June Recap; July events

Happy Fourth!

June meeting minutes

Fitness at Fairview – June 24

Thank you, Ally, for leading a high energy, High Fitness session on Saturday, June 24.

Fitness at Fairview on the tennis courts. Music kept the group in motion for almost the entire hour. Whew!

Modern Zoning Code (ZCR) Rewrite

From the City of Boise:

After three days of public testimony, City Council unanimously passed the Modern Zoning Code with an effective date of December 1, 2023 with several changes. The changes that City Council made can be found on the Modern Zoning Code website. The code was modified to reflect council’s changes and can be found online here.

What’s Next?

Planning and Development Services will complete three readings at upcoming City Council meetings, with an effective date for the Modern Zoning Code on December 1, 2023.

  • 1st Reading: June 27, 2023
  • 2nd Reading: July 11, 2023
  • 3rd Reading: July 18, 2023

City Council also directed staff to bring forward minor amendments to the code November 2023 and bring the code back to City Council in one year from the effective date to evaluate the effectiveness and make the appropriate amendments.

We want to ensure each neighborhood has the opportunity to engage and ask questions during this transition. You will be hearing from staff in the coming weeks to continue education and outreach so our neighbors know what to expect with these changes in the coming months.

July Events

Fitness at Fairview – Saturday, July 8, at 9AM. Join us for Gentle Morning Yoga Flow with Carolyn. We’ll meet under the trees.

WENA Board Meeting – Tuesday, July 18, at 6:30PM. Fairview Park. Agenda to follow.

June Happenings

West End N.A. Board Meeting, June 20, 2023, at Fairview Park

Agenda

6:30pm- Welcome neighborhood members and attendees

6:35pm- Approve May AGM Meeting Minutes

6:40pm- Discuss the appointment process for new board members

6:45pm- Update of Zoning Code Rewrite

6:55pm- Board Officer Elections- President, VP, Secretary, Treasurer

7:10pm- Appointment of Committee Chairs

7:20pm- Committee Reports

                        Community Building- Rachel Rudeen

                        Communications- Lauren Pennisi

                        Housing and Development – David Anderson

                        Street Signs- David Anderson

                        Fundraising and Grants – Anita Claridge

                        Neighborhood Watch- Cecilia Lopes 

                        Elections Committee- Chris Testa

7:45pm- New Business

This is a new agenda item where new topics can be brought up by board members or other members in attendance. If action will need to be taken on an item, it will be added to the agenda for the following meeting.

Fitness at Fairview – Saturday, June 24, 9AM at Fairview Park

Join us for High Fitness. Aerobics is back! Bigger, Better, and HIGHer! Experience a modern twist on aerobics in a non-stop action-packed hour of cardio and toning tracks that will take your fitness to the next level. Adaptable to all levels of fitness, you can go high or you can low but you will always leave feeling HIGH!

Participants don’t need to bring any equipment. Supportive shoes, water, and maybe a sweat towel are highly recommended. We will meet on the tennis courts and Ally will give us an overview of the class and go through a few tips to make everyone feel more prepared before class begins. It’s a super fun workout that is meant to get your heart rate up and endorphins pumping! 

Surfing in Idaho

by Chris Testa, President of West End Neighborhood Association

You might get a double take when you say you surf in Idaho but surfing is a key element to the West End Neighborhood’s culture. Having Whitewater Park aka “the wave” is an asset that we don’t take for granted in the West End. Whether you are just stopping to watch during your walk along the greenbelt or braving the cold of the Boise river to surf the wave, our community creates energy and enjoyment through this recreational activity.

