A playground to roam on
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH - With two grandchildren in kindergarten at Lincoln
Elementary School and three more on the way, a Newport Beach couple
decided to replace the rusty old playground with bright new equipment.
Just last month, the sand lot contained only a couple metal jungle
gyms, a balance beam and a slide.
Now, a month and nearly $20,000 later, children scamper over a bright
colorful monstrosity with three slides, a twirly pole, a mountain, a
bridge, climbing areas and more.
All of it, thanks to George and Barbara Woods.
“It’s pretty spectacular stuff,” George Woods said. “As much as I hate
plastic, this stuff is the way to go.”
The children couldn’t agree more.
“I like the big monkey bars and the slide and that’s it,” said
5-year-old Max Stone. “Because there was not that much slides before.”
The Wood’s children went to Lincoln when it was still a middle school.
Now their children’s children roam those same grounds.
So, the philanthropic couple decided it was a charity well worth their
money.
“It was kind of a family idea,” said Suzanne Woods, the couple’s
daughter-in-law.
She and her sister-in-law, Erica, who have children in the upper
grades and in kindergarten, had been talking about what terrible
disrepair the old kindergarten playground equipment was in.
“Some of it was rusty and had rough edges, some of it was kind of
pathetic,” she said. “It was second-hand stuff from Eastbluff. Some of it
belonged to Eastbluff when it first opened.”
The two women had joked with the Woods, suggesting that they should
buy the school some new equipment.
The Woods decided in was actually a good idea.
“We believe in our public schools,” said Barbara Woods. “We did our
part too when our children were in school.”
So they gave the two younger women the means and let them run with the
idea.
“George gave us a budget and the go-ahead in September,” Suzanne Woods
said. “We worked with the playground guy, then brought the ideas to the
principal.”
Having been a kindergarten teacher for years, the principal, Barbara
Rothman-Haddock, had a few suggestions.
“We were really looking at building physical skills and at
student-safety issues,” Rothman-Haddock said.
The Woods were thanked for their gift in a dedication ceremony Friday
morning by students and staff.
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