters = Beaverton, Oregon

|coordinates= {{coord|45|31|7|N|122|50|16|W|type:landmark_region:US|display=inline,title}}

|region_code = US,display=inline,title

|employees = 212{{cite web|url=http://www.thprd.org/pdfs/document569.pdf|title=Fact Sheet 2010|date=February 22, 2010|publisher=Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District|access-date=16 April 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100507215422/http://www.thprd.org/pdfs/document569.pdf|archive-date=7 May 2010}}

|budget = $40 million

|chief1_name = Doug Menke

|chief1_position = general manager

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|website = [http://www.thprd.org/ www.thprd.org]

|footnotes =

}}

Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District (THPRD) is a special parks district located in the eastern part of Washington County in the U.S. state of Oregon. Created in 1955, the district covers all of the city of Beaverton and many of those communities surrounding Beaverton in the Portland metropolitan area. The district covers an area of {{convert|50|sqmi}} and serves a population of about 220,000, making it the largest parks district in Oregon. Tualatin Hills operates over 200 facilities totaling {{convert|2100|acre}}, including eight swimming centers. The district has an annual budget of $40 million and is overseen by a five-person board of directors.

History

Around 1953 some members of Parent-Teacher Associations (PTA) in Beaverton-area schools started campaigning to create a recreation district, as Beaverton had few parks at the time.{{cite news|title=Recreation and Leisure: Recreation district established in '55 with slim budget|date=October 19, 1976|work=Hillsboro Argus|page=11}} This group organized a meeting of PTAs and other civic groups and then decided to create a formal group, the Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation Council.{{cite news|title=The People's Own Corner: For Park Plan|last=Stuhr|first=Elsie|date=March 1, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=14}} They drew up a constitution for the group, elected Elsie Stuhr as the president, and started holding board meetings in July 1953. At the first meeting they adopted the name for the proposed district.

This group then started collecting signatures on a petition in September 1953{{cite news|title=Park District Drive Looms|date=September 6, 1953|work=The Oregonian|page=10}} in order to create a special parks district, and collected the planned 4,000 signatures by December 1953.{{cite news|title=Council Seeks Park District|date=December 11, 1953|work=The Oregonian|page=53}} They gathered additional signatures in order to compensate for any errors. A total of 4,400 signatures were collected and turned over in February 1954 to the county, which the county had required 27% of property owners to sign the petition.{{cite news|title=Petition Asks Vote on Park|date=February 28, 1954|work=The Oregonian|page=32}}

File:Tualatin Hills Nature Park office.JPG

Then beginning in June 1954 the then county court, now board of commissioners, held meetings to work out what the boundaries would be for the proposed district. School districts in the area that withdrew fully or in part from the proposal included Aloha, McKinley, Groner, Sunset Valley, McKay, Bethany, and Cooper Mountain.{{cite news|title=Beaverton Area Residents to Vote on Recreation District on March 4|date=January 30, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=31}} The district would be entirely within the boundaries of the then Beaverton Union High School District, which later through consolidation became the Beaverton School District.{{cite news|title=Park Hearing Set Thursday|date=August 4, 1954|work=The Oregonian|page=12}}

Opposition came mainly from farmers within the district who objected to increased taxes. The main arguments in support of the district were that increased recreation activities would decrease juvenile delinquency and that facilities within the area would reduce travel costs. The district planned to construct a centrally located swimming pool as the first priority if the district was created. In March 1955, the proposal was submitted to voters in the planned district, and the formation of the district was approved by a vote of 1,054 to 852, on March 4.{{cite news|title=Voters Okeh Park District|date=March 5, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=6}} At that time the district included all of Garden Home, Beaverton, Bonny Slope, Raleigh Hills, and the Washington County portion of Sylvan. Parts of Cooper Mountain, Hazeldale, Sunset Valley, Cedar Mill, and McKay also were in the new district.

The district became the third parks district in Oregon, with two in Lane County already in existence. Stuhr was elected as one of the three original directors, and was then elected as president at the board's first meeting. She and the other two original directors of the district had been members of the Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation Council.{{cite news|title=Directors Draw For Park Terms|date=April 10, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=44}} When formed, the assessed value of the land in the district totaled $12 million, the population was about 22,000, and the budget for the first year was $65,000.{{cite news|title=Park District Rolls Ready|date=March 4, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=41}} William B. Pond was hired as the district's first superintendent in July 1955, and he started work in the position on September 1 at a salary of $7,500 per year.{{cite news|title=Post Filled at Tualatin|date=July 22, 1955|work=The Oregonian|page=13}}

Voters in the district approved the issuing of a $10 million bond in November 1974,{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hRMRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MOADAAAAIBAJ&pg=3042,6263435&dq=tualatin-hills-park&hl=en|title=Bond issue cleared|agency=UPI|date=April 23, 1975|work=The Register-Guard|page=7C|access-date=15 April 2010|location=Eugene, Oregon}} but voted down an increase in the tax base in May 1978.{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=IG4RAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4uEDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4976,7103266&dq=tualatin-hills-park&hl=en|title=Voters in no mood for additional taxes|date=May 24, 1978|work=The Register-Guard|page=2A|access-date=15 April 2010|location=Eugene, Oregon}} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}} By 1976 the district had grown to cover nearly {{convert|40|mi2}} and have a total assessed value of property in the district of $1.4 billion, and a budget of almost $990,000. At that time the district had grown to over 30 parks and operated swimming pools at Beaverton High School, at Sunset High School, in Raleigh Hills, and at Somerset West-Rock Creek. The district opened a senior center in 1975 in Beaverton and named it after Elsie Stuhr.{{cite news|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/washingtoncounty/index.ssf/2010/02/elsie_stuhr_center_in_beaverto.html|title=Elsie Stuhr Center in Beaverton celebrates 35th anniversary with party|last=Marek |first=Carol|date=February 17, 2010|work=The Oregonian|access-date=14 April 2010}}

