FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                   

Contact:            Bob Taylor, Lee County Construction & Design
                         (941) 479-8306

NORTH FORT MYERS PARK FOOTBALL FIELDS READY FOR KIDS TO PLAY

FORT MYERS, Fla. (August 19, 2002) – The Board of Lee County Commissioners will hold a ribbon cutting Saturday (Aug. 24) on the second phase of North Fort Myers Community Park, which includes football fields and a multi-purpose building at the park.

The ribbon cutting ceremony is at 12:30 p.m. at the park, 2021 N. Tamiami Trail (Old 41), north of State Road 78/Bayshore Road and behind the North Fort Myers Library.  Commissioner Andy Coy will serve as master of ceremonies.

The $2-million project added three football fields (two practice fields and a game field) and a multi-purpose building that will house concessions, restrooms, storage, team rooms, covered shade areas and a 2,000-square-foot meeting room.  The Lee County School District contributed $110,000 of the cost and the rest is coming from community park impact fees.

The fields will be used primarily by the North Fort Myers Junior Football Association (Pop Warner).  The multi-purpose building will provide a place for community gatherings and organizations to meet.  Wilson Miller Inc. designed the improvements and Compass Construction was the construction manager.

 The first phase of North Fort Myers Community Park was completed in 1996.  The park currently has four, lighted baseball fields, 24 shuffleboard courts, a big playground, pavilion, disc golf, and a horseshoe court.  The shuffleboard courts were completed in 1999 and are home to the Lee County Shuffleboard Club.

Lee County’s Parks & Recreation Department maintains and operates 3,500 acres of developed park land, 14 centers, 9 pools, five boat ramps, three Gulf beach parks, one lakefront beach, 76 beach accesses, 60 tennis courts, 73 ballfields, and 13 preserves.  The department also manages the more than 7,500 acres of environmentally sensitive lands the county has purchased in the last five years through its Conservation 2020 Program.  Its fiscal year 2002 operating budget is $16.2 million.

The Parks System gained national accreditation last year and is a 2002 National Gold Medal Award Finalist.