Skate park makes list of city recreation needs
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Lolita Harper
In a Southern California city where the sun shines brightly most
of the year, recreation has proven to be a big issue lately. Playing
fields for children and adults, tot lots, playgrounds, tennis courts
and skateboard parks -- or the lack of one -- are all issues that
Costa Mesa residents feel strongly about, according to a preliminary
recreation master plan released last week.
RJM Design Group Inc., based in San Juan Capistrano, released its
breakdown of the various recreation needs in Costa Mesa compiled from
hours of resident input, telephone surveys, interviews and analysis
of recreation trends, demands and current facilities.
The report is an “incredible first step” in a process set to serve
as a guide for development and management of the city’s recreation
programs and facilities, officials said.
The document was also created to update the Parks Recreation and
Open Space Master Plan, which was adopted in 1996, to account for
changes in population and needs in the last six years.
The completed report is just one of many stages in the city’s
quest for a comprehensive recreation master plan, said Stacia
Mancini, the city’s recreation manager.
The recommendations outlined by RJM Design Group will be
scrutinized and fine-tuned by city leaders to fit the community’s
needs, Mancini said.
The report’s release followed an extensive community outreach
effort in which city officials and the consultants held four
recreation workshops to gather as much input as possible from
residents. Mancini said the turnout was more than double the average
in other cities, with about 80 people at each session.
Jim Gray, a former professional skateboarder and leader of the
movement to get a skate park in Costa Mesa, was in large part
responsible for that turn out. Gray motivated all his fellow skaters
-- young and old -- and parents of skaters to attend the workshops to
illustrate the need of a skateboarding facility. Gray said he wanted
to make sure city officials could no longer ignore the need for a
skate park in town.
Even beyond the input from the skateboarders at the meetings,
Mancini said outside research, including a telephone survey, also
outlined a skate park as the No. 1 recreation need in Costa Mesa.
“We’ve got a lot of politicians right now all saying they are
going to fight for a skateboard park,” Gray said about the five City
Council candidates who have all highlighted a skate park as one of
their primary issues. “We’ll see when they actually get elected but
at least now with this master plan if they start waffling we can say,
‘Hey, just look at your own data.’”
The City Council and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District have
agreed to work together to study the possibility of a skate park at
Davis Elementary School, a process in its very preliminary stages.
Mancini said she is excited about that possibility and looks forward
to adding a skate park to the city’s recreation facilities.
Even with a skate park at Davis, the report still outlines a need
for an additional park, based on the number of skateboarders in the
city. The document also highlighted a need for more adult softball
fields, youth baseball fields, tot lots, picnic tables, walking,
jogging and bicycle paths and tennis courts.
Mancini said she hopes the community will continue to be as
involved as it has been up to this point. Residents are invited to
view the 203-page master plan at City Hall or online and are
encouraged to give public comments at the Parks, Recreation and
Parkways Commission meetings on the subject. The report will be
reviewed by the commission in mid or late November and will then go
onto the council for final approval sometime in January.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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