Air quality a concern
Barry Faulkner
Administrators at local high schools and colleges, concerned with air
quality, chose to limit physical activities Monday. Some athletic
teams, including all those at Sage Hill School, did not practice
outdoors, but no practices or events involving Newport-Mesa athletic
teams were canceled.
A typically light Monday calendar included two golf matches,
involving the Costa Mesa High girls and the Orange Coast College
women, as well as girls volleyball matches for Corona del Mar High
and Sage Hill.
School officials said decisions on whether to restrict future
contests or practices, due to airborne ashes from wildfires in
neighboring regions, would be made on a day-to-day basis.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District directed schools to
curtail physical education classes, as well as athletics. It did not
ban practices or games, as did some Orange County school districts.
Sage Hill, a private school in Newport Coast, asked its outdoor
sports teams to practice indoors.
Orange Coast College President Gene Farrell directed his coaches
and physical education instructors to either cancel or limit
activities, as they saw fit. Ferrell’s instruction also gave students
and athletes the right not to participate, if they so chose.
The air quality issues created by fires in San Bernardino, Rancho
Cucamonga, San Diego County and elsewhere, prompted Irvine Unified,
Capistrano Unified, Saddleback Valley Unified and Tustin Unified
school districts to cancel contests involving their schools.
Saddleback Valley also canceled practices.
Santa Ana Unified limited practices to seventh period only and the
Huntington Beach Union School District advised its coaches to
prohibit “prolonged vigorous outdoor exercise.”
The Huntington Beach district directive cited reports from the
South Coast Air Quality Management District proclaiming air quality
in South Orange County as somewhere between unhealthy and unhealthy
for sensitive groups.
Newport Harbor High boys athletic director Eric Tweit, also the
school’s girls cross country coach, said he advised his coaches to be
cautious and conscientious.
“We did not get complete direction [from the district], but they
were basically asking us to be smart and not do anything too
strenuous,” Tweit said. “We usually limit our running on a hot day
like [Monday], but we limited it even more. We just had our runners
warm up, stretch and do a little running on the track. We had plenty
of water and allowed those who didn’t feel strong enough to continue
to stop running.”
Tim Parsel, the boys athletic director at Estancia High, said
Eagle cross country teams had a light jog, followed by a dip in the
pool. He said the school’s boys water polo team had an abbreviated,
half-speed workout.
Dick Freeman and Jeff Brinkley, football coaches at Corona del Mar
High and Newport Harbor, respectively, said their Monday practices,
usually less demanding anyway, included no running or conditioning.
Freeman said his players dressed in helmets, shorts and shoulder
pads, a change from a typical Monday workout in full pads.
Estancia football coach Craig Fertig said the ocean breezes that
usually blanket his school’s practice field would help limit air
quality concerns. He said, however, he “cut back a bit” from his
normal Monday regimen.
OCC women’s golf coach Barry Wallace said his athletes were
allowed to ride carts in their Orange Empire Conference match against
Santa Ana at River View Golf Club in Santa Ana Monday. Typically,
carts are not allowed in competition.
“The winds picked up and we got a little of the ocean breeze,
which was nice and made the air not so bad,” Wallace said after the
match. “We used carts as a precaution and I think that was a good
move.”
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