My first experience at the wave was more intimidating than I had expected. Being an experienced ocean surfer, I was immediately drawn to this sport, but despite my experience battling overhead ocean waves, I was not fully prepared for what the wave had in store for me. Armed with a wetsuit and a rental board from Corridor Surf Shop, I was ready to tear up this wave (how hard could it be?) Standing in line for my turn, I was visually nervous. I studied the experienced surfers in front of me to mimic their every move. Likely seeing my jitters, a fellow surfer struck up a conversation with me while we waited our turn. I mentioned it was my first time and his response was a welcoming demeanor and overwhelming support for giving it a shot (a response I continue to pass on to newbie surfers).

When it was finally my turn, I shuffled my feet up to the platform where the power of the Boise river started to jeopardize my balance. I could barely stand, how was I expected to surf! When I finally had myself situated, which seemed like an eternity with dozens of surfers watching me, I jumped onto my board and was immediately met with a faceplant of brisk river water followed by a rollercoaster of ripping rapids that sent me shooting down river toward Eagle. When I was out of the rapids and all in one piece, I was smiling from ear to ear. What a thrill! My adrenaline was pumping and I couldn’t wait for more.

The ease at which experienced river surfers walk out and jump onto that wave cannot be understated. The entry into this sport, and by entry I mean attempt after attempt of faceplants and wipeouts, is unmatched. But this (let’s call it a barrier to entry) breeds a sense of community that you feel immediately while on the wave. One fellow surfer, Mary, described the wave as “super supportive where instantly five people are stoked to teach you what to do.” The fact is that everyone is surfing their own wave, where progress is met with hooting and hollering from your fellow surfers regardless of your experience level.

On the wave, it is “intimate, a close-knit community like a family” as one surfer, Devon, described. Another tenured surfer, Gabe, told me about his love of the cold January surf session when wearing a “seal-like 5/4 wetsuit with booties, gloves, and a hoodie only slows the freezing numbness of fingers and toes, not stops it”. There is true dedication to the sport from this smaller ‘foul weather crowd’ but again the wave creates bonds between them as they shiver and smile after each ride while peering up at the white foothills and wondering if they could also fit in a ski at Bogus Basin later that same day.

To this day, I regularly look to the wave for a reprieve from the stressors of ordinary life. Every session is an opportunity to connect with fellow thrill seekers and appreciate the power of our natural resource here in Boise. Regardless of the season, ‘the wave’ brings me community and makes me grateful to live in the West End.  

WENA Annual Board Meeting 5/16

West End Neighborhood Board Meeting, Tuesday, May 16th, 6:30 pm, Fairview Park

The West End Neighborhood Association is your local advocate, striving to create a fun, safe, and wholesome community here in Boise’s West End. Our goals cannot be achieved without your input and involvement. Please join this year’s Annual General Meeting for an update on all the great things happening in our neighborhood and contribute to the future direction of our community.

This year we will be electing five new board members. You must be present to vote. If you would like to nominate yourself or someone else, please send an email to westendboise@gmail.com. Nominations will also be accepted at the meeting on May 16th. Join the board to get involved, make an impact, and meet great people with a minimal time commitment.

Look out for two exciting WENA events this year: Neighborhood Night Out on Tuesday, Aug 1st and the 4th Annual HalloWENA Event. Stay up to date on everything in the West End by subscribing to the WENA blog at westendboise.wordpress.com.

It takes all of us to prove why the West End is the ‘best end’!

Whittier Community Garden

You may have noticed that the garden is expanding!  This means we now have more room for community members to have their own garden boxes! 

It also means we’ll need more help with garden maintenance, particularly during the summer months. 

If you’re interested in a garden box or would like to help out, please fill out this brief survey: https://forms.gle/odJbjqN5DJZhRzbg9 or email whittiercommunitygarden@gmail.com.

Board Member Missive – Anna

In closing this long and demanding year, I can think of nothing better to write about than gratitude.

Gratitude for all the goodness in our lives as Americans as well as gratitude for the challenges we have come through–hopefully with growth and understanding–but most of all gratitude for people of service who make differences in our lives. That includes the men and women in the Armed Forces who protect our country and the world, and others such as the volunteers who greet us at hospitals or who help our children find books at the libraries or citizens who protect wildlife and care for injured animals at the many rescue centers. It would include people like my fellow neighborhood association members who enrich our communities with their time, knowledge, hard work and innovation.

