July 27, 2013 Article by Jared Janes in The Monitor newspaper. Photos by MGa
Hidalgo County Pct. 4 Commissioner Joseph Palacios, center, speaks to the media prior to the ground breaking ceremony for the
Sunflower Park Friday July 26, 2013 in San Carlos. The park will provide
outdoor play areas and recreational activities for residents of the area.
Rain complicates conditions at the chronically-cramped San
Carlos community resource center. When the skies open up, the volunteers who
manage its summer program for children must find ways to make the center work
with no outdoor options. They divide its available indoor space with curtains
and siphon kids off by activity, or they find ways to entertain and educate
them as a whole group.
But in a program that already has to turn kids away because of the
limitations at the community resource center, those space-saver solutions
aren’t the ideal fix, said Veronica Sanchez, a volunteer at the center whose
two children are regular attendees. “There’s a lot of parents asking to put
(their children) in the program,” she said. “If we could have more space, we
would be better off.” They’ll get it now thanks to an expansion of county
services in the San Carlos area.
Hidalgo County Precinct 4 broke ground Friday on Sunflower Park,
one of two new parks planned for the precinct this year that will expand
existing acreage by 400 percent. Located at the intersection of Highway 107 and
Sunflower Road, the new park will provide outdoor play space and recreational
activities for residents and families in San Carlos. Planned amenities for the
park include a pavilion with basketball courts, playground equipment, walking
trails and a soccer and baseball field. The park is just the first phase of a
series of improvements planned for the area. Precinct 4 will also break ground
later this summer on a new community resource center to replace the existing,
outdated one that hosts community events for children and their parents.
Hidalgo County Pct. 4 Commissioner Joseph Palacios, center left, and Ernesto Narvaiz, center right, toss dirt during the ground breaking ceremony for the
Sunflower Park in San Carlos. The park will provide outdoor play and recreational activities for residents in the area.
Precinct 4 Commissioner Joseph Palacios said the new park and
community resource center are needed improvements for San Carlos, a rural
community with about 6,000 residents, making it larger than some of the
county’s cities. Palacios said the county is currently under-serving its youth
in San Carlos because it can only take in about 35 percent of those who sign up
for its summer program. In an impoverished community where many families lack Internet
access or even a computer, the community resource center fulfills a fundamental
need for San Carlos.
“It’s not just improving the quality of life,” Palacios said,
adding that the space will fulfill the needs for now and the immediate future.
“It pretty much will be the flagship for their community, the place where they
go and take pride in.”
Rendering of the three phases of Sunflower Park. Phase I is in the lower right-hand corner.
Construction costs for the park’s first phase are estimated at
$500,000, but the total cost over three phases will be about $1.1 million. The
San Carlos community resource center will cost about $1.2 million. Precinct 4 is covering the initial $500,000 cost for the park’s
first phase, while funding from the U.S. Housing and Urban Development is
slated for the rest.
Once both are completed, it will vastly improve the quality of
services in San Carlos, said Alicia Rodriguez, the San Carlos community
director for Precinct 4. In addition to the children’s summer program funded
entirely by churches and charities and handled by parent volunteers, the
community resource center hosts educational courses — helping residents get
their GED diploma or learn English — and other special events in San Carlos.
East/Courtyard Elevation * Community Resource Center
North/Courtyard Elevation * Community Resource Center
South Elevation from Hwy. 107 * Community Resource Center
The park will also add a recreational venue for a community that
previously lacked those options. “It’s a blessing,” Rodriguez said. “This is going to be a place
that will improve our community.”
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