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CITY COUNCIL & JOINT WORK SESSION
August 02, 2016
4:00 PM, City Hall
MEETING AGENDA
I. Broadband Issues
JOINT WORK SESSION OF THE
ASPEN CITY COUCIL AND BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
August 2, 2016
4:00pm, City Council Chambers
MEETING AGENDA
4pm Broadband Service Improvements
4:30pm Future Agenda Items
Information Items:
Cozy Point Management Plan Process and Timeline Memo
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MEMORANDUM
TO: Pitkin County, Board of County Commissioners
City of Aspen, City Council
FROM: Austin Weiss, City of Aspen Open Space Manager
THRU: Jeff Woods, City of Aspen Parks and Rec Manager
Randy Ready, City of Aspen Asst. City Manager
DATE OF MEMO: July 28, 2016
MEETING DATE: August 2, 2016
RE: Cozy Point Ranch Management Plan Update
CC: Steve Barwick, City of Aspen Manager
Jim True, City of Aspen Attorney
Summary:
Over the past year and a half, City of Aspen Parks Department staff has been working on
developing a management plan for Cozy Point Ranch. The scope of this plan includes
the entire Cozy Point Ranch including the leased ranch property, the City managed Cozy
Point Open Space, City and County owned Cozy Point South, the Aspen Mass Open
Space and the City, County owned Mills Open Space for a total of approximately 250
acres of public property. We are also looking at how trail connections through Intercept
Lot can be improved. The goal of the planning effort will be to identify ways to improve
the ecological health of the properties, examine the current uses and other suitable uses
of the ranch, and to identify opportunities to upgrade the existing facilities and
programming of the ranch. This plan will showcase this important gateway to our
community.
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Background:
The City of Aspen purchased the Cozy Point Ranch property in 1994. The original intent
of the purchase of this property was for the preservation of the agricultural heritage of the
upper Roaring Fork Valley and as a possible location of additional affordable housing. In
2003 the property became a part of the City of Aspen Open Space program and was put
under a conservation easement with the Aspen Valley Land Trust. This conservation
easement is intended to protect the property from further development but does not
prohibit the property’s existing agricultural, equestrian and other recreational uses.
The property consists of approximately 60 acres of irrigated hay meadows and pasture
lands, 30 acres of equestrian facilities and 70 acres of rolling sagebrush shrub lands. In
addition to the historic ranching and equestrian operations, the property also has an active
archery range and has recently become the home of a four season greenhouse that is being
used for community-supported agriculture as a part of the AspenT.R.E.E program.
The City of Aspen currently leases out a significant portion of the property for the
equestrian operation to Cozy Point Ranch, LLC, which is owned and managed by Patti
Watson. Cozy Point Ranch, LLC offers kids equestrian camps throughout the summer,
year round horse boarding services and riding lessons for all ages.
Discussion:
Parks Department staff are in our second year of our planning and are currently putting
the finishing touches on our first draft of the plan. We hope to have a review of that draft
at our August Open Space and Trails Board meeting. That meeting is currently scheduled
for Thursday, August 25th at 5:00 PM. At that time, the document will then be available
to the public for their review and comment as well. We will then take the draft to a joint
meeting with both the City and County Open Space and Trails Boards for review on
September 8th. Once that next round of comments is completed, the document will then
be edited to reflect the comments received during that period. It will then be back in front
of the Open Space and Trails Boards for their final review and adoption of the plan which
we anticipate will take place in October. Once the OS&T Boards have adopted the
management plan it will then be brought to City Council and the BOCC for final approval.
During our planning efforts, City staff has met with many different stakeholders and user
groups of Cozy Point Ranch. Those include, City of Aspen, Town of Snowmass Village
and Pitkin County elected officials, both the City and County Open Space and Trails
Boards, The Aspen Valley Land Trust, The Brush Creek Metro Dist rict, the Woody Creek
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Caucus, The Roaring Fork Valley Horse Council, the Friends of Cozy Point Ranch,
longtime local ranchers, numerous experts of sustainable agriculture, including Joel
Salatin, Eliot Coleman, AspenTREE, Sustainable Settings, The Colorado Rocky
Mountain Permaculture Institute and ACES. Other user groups also include, the archery
community and the Roaring Fork Mountain Bike Association.
As I mentioned, we have met with many different stakeholders and users of the ranch to
try to get a complete picture of the property and its role in our community. Through this
process we have focused on numerous items for the management plan. These include
multiple uses for the open space property including enhancing the equestrian facilities
and improving the equestrian experience. The plan will look at new opportunities to
provide dedicated equestrian trails and safer ways to access those and other nearby trails.
It will speak to insuring that the community has access to high quality equestrian
programming for the immediate future.
The plan will also speak to enhancing the sustainable agriculture opportunities that have
been initiated through AspenTREE. The plan will look at opportunities to integrate some
level of local food production and to continue to provide educational opportunities to
youth programming. It will look at ways to improve the pasture health of the ranch
through rotational grazing of horses and other animals. All of these items we see as
opportunities for enhancement of the ranch. These will not all happen at once but are
ideas to be further studied and implemented when the time is right.
The comments received by stakeholders and the general public are an important
component to the plan. It’s also important to note that the conservation values and the
preservation of the ranching legacy of Cozy Point Ranch and the neighboring Open Space
properties (comprising of over 300 acres) are the foundation of the action items outlined
in the management plan. Staff has hired Western Ecological Resource to identify
opportunities to enhance the wildlife habitat and native vegetation, along with
recommendations of ways to restore the heavily impacted Brush Creek and Cougar Creek
corridors as they transect the ranch property. This plan is using science and history as a
foundation for our plan. While public input is important as land managers we need to
balance all the desired uses with important land management tools.
ATTACHMENTS:
Exhibit A – Cozy Point Ranch Vicinity Map
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