Ontario Parks Master Plan

Page 37

EXISTING CONDITIONS

PROGRAM OVERVIEW AND ANALYSIS

The City of Ontario currently provides a wide variety of recreation classes and programs. The City purposefully seeks to make participation affordable and financially accessible for all residents. Six City-owned centers are home to City-operated programs. City-owned Veterans Memorial Community Center is leased and operated by West End YMCA. Programs at non-City owned locations are offered through the City by the means of contracted services. In the case of contracted services, the City typically receives 35 percent of the fee and the contractor receives 65 percent of the fee.

EXISTING RECREATION PROGRAMS Ontario Living Magazine is the Agency’s seasonal catalog of program, activity, and event offerings. The guide is published four times a year and costs approximately $130,000 annually to print and distribute to households and businesses. While program and activity offerings vary seasonally, the Agency catalogs programs in the following categories: »

Arts & Crafts Classes

»

Dance & Exercise

»

Special Interest Classes/Excursions

»

Tiny Tots

»

Tot Classes

»

Sports Classes

»

Adult Sports

»

Youth Sports

»

Adaptive Program

»

Community Centers

»

Aquatics

»

Teen Scene

»

Senior Center

»

Library Events

»

Museum Exhibits & Programs

»

Arts & Culture Events

»

Community Events

02

While these programs are laid out in the Ontario Living Magazine using these categories, the Department does not input all programs in their registration software using these categories. According to Civic Rec participation and attendance reports, 2,055 programs requiring registration were offered by the Agency and 18,861 registered participants were served in 2019. Of the 2,055 programs offered, 445 activities were offered at a variety of City facilities and private businesses so no correlation between the lack of registrants and location can be assumed. Friday Night Dance amassed the highest total of registered participants. While the three registration activities available for Ontario 5K Reindeer Run saw the combined highest total (2,811). Rudolph’s Dash, a short fun run, had 1,693 registrants. Ontario 5K Reindeer Run had 758 teams registered and 360 individuals registered for the 5K event.

In 2019, the City of Ontario had: 2,055 recreation programs registered participants (of 18,861 those classes entered into Civic Rec) 31


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Linear Park and Multi-Use Path Opportunities

2min
pages 142-143

Whispering Lakes Golf Course Analysis

3min
pages 122-123

Ontario Ranch Recommendations

1min
pages 126-127

Figure 5-16: Sam Alba Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 117-118

Figure 5-17: Vineyard Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 119-120

Figure 5-14: John Galvin Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 113-114

Figure 5-15: Mt. View School Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 115-116

Figure 5-13: James R. Bryant Park Opportunity Areas

2min
pages 111-112

Figure 5-12: Homer Briggs Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 109-110

Figure 5-11: Grove Memorial Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 107-108

Figure 5-10: George Gibbs Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 105-106

Figure 5-9: Del Rancho Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 103-104

Figure 5-8: De Anza Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 101-102

Figure 5-6: Creekside Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 97-98

Figure 5-7: Cypress Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 99-100

Figure 5-5: Centennial Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 95-96

Figure 5-4: Bon View Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 93-94

Figure 5-2: Anthony Munoz Park Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 89-90

Figure 5-3: Armstrong Center Opportunity Areas

1min
pages 91-92

Underutilized Park Spaces Recommendations

3min
pages 86-88

Figure 5-1: Ontario Three Year Trend of Cost Recovery for Services

8min
pages 82-85

Two Stakeholder Listening Sessions

1min
pages 65-67

Pop-up Event

3min
pages 63-64

Community Engagement Tools

1min
page 60

Statistically-valid Survey

3min
pages 61-62

Ontario Great Park Phase 1

1min
page 50

Figure 3-4: Ontario “Great” Park Context Map

1min
pages 51-52

Existing Community Centers and 2045 Population

1min
page 48

Population Standards

1min
pages 13-15

Figure 2-5: Park Acreage with Residential Uses (2045 Population

1min
pages 28-29

National, Regional, & Local Recreational Trends

2min
page 39

Figure 2-3: Existing Community Centers

0
page 24

Program Overview and Analysis

1min
page 37

Recreation & Community Services Department

1min
page 10

Introduction: Why Is This Important?

2min
page 8

Planning Context: Documents, Projects, and Programs

2min
page 12
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