In May 1985, two teenagers set booby traps at the district's Fir Grove Park, imitating traps they had seen in the movie First Blood, the first film in the Rambo series.{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=U7koAAAAIBAJ&sjid=vYYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5380,3598807&dq=tualatin-hills-park&hl=en|title='Rambo' prompts booby traps idea|agency=UPI|date=September 18, 1985|work=The Bulletin|page=A4|access-date=15 April 2010|location=Bend, Oregon}}

The district agreed to transfer nine parks, for a total of {{convert|56|acre}}, to neighboring Hillsboro in 2002.{{cite news|title=District negotiates transfer of parks|last=Anderson|first=David R.|date=June 20, 2002|work=The Oregonian|page=B2}} These parks were in areas anticipated to be annexed by Hillsboro, as Hillsboro and Beaverton had agreed to a shared boundary to match school district lines, except in areas already annexed into one of those cities. Tualatin Hills received $1.1 million for the transfer of the parks. In 2004, Sports Illustrated named the district as its Sportstown for Oregon during the magazine's 50th anniversary year.{{cite journal|last=Schulman|first=Andrew|date=June 16, 2004|title=Beaver State's best|journal=Sports Illustrated|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/magazine/features/si50/states/oregon/sports_town/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040718010942/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/magazine/features/si50/states/oregon/sports_town/|url-status=dead|archive-date=July 18, 2004}}

Tualatin Hills had grown to an area of {{convert|55|mi2}} in 2005, with in excess of 200 parks, along with eight swimming pools.{{cite news|title=West Zoner: Parks may seek 2006 levy|last=Colby|first=Richard|date=March 17, 2005|work=The Oregonian|page=1}} At that time the district's budget had grown to $41 million, the district served over 200,000 residents, and employed 203 people.{{cite news|title=West Zoner: Tualatin Hills Park & Rec turns 50|last=Campbell|first=Polly|date=March 3, 2005|work=The Oregonian|page=2}} Voters in the district approved a $100 million bond in November 2008 to both improve then existing parks and facilities, as well as purchase new park lands.{{cite news|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/washingtoncounty/index.ssf/2009/11/tualatin_hills_park_rec_begins.html|title=Tualatin Hills Park & Rec begins spending money from last year's $100 million bond|last=Fitzgibbon |first=Joe|date=November 4, 2009|work=The Oregonian|access-date=14 April 2010}} It was the first bond measure passed in the district since 1996. In June 2009, Cooper Mountain Nature Park opened, with Tualatin Hills operating the Metro-owned park.{{cite news|url=http://www.portlandtribune.com/sustainable/story.php?story_id=125002920310763900|title=Nature park restores wildlife, prairies|last=Anderson|first=Jennifer|date=August 13, 2009|work=Portland Tribune|access-date=14 April 2010}}

Facilities and details

Tualatin Hills is the largest independent parks district in Oregon, serving over 220,000 residents. An elected board of directors governs the district, which is headed by a president. The district's board of directors originally had three members, but now consists of five board members. Board members are elected to four-year terms.{{cite news|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/washingtoncounty/index.ssf/2009/04/tualatin_hills_park_and_recrea.html|title=Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation seats up in May election|last=Uno|first=Wesley|date=April 30, 2009|work=The Oregonian|access-date=16 April 2010}} Board meetings are held monthly. Day-to-day operations of the district are overseen by the general manager (GM), which is Doug Menke who became GM in 2006. The GM oversees a total of 212 employees and an annual budget of $40 million.

Tualatin Hills has over 200 parks or facilities totaling {{convert|2100|acre}}, spread across {{convert|50|sqmi}} in eastern Washington County. Included in this are eight aquatic centers or outdoor swimming pools, one senior center, two nature parks, and 60 miles of trails. Major parks and facilities include the Howard M. Terpenning Recreation Complex (often locally called simply the "THPRD complex"), Conestoga Recreation and Aquatic Center, Cooper Mountain Nature Park, Tualatin Hills Nature Park, PCC Rock Creek Recreation Facility, and the Jenkins Estate. Tualatin Hills also operates a variety of athletic fields and facilities, many in-conjunction with the Beaverton School District. These include 189 soccer fields, 111 tennis courts, and 75 basketball courts, among others. A complete list of facilities is below.

=Facility list=

class="wikitable sortable"

! Image !! Facility !! Type

125pxAlohaPool (Indoor)
125pxBeavertonPool (Indoor)
125pxCedar HillsRecreation Center
125pxConestogaPool (Indoor)/Recreation Center
125pxCooper MountainNature Center
125pxElsie StuhrSenior Center
125pxGarden HomeRecreation Center
125pxHarmanPool (Indoor)
125pxRaleighPool (Outdoor/Seasonal)
125pxSomerset WestPool (Outdoor/Seasonal)
125pxSunsetPool (Indoor)
125pxTualatin Hills AquaticPool (Indoor)
125pxTualatin Hills AthleticRecreation Center
125pxTualatin Hills NatureNature Center
125pxTualatin Hills TennisTennis Center

{{cite web|url=http://www.thprd.org/facilities/|title=THPRD Facilities}}

References

{{commons category|Tualatin Hills Park and Recreation District}}

{{reflist|30em}}