Leavitt’s team won, 4-2.
Park honored
Also Saturday, the county commissioners accepted an award from the nonprofit Washington Recreation & Park Association, which named the Luke Jensen Sports Park “Best Sports Complex,” in 2012 for communities with more than 35,000 people.
The sports park, 4000 N.E. 78th St., can be used for baseball, softball, soccer, lacrosse, field hockey and football. In 2010, the county commissioners signed a memorandum of understanding between the county, Vancouver First Church of God and King’s Way Christian Schools. The 25-year agreement sets out the terms for shared use of parking and fields as well as maintenance; many attendees Saturday had to park at the church or school and walk over to the sports complex.
The project has not been without some controversy.
The land is a federal Superfund site because of chromium and volatile organic compounds in groundwater at least 50 feet beneath the surface, a fact often repeated by neighbors who were in opposition to the park. The Environmental Protection Agency said there’s no danger of exposure, and in 2010 a hearings examiner said there’s no credible evidence supporting the idea that contaminated groundwater will ever reach the surface.
The park includes a multipurpose field with synthetic turf and lights, two Little League fields with natural grass, two small T-ball fields with synthetic turf, batting cages, a playground and picnic tables. Most of the construction, which started in April 2011, has been completed, with the exception of drainage for two grass fields.