Editor’s Notebook -- Danette Goulet
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As city leaders consider putting a skate park in at Oak View Community
Center at the request of teenagers, I am reminded again why I love this
city.
It would be the third skate park in Huntington Beach, while our
neighbors in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa have hemmed and hawed about
putting one in their cities for more than a decade.
A majority of residents in the two cities seem to want the park, but
no one wants it in their neighborhood.
God forbid, should “those skateboarder kids” be recreating in their
neighborhoods.
Although there were fears and objections when Huntington Beach
considered building its first skate park in the early 1990s, city leaders
recognized there was a need and growing desire for the parks. While there
had been some Orange County cities with skate parks in the 1970s, the
craze trailed off a bit and those parks closed. Huntington was the first
to resurrect the idea with the park at the Murdy Community Center.
Such forward thinking is what makes this city what it is -- a place
where children and adults can enjoy healthy active lives.
That is not to say there are no residents in Surf City who are
appalled by the youth and surf/skate culture of the city, but as a whole
Huntington Beach is far more accepting of such things than our neighbors.
This, to me, is key. That’s what makes Huntington vital, alive and fun.
Huntington Beach now boasts two skate parks, one at Murdy and another
at Huntington Beach High School, that I have never seen either empty in
the afternoon and early evening. Can you say that for every other
recreational facility in the city?
And you don’t see kids out there fighting, smoking or doing drugs --
they’re getting exercise and having fun doing things far more coordinated
than I could ever do.
If it were a basketball court or soccer field that teens wanted, the
only question from residents would likely be “how late will it be open at
night?”
But there is this absurd mentality out there that skateboarders are
hooligans.
Although he later retracted it, and is now pushing for a skate park,
Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway was quoted in January describing
skateboarders as “a culture of defiance.”
That sums up what every generation of adults thinks of every new
generation of teenagers. It has nothing to do with skateboarding.
It used to be “that rock ‘n’ roll music.”
I never learned to skateboard, and frankly am pretty lousy at in-line
skating as one Huntington Beach lifeguard who patched me up on the beach
path at the bottom of the 1st street “hill” can attest to.
But if a skate park is what the youth in the Oak View neighborhood say
they want, what they “need,” then that is what the city should do with
the money they have allocated to that park.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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