About the Marion Recreation Department
Recreation Department Hours of Operation:
Satuday and Sunday - Closed
Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Our Board - The Recreation Board held it's final meeting on December 14, 2011. The Recreation Department has been dissolved. The responsibilities of any recreation programs are now up to the Parks Commission.
Bob Sanner – President
01/99 – 12/14
Dan VanSickle - Vice President
01/97 – 12/12
Les Ryle
12/01 – 12/10
Teresa Haycox
04/04 – 12/11
Steve Vanderhoff
01/09 - 12/13
The board is established under Marion City Ordinance 163.01. The Marion City School Board recommends two members and three members are appointed by the Mayor. Each term is for a period of 5 years.
The board meets every 3rd Wednesday of the month at the Recreation Center at 4:00 p.m. These meetings are open to the public. Board members may be reached through the Recreation Department.
Our History
In June of 1949, the National Recreation Association prepared a recreation plan for the City of Marion. Amazingly the philosophy is the same today. Here, in part, is what the report entailed.
"The very process of planning consists of anticipating the community's needs in time to meet them most effectively and economically. Just as the past has shaped the present so does the present set the pattern for the future."
"In this instance the planning is concerned with recreation, that is, with the provision of facilities and opportunities for making the lives of all citizens more enjoyable."
Recreation is a universal experience and a common need. All kinds of people, young and old, rich or poor, engage in some form of active or passive recreation with reasonable regularity. There are important reasons for this. Recreation satisfies fundamental needs that exist in all persons and that are increasingly difficult to satisfy in our present-day urban civilization. Among these are the need for sociability, the need for opportunities to create things, the need for physical expression, the need for achievement and the need for adventure or new experiences. In effect, these constitute immediate goals for community recreation.
We are still striving to meet community needs and enhance day-to-day life experiences.