On another note, I wish to recognize the police force that protect us on our streets, day and night, and at their peril. And a group that I am eternally grateful for, the firefighters and paramedics. I have a long history with Los Angeles firefighters as wildfires increased in the northern region over the years and eventually took our beautiful canyon home. These firefighters were not only brave risk takers, but they cared so deeply about the people who had incurred misfortunes. They stayed after days of putting out spot fires around existing structures but most of all to be present with open arms and encouraging words for homeowners when we returned.

The Idaho brand of firefighter is cut from the same cloth. I have experienced their commitment of service and caring nature several times as they responded to our calls of help for my elderly mother, who suffers from dementia, when she had fallen, slipped off a chair, or had a hard time recovering from a seizure. They came with their steady strength and good humor as an old woman who is not in her right mind would flirt and ask them out for dates. They would play along and make her feel special. We all have had many good laughs, which relieved pressure from a situation that could otherwise be bleak. These men and women of Stations 1 and 5 and Medic 15 know my home, my dogs names, and always remind me to never hesitate to call for help when needed. Our wellbeing is important to them.

It takes a special breed to live one’s life in service of others. I would recommend that you do yourself a favor and get to know these people, their names and their stories, and be richer for it. Get to know what impassions them to do the work they do and perhaps how you can follow your own voice into a life of service in whatever way, big or small.

The human factor and connection are what make a community great. That is what I see in our neighborhood in Boise.

Thank you for allowing me to express my thanks. Here’s to a great beginning to the New Year and to a life full and rich with gratitude.

Anna Rapagna Cox

Board Member Missive

Board Member Rachel Rudeen riding her bike.

Hi neighbors, Rachel Rudeen here. I’m a Boise native and current chair of the Community Building committee. While I’m a new board member, I’m not new to this neighborhood. I’ve been appreciating this neighborhood since my youthful days of doing landscape work. I then moved into the area and had fun exploring a budding entrepreneurial dream of putting a coffee bar in Jerry’s Market. Obviously that did work out but eventually Alchemist arrived to fill that need. When it came time to buy a house and start our family, this neighborhood was the obvious choice for us to feel at home.

The thing I’ve learned about homes, especially ours, which was built in 1938, is that they all have flaws. Some of those flaws can be addressed with a fresh coat of paint or updated flooring but others we just have to live with. The growing pains of living in a near-urban neighborhood feel very similar. Being blocks from transitional housing and on the corner of an unofficial route to the nearest convenience store and Fairview Park, we see a lot of loitering and littering along our sidewalk and alleyway. This situation isn’t anything I can control without moving but I have also never felt threatened or unsafe. 

We contacted the Boise Police Department’s community liaison who came to our home and walked us through things we could change to ensure our family’s safety while deterring theft and loitering. Locking gates and motion flood lights were a simple change to make our home feel more secure. Getting involved with the board and working to strengthen our community bonds is a way I see to make our neighborhood more secure. I hope to continue building relationships in the neighborhood and look forward to seeing where our citizen action takes this neighborhood.   

Please feel free to reach out to me if you’re interested in being a part of the Community Building committee or just want to help with events – rachel@boisebrewing.com.  

Speaking of events, please come say hi at the Hallo-WENA Block Party.

Whittier Community Garden Potluck

Come join us for a potluck at the Whittier Garden this Sunday, October 9th and 5:00 pm.  Bring lawn chairs or blankets, plates/cups/silverware (to reduce waste), and food or drink to share.  We’ll take the opportunity to celebrate how far we’ve come and discuss future garden organization in light of our anticipated expansion. 

Can’t come but want to hear more about the garden or get involved? Email whittiercommunitygarden@gmail.com