Skatepark enthusiast
It’s been a long time coming, but signs are pointing to Costa Mesa
finally building a skate park, which would be the first public
skating facility in Newport-Mesa.
At the center of the debate for years has been Costa Mesa resident
and skateboard manufacturer Jim Gray. Still expecting a curveball or
two before a park gets built, Gray talked with Managing Editor S.J.
Cahn about the need for a park and the status of skateboarding.
Why do you think a skatepark is needed in Costa Mesa?
Because there are more skateboarders in this and most cities than
those that play mainstream sports, and we don’t have a facility for
them. If you consider how much more time the average skateboarder
spends on his skateboard compared to, say, your average kid on a
basketball team, soccer team, etc., then the amount of time kids are
spending skateboarding is immense and this just once more highlights
the need for a facility.
Also, Costa Mesa is an epicenter of skateboarding with three of
the 10 or so pro quality manufacturers in the world being located
here, along with pro skaters, and many other companies heavily
involved in skateboarding. We have people from around the world
looking at us as the world leaders in skateboarding, and they are
riding boards made here. Those same folks have no problems getting
skateparks built in Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Colorado, etc., and
California now has new skateboard parks opening every week, but we
here in the epicenter are still fighting. It is pretty funny when you
think about it. Funny, but like ha ha.
Do you have any numbers of the how many skaters there are in
Newport-Mesa?
I personally know hundreds, but there are definitely thousands. I
don’t think you could specifically pin down the Newport-Mesa area,
but there are some estimates in the Costa Mesa recreation master
plan. Some general statistics are available, and some of those which
are posted on our Web site are as follows:
Check out the 14-year statistics from 1987 to 2001 from a recent
sports survey. Some of the 14-year average changes in participation
are: football (-17.8%), baseball (-24.5), racquetball (-49.1%),
tennis (-28.6%).
Here are the growth sports: soccer (+23.7), mountain biking
(+309.3), snowboarding (+221.2%), wakeboarding (+37.5), skateboarding
(+14.4%), inline skating (+454.2%, 11-year average), artificial wall
rock climbing (+57.1%).
If someone doesn’t believe me, they can check out a copy of a
recent sports survey report at https://www.sgma.com/
reports/data/2002/sports-part-topline- report2002.pdf. This is
produced by the sporting goods manufactures association. I found this
information on the Web and am not a member, nor do I even know a
member of this association. Skateboarding’s numbers don’t necessarily
look that impressive in growth if you don’t understand that even 14
years ago they showed millions of skaters in the U.S. while many of
the other growth sports are new to the list entirely.
Skateboarding started with 9.2 million participants in 1987 and
ended with 12.4 million in 2001. On the other hand, baseball started
with 15 million participants in 1987 and was down to 11.4 million
participants in 2001. I played baseball most of my life, enjoy the
game, and have nothing against it, but at 40 years old I am still
skateboarding, and have little or no interest in playing baseball
other than an annual softball game my kids do with their tai kwon do
class. The fact that there are trillions of dollars of capital
invested nationwide and billions continuously spent maintaining
fields while there are sports with more participants that have no
facilities is just another highlight that makes it seem so ridiculous
that we have to fight for a skatepark.
I hope that when I grow old and am in a position to do something
about imbalance like this, that I will look at the realities and not
try to just hold on to my personal beliefs of what sports should be.
The youth has spoken, and our cities need to listen. They are our
future, and have shown us which direction they want to go. The want
skateparks, BMX tracks and hockey arenas. Millions will be
skateboarding for years after mom and dad stop forcing them to play
soccer. That is just a fact. I am not trying to put anyone down. My
kids have played soccer, and I’ve coached soccer teams. It’s just a
different reality than some people want to deal with.
The fact is most mainstream sports, which already have a lot of
facilities to use, even if they don’t have enough in this area, still
have more facilities than skateboarding, which has been on a steady
increase yet has zero facilities in our local cities. It just does
not make sense, and our cities are not responding to the needs of
their kids. Someone has got to do something about it. That is what
our skatepark fight is all about.
There is also quite a few statistics in the Costa Mesa recreation
master plan. You can access it on the web at
https://www.ci.costa-mesa.ca.us/ recreation/master_plan.pdf. This is
data collected by a independent consultant. We have nothing to do
with it, yet it clearly supports our position.
Are there any other comparisons to make to other sports?
One thing that cannot be covered by a statistic is how much more
passionate the average skateboarder is than most kids who play
baseball, football, basketball, etc. Some of the best-selling sports
magazines are skateboard magazines, and there are about seven of them
on the newsstands. The best-selling video game for years now has been
Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater. Statistics have shown that more kids know who
Tony Hawk is than any other pro athlete.
