Skate park debate hits new delay
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Deirdre Newman
Skating aficionados and bark park fans were poised to battle
Wednesday night for a coveted piece of land at TeWinkle Memorial
Park.
Skateboard park fans have had their eyes on the site since it was
listed as an alternative skateboard park location on the TeWinkle
Park Master Plan. The Costa Mesa Bark Park Foundation is also
salivating over the area east of Junipero Drive along Arlington
Avenue as another dog-friendly area.
The issue was tentatively scheduled for the Park and Recreation
Commission’s agenda, but in the end it was postponed when it turned
out that other parts of the TeWinkle Park Master Plan would be
discussed in August.
The recreation department would rather have the commission
consider more of the plan at the same time next month, said Mark
Taylor, management analyst with the city’s recreation division.
While the delay cost the foundation about $300 to give notice
through mailings, it was another domino in a series of delays and
setbacks that have undermined the collective psyche of the
skateboarding camp, said Jim Gray, who has been lobbying long for a
park in town.
“We’re dealing with a lot of young kids,” Gray said. “It’s tough
to tell them they have to keep fighting. That’s a sad statement.”
On June 9, the Planning Commission approved parts of the TeWinkle
Park Master Plan, a road map for the future of the city’s most
heavily used park. But the commission continued a discussion on the
skateboard park for a variety of reasons, including giving fans of
the Bark Park a chance to weigh in on the discussion.
The master plan originally proposed a 20,000-square-foot
skateboard park at Davis Elementary School. But installing it there
raised red flags among some commissioners, staff at Davis School and
Newport-Mesa Unified school board members, leading city staff to
consider removing it as an option, Steve Hayman, the city’s director
of administrative services, said last month.
As this location loses its luster, the skateboarders have shifted
their focus to TeWinkle.
Foundation officials say they are not opposed to a skateboard
park. They just don’t want it at this particular location, said Cathy
Mitchell, foundation chair, mainly because the skateboarders would be
sharing the parking lot being used by the bark park.
“We don’t have enough room for the patrons who come to our park,”
Mitchell said. “What if we had children on skateboards antagonizing
dogs on leashes? In essence, it’s not a very good idea.”
Mitchell said the foundation settled on the additional area after
a site they wanted in Fairview Park was rejected. It would like to
use the TeWinkle site in rotation with its area on Arlington Drive at
Newport Boulevard to allow the grass in both parks to recover.
Although most of the new area would have to be fenced off, they
would leave the neighborhood side as an open area, Mitchell said.
Gray said the skateboarding contingent is getting so frustrated
that some have suggested tying up the public comment sessions at City
Council and Park and Recreation Commission meetings.
“I think the mayor of Newport Beach once called us ‘the defiant
subculture,’ and we’re not,” Gray said, “But we’re feeling like
they’re forcing us to be this defiant subculture and clog up the
first hour of City Council meetings until someone starts making
something happen.”
Taylor said he has received a slew of e-mails from the camps for a
bark park addition and a skateboard park. The skateboarders should
rest assured that the two are not mutually exclusive, Taylor said.
“[The skateboarders] perceive that if we do put a dog park in,
there will never be a skateboard park, and that is definitely not the
case,” Taylor said. “They seem to be pitted against each other, and
that’s never been the case.”
Another idea, which surfaced two to three months ago, was to put
the park at Costa Mesa High School, although that would not be part
of the TeWinkle Park Master Plan, Hayman said in June. The school
district wants to consider the plan in more detail before a specific
site at the school is announced, she said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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