JUN 29, 2026 ≈77 MIN → 5 MIN AI-GENERATED

Bidwell Park and Playground Commission — Recap

Watch the full meeting →
TL;DR

The biggest topic of the night was a proposal from Chico Police Chief Billy Aldridge to convert the city's park ranger positions into police officer positions, backed up by new community service officers — a plan meant to fix chronic understaffing in Bidwell Park, not to reduce services there. No vote was taken; this was an informational presentation, and the plan still has to go through council and labor negotiations before anything changes. Commissioners also got an update on a lease amendment for the Chico Rod and Gun Club, approved routine meeting minutes, and heard detailed staff reports on park maintenance (including a major Sycamore Pool sediment cleanup) and street tree work. A newer concern also surfaced: staff pushed back on a technical study claiming Bidwell Park's forest isn't dependent on groundwater, warning that ongoing aquifer depletion could eventually threaten the park's trees.

What happened, item by item

5.1 Presentation on Proposed Park Ranger Position Reform

Chico Police Chief Billy Aldridge described a long-standing problem: of three authorized park ranger positions, the department has struggled for years to keep them filled, since rangers go through the same police academy and training as officers but have less room for career advancement. His proposed fix is to convert the ranger positions into police officer positions — assigned full-time to the park as a "specialty" beat — plus two new community service officers (unarmed staff) to handle education, interpretation, and minor enforcement like parking. "The idea is not to take services from the park, it's to increase services in the park," Aldridge told commissioners. He emphasized there's little practical difference between rangers and officers today: "There's zero difference in a park ranger and a police officer." Commissioners asked detailed questions about cost (roughly $7,000–$25,000 more per position annually than a ranger), staffing coverage (seven-day-a-week presence is intended), and whether this would pull officers from citywide patrol coverage (Aldridge said no — these would be new hires backfilling other positions, not a reduction elsewhere). Vice Chair Blatchie, who identified himself as a 30-year retired law enforcement park ranger, suggested keeping officers in ranger-style uniforms with a police badge so the public could still easily recognize them. This was an information item only — no vote was taken, and the plan still needs to go before city council.

5.2 Amendment of Lease with the Chico Rod and Gun Club

Staff presented a proposed change to the club's long-standing lease with the city, removing a "prevailing wage" provision (a rule requiring union-scale wages on construction work) for upcoming facility improvements. Park and Natural Resource Manager Shane Romain confirmed the improvements will be paid for entirely with the club's own money, not public funds, and that the city attorney had already reviewed and supported the change. This was an information item only, with the matter headed to city council for final approval.

6.1 Parks Division Report

Shane Romain reported a major cleanup of Sycamore Pool, where crews removed unusually heavy sediment: "We got over 150 dump trucks worth of sediment out of the pool." E. coli bacteria levels remain in an advisory range for the pool (meaning swimmers should avoid swallowing water and rinse off afterward), though testing came back negative for the more serious O157 strain that caused illness last year; the city has switched to daily testing. Other updates included completion of the Cape Ridge/Upper Park fencing project, steady progress on the Iron Canyon fish ladder project (not expected to finish this year), plans to bring grazing goats back to Middle Park in mid-July, and ongoing road paving work on South Park Drive, which has caused confusion about whether the closed road is off-limits to pedestrians and cyclists — staff said they'd raise the signage issue at their next construction progress meeting.

6.2 Street Tree Division Report

Urban Forest Manager Richie Bamlet reported nearly 60 trees planted citywide in a first planting phase, with a second phase starting this fall, plus major tree-trimming progress on Vallombrosa Avenue and in the Mansion neighborhood. He also flagged a broader concern: a technical study for the region's groundwater sustainability plan currently classifies nothing in Chico, including Bidwell Park, as a "groundwater-dependent ecosystem." Bamlet disagreed, citing rooting-depth data he says the study underestimates: "We don't agree that Bidwell Park is not a groundwater-dependent ecosystem." He suggested inviting the water agency to present to the commission before the plan is finalized (due around January 2027). Commissioner Blaschle raised concerns about long-term aquifer decline potentially harming Chico's shallow-rooted urban trees.

Votes & roll calls

Present: Nava, Nichols, Paiva, Blachley, Willis · Absent: Scheer, Thomas Petty

ITEM 5.1
PRESENTATION ON PROPOSED PARK RANGER POSITION REFORM
Nichols Paiva Blachley Willis

Plus one vote (yes) we heard in the roll call but couldn't confidently match to a member's name — the audio is unclear there.

Notable moments

  • The commission acknowledged receiving a letter from a resident, Paul Belt, regarding the ranger reform proposal; per the chair, it was entered into the public record but not read aloud.
  • No members of the public spoke during the general public comment period.
  • Richie Bamlet noted a great horned owl nesting at Cedar Grove has delayed some tree and parking-lot work: "There's a mutual admiration going on" between the owl and children visiting the nearby nature center camps.
  • Commissioner Scheer arrived after roll call and was noted as present partway through the meeting.
Coming up
  • Next regular BPPC meeting: Monday, July 27, 2026, 6:00 p.m., Council Chamber, Chico Municipal Center.
  • The California Conservation Corps' 50th-anniversary statewide bus tour was expected to end with a ceremony in Bidwell Park near Horseshoe Lake on a Wednesday morning (shortly after this meeting), possibly attended by a state cabinet secretary.
  • Sycamore Pool cleanings continue on an every-other-Thursday schedule through summer, with daily E. coli testing ongoing.
  • Upper Park Road Lot B paving is expected in August; South Park Drive paving work is ongoing, with priority given to reopening the road to the public as soon as possible.
  • Grazing goats expected in Middle Park by mid-July.
  • Staff plan to seek a future presentation from the regional groundwater agency (Vina GSA) on Bidwell Park's groundwater dependence, potentially with a public comment opportunity.
  • The park ranger position reform proposal still needs to go before Chico City Council, along with human resources and union-related steps, before it can be implemented.