Anyone reading this can take a test to prove it. If you know a kid
who plays Little League baseball, ask them to name as many pro
baseball players as they can. If they come up with 10, I’d be amazed,
actually I’d be really amazed. Now go out and ask a kid you know who
is into skateboarding, or even just grab one riding down the
sidewalk, and ask him how many pro skaters he can name. I’ll be
surprised if he came up with less than 20, and a whole lot would be
able to come up with a 50 or more.
Is TeWinkle Park your first choice?
No, because I live on the complete opposite side of the city in
Newport Heights. I’d personally rather see it at Lions Park, or
Fairview Park, but as far as size, compatibility with its surrounding
area, proximity to population, size of available space and usability,
it is a great spot. I think it is good because it will be accessible
to a lot of people, with a relatively low impact on the neighborhood.
How do you respond to people who worry that a skate park will draw
a “bad element?”
Take a drive to a local public skatepark. My first park I’d direct
them to is the park in Laguna Niguel, because it is most similar to
what we’d like to see here. Irvine would work, Brea, Fullerton, etc.
Go down there, watch the Mercedes wagons and SUV’s drop off and pick
up kids all day long, and then go ahead and tell us about all the bad
element you saw there. I don’t really think anyone could come away
from there saying there is a bad element. That’s the real world about
modern day public skateparks, and that is what we want. It doesn’t
look much different than moms dropping off their kids for soccer, or
at the Bay Club for their sailing lesson for that matter. There is
just a few people who don’t want to see that because it is not
something they grew up doing, and they’d like to stop it. I like to
call them rebels without a clue.
Some of these “bad element” people probably just remember some
kid, angry ‘cause he’s getting kicked out of the only place he could
find to skate, having a bit of a bad attitude. You might be [upset]
too if the only thing you like to do is considered illegal, your city
won’t do anything to acknowledge you, and it is full of empty
“legitimate” sports fields, and there are a whole group just like you
simply baffled by the way they are treated. There is bound to be
someone coming out of that environment with a bad attitude, but a bad
attitude isn’t a bad element, and that is so much more of the
exception than the rule.
If 25% of all boys under 18 ride skateboards, then some of them
are going to be from the so-called bad element. It’s just a
statistical reality. One bad apple in a really, really huge bunch
should not spoil the whole bunch, unless you want to see it that way.
There are bad baseball players, bad football players, bad soccer
players, but we don’t find one drunk high school football player and
try to shut down the whole football program. That is not realistic. I
guarantee there is more drinking going on at the basketball courts
and baseball fields in Costa Mesa than will ever take place at the
skatepark. If you doubt this, just go look in the trash cans near all
these fields, or ask the city workers who clean it up, and come out
from under your rock for while and live in the real world.
A bad element usually means drinking, drugs, and gangs. I don’t
know anyone who skates who is in a gang, but I am sure there is
someone, somewhere. I have never seen a drinking or drug problem at a
public skatepark, and though I am sure it’s happened, it also happens
at the beach, the park, school, in someone’s car, etc. Public
skateparks are recreation facilities. They are not a magnet for the
bad element. They are relatively self policed by the kids and adults
who skate there. Anyone who is using the scare tactic “bad element”
word is just grasping at straws. There is no concrete evidence to
support that, yet there is a lot of evidence against that theory, but
the people throwing that word around don’t want to look at that. They
need to wake up and face some of the real problems that they are busy
looking the other way on. I am betting someone consumed a beer at
TeWinkle park somewhere today. Maybe we should close the whole park,
or maybe we should lighten up and deal with the skateboard facility
the way we do with any other and keep a regular patrol checking it
out on a consistent rotation.
In some corners, including the Pilot, the debate about a skate
park at TeWinkle has been simplified to a “children vs. dogs”
argument because of the Costa Mesa Bark Park also being at TeWinkle.
Do you think that’s a fair way to characterize the debate?
The only argument that has lingered in any way about the skatepark
debate after the recreation master plan was complete was the
“location” issue. When the residents of the area, together with the
city recreation people, came up with plans for a elements which
included a skatepark at TeWinkle, we were very pleased. We didn’t
even attend those meetings and had nothing to do with their choice.
