Source: Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, Calif.迷你倉出租Jan. 04--CLAREMONT -- Claremont Hills Wilderness Park visiting permits are available at City Hall and the Alexander Hughes Community Center to anyone interested.There were 630 permits sold in 2013, said Assistant City Manager Colin Tudor. There have been 26 sold as of Tuesday for the new year."The Wilderness Park Pass program is going well," Tudor said in an email. "The lots are being used at all times of the day and number of cars parked in the street has been reduced. This has helped to create a safer and more enjoyable experience for pedestrians, motorists, and the residents in the neighborhood."Park boundaries include Marshall Canyon to the west, Angeles National Forest to the north, and county line to the east, according to the city website. Park elevation varies from 1,800 to 3,000 feet, according to the website.Applications are available on the city's website at .ci.claremont.ca.us/ and at City Hall, 207 N Harvard Ave., and can be filled out and taken to City Hall or the Hughes center, 1700 Danbury Rd.The cost is $100 until April 1; after this date the permit will be $75 until July 1; after this date, the fee will be $50 until Oct. 1; when this date concludes, the pass until Jan. 1, will be $25.There is also a free resident parking permit (for the Thompson Creek Trail parking lot on the northeast corner of Mi迷你倉ls Avenue and Mt. Baldy Road) that is good until Dec. 31, 2015.Claremont Mayor Opanyi Nasiali said the daily fee at the park of $3 for four hours of parking was fair, but the pass was a way to save money."It's possible to sell more (annual passes than in 2013)," Nasiali said. "When people figure out it's cheaper to buy an annual pass, they'll buy an annual pass and save money. If you pay every time you come, it will add up over the long term."Nasiali said the intent of the pass sales is not to make money but for maintenance of the parking lot.On March 22, the park opened with an expanded metered parking lot and had meters installed in the south parking lot, known as the Thompson Creek Trail lot."I've walked there many times," Nasiali said of the park. "People are using the parking lots pretty well. Especially on the weekends. People who actually go a lot ... most have got annual passes. You pay once and go until the year ends."The mayor added he had not heard any major issues about the price of the passes."There have been a few cases where some people have tried to use an invalid pass, but other than that for the most part it's working very well," Nasiali said.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, Calif.) Visit the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin (Ontario, Calif.) at .dailybulletin.com Distributed by MCT Information Servicesmini storage
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