Des Moines rejects 515 Run Club’s reduced-fee push

515 Run Club is again exploring options for its group runs after parking concerns were raised at a popular section of Water Works Park and Des Moines rejected its request for permit-fee exemptions at Gray’s Lake.

Why it matters: The dispute tests how Des Moines balances free community fitness groups with safety, congestion and equal access to popular public spaces.

Driving the news: In a letter to co-founder Anthony Arroyo obtained by Axios, city manager Scott Sanders last week rejected the club’s requests to reduce or waive trail-use fees.

  • 515 must complete the city’s permit process — including payment — before its next organized event at city parks or trails, per the letter.
  • The club’s fees this year could be $4,300 or more, the Register previously reported.

Catch up quick: The club, which started with two runners in 2022, has grown to as many as 190 participants for Monday runs.

  • City officials say the group’s popularity has led to trail congestion, parking problems, and safety concerns, and earlier this year the city notified 515 that it must pay a $1-per-participant fee to obtain a permit.

Context: Des Moines and other Iowa cities have increasingly sought to diversify revenue as property-tax limits strain budgets.

  • User fees are one way to shift some event-related costs from taxpayers to the groups and participants using the service.

State of play: The club has been operating in the adjacent Water Works Park in recent weeks, which is governed by its own board rather than the city’s parks department.

  • In the meantime, the club asked the city to recognize it as a community partner of the parks and to establish a more flexible permit-fee system for volunteer groups.
  • That status is premature because such agreements typically require written commitments, including maintaining city property, donating improvements or providing free city-approved programming, Sanders wrote.

Zoom in: Sanders also questioned whether 515 Run Club qualifies as a “free volunteer organization,” citing merchandise sales, vendors at runs, ties to Nike and Lululemon, and the city’s inability to find the group registered as an Iowa nonprofit.

  • 515 co-founder Neek Robinson disputes that characterization, saying 515 has no dues or entry fees, no organizers have been paid, and the club has not generated sponsorship revenue.

The intrigue: 515 organizers declined a donation to cover the fees, saying they’d rather push for policy changes than accept what they consider unfair and exorbitant charges, the Register reported last month…

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