The site that was proposed was suitable for our needs, didn’t have
any realistic obstacles to overcome, etc. so we were happy to see if
we might finally get our ever-so-elusive location off the table so
there would be no more arguments that could be used to sweep us under
the rug again. Then out of the blue, the Bark Park people showed up
with more whining than the maternity ward at Hoag. “There were
back-door deals, we weren’t consulted (nor did they show up at the
publicly advertised TeWinkle Park master plan meetings), this was a
back door deal,” and so on and so forth. These were just some of the
things they cried about. None of which were true, and especially from
our side. We’d been fighting the city forever, so suddenly us doing
backdoor deals with the recreation people? That was pretty far
fetched, but it worked enough for them to get our item set aside to
give the Bark Park people a chance to talk.
Great, we’d never been able to hold up a meeting before so we
could talk, even though I attended every recreation master plan
meeting, every Fairview Park meeting, etc., but now suddenly the Bark
Park people are demanding they be heard out. OK, so if that wasn’t
ridiculous enough, I went and looked at their Web site, and they had
posted requests for anyone interested in expanding the Bark Park or
anyone “against a skatepark” to show up to this meeting.
That got me a little irritated, and I think that’s when the dogs
versus kids thing started. I was able to use that to get more people
than usual to show up to the recreation meeting to show support for
the skatepark. They actually helped us a lot, by giving us something
ludicrous to battle. They came up and spewed ideas about dogs biting
kids in the common parking lot, even though no design had been
submitted, and no one on our side would ever recommend sharing a
parking lot with the dog folks. And they continued that argument at
the Planning Commission meeting.
I was starting to think maybe we should close the dog park if the
dogs that are going there are so vicious that the Bark Park people
are so convinced they are going to attack all the kids a hundred
yards away on the other side of the fence. How many people on the
tennis courts have they broken free and ran over to attack?
Then they said the horses that live a couple hundred yards away,
next to the roadside, next to the speedway race track, were going to
be scared of the kids on their skateboards. I mean they were just
grasping for straws. Those horses will hear more ducks quacking in
the pond than skateboarders. It was pretty sad. They should have just
been big enough to say that they just really wanted to expand their
dog park at anyone’s expense, and we were standing in their way. It
really could not have had anything really to do with the skatepark.
They must have just realized that if that corner is developed,
they’ll never be able to expand their dog park at that location.
Besides the obvious benefits to those who skate, are there other
“pluses” to building a skate park?
Kids putting down the Playstation controller and exercising.
Working toward getting the kids off the school grounds, out of the
retail and industrial centers, and into a positive place that
acknowledges what they really like to do, not what someone tells them
they should do. Nearby restaurants will gain business, and obvious
things like that, but nothing is more important than giving one of
the cities largest sports groups a place to have some fun.
What are you expecting from the City Council meeting when the park
at TeWinkle is discussed?
Actually, from experience, I am expecting some sort of curveball.
I expect that they will suddenly come up with another spot and try
and push the skatepark to another location. I don’t really care, as
long as it is a good and appropriate location, but if it starts up a
whole process of public hearings and such, I will be a pretty
disappointed. I am at least happy the we now have an undisputed
“location” option, so that we can’t get pushed aside if one of the
expected curveballs does not work. I guess I am getting used to
having to battle, even when it shouldn’t be necessary. It doesn’t
matter what happens, we are just going to keep pushing till we make
it happen, and then we are going after Newport Beach. Even with all
the problems we’ve had in Costa Mesa, they’ve acted like ambassadors
to skateboarding compared to Newport. It is amazing how wealthy,
supposedly educated people could be so ignorant when it comes to
issues going on in their own backyard.
What features would you like to see in a skate park?
If the city is going to spend capital, we need to assure that it
will be ridden for the next 30 years no matter what trends are
happening in the skateboard world. It has to have an area just for
small kids that is separated from the other areas so it’s not taken
over by the older kids. It needs to be built to minimize the possible
collisions, and have enough real street elements to encourage a kid
who has only skated in a real street setting to be able to and enjoy
adapting into a skatepark environment.
It has to give everyone a chance to have something to grow into.
It would be nice to just have a flat area of concrete for kids to
practice their flatland tricks as well. Plus, I think we need to
allow for shaded areas for rest, viewing areas for parents and
families, and maybe even things like special obstacles for stretching
out before you skate.
I’ve been to at least 50 pubic skateparks and I really believe the
one upside of waiting too long for a skatepark is that we get to
learn from all that has worked and not worked.... I love
skateboarding too much to let a bad skatepark get built with our
taxpayers money.
And, finally, what’s your best trick?
Tricks are for kids. I just want to go so fast it will scare you.
That’s my favorite trick. I am 40 now, and at my age, best is
whatever gets you through the day with a smile on your face.
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