Getting fat off kids’ play time shouldn’t be permitted
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STEVE SMITH
Here’s what you don’t know about Rick Campo, the guy who was cited
for having his Little League team practice at a Costa Mesa field
without a permit and whose letter about the incident was published
recently in the Daily Pilot.
To recap, Campo and his baseball team of 11- and 12-year-olds got kicked off a baseball field at Adams Elementary School on a Sunday by
a park ranger who called police to come over and cite him.
“We practiced there all week, but it wasn’t until Sunday that they
gave me a ticket,” Campo told me.
Campo has been heavily involved with the Costa Mesa National
Little League for about 10 years. He has been the primary force
behind the league’s chief fundraiser -- a plastic card that entitles
the bearer to discounts all over town. (Attention, guys: the card
gets you 50% off cut flowers at Conroy’s.)
Campo does all of the work for the card campaign, which has
generated tens of thousands of dollars over the years. Campo rounds
up the sponsors offering the deals, coordinates the printing of the
cards and their distribution to the league’s managers, and finally,
he tallies up the sales efforts by the league’s players to determine
who wins the various prizes.
And he does it all gratis.
Campo should not be allowed a “get out of jail free” card because
he’s a chief fundraiser -- rules should apply equally to everyone.
His history with the league and with youth sports is only an
exclamation point to this sorry turn of events.
A few days ago, I compared notes about childhood play with another
Rick, Rick Amodeo. Amodeo lived in Chicago in the ‘50s and ‘60s until
he was 22; then he moved to California. I lived in Chicago from birth
in 1955 until my family moved to California in 1963.
Our memories are the same. Although we had televisions, we rarely
watched them save for a couple of hours of cartoons on Saturday
morning. Then, as soon as it was late enough in the day to go knock
on a friend’s door, we were out of the house. No parental
supervision, no play dates, no nothing.
We ran and jumped and played. We played anything we could, with
whatever we had at our disposal. Being of limited means, we did not
have a lot of sports equipment, so our playing usually meant that we
were limited to kick the can, hide-and-seek and tag. Running around
the neighborhood, we kept our heads down, lest we miss a soda bottle
that we could return to a local store for a few cents, which meant
candy.
We played all day, coming home only when it was too dark to see
each other or when dad, not mom, came calling for us, whichever came
first. We got really dirty during the day, but we were exhausted, and
we slept really well. Overweight kids were hard to find.
Growing up in Los Angeles in the ‘70s, my friends and I could play
basketball inside the gym at Fairfax High School in Los Angeles for
free. We also had free access to the football field, baseball
diamonds and tennis courts.
Today, kid’s activities have to be organized and supervised.
Improvised, unchaperoned play means trouble.
So, what’s a kid to do? On one hand, we’ve got a drawer full of
reports about the sharp rise in childhood obesity and its related
consequences such as diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease.
Included in the chief causes of the obesity are our kids’
sedentary lifestyle, meaning they’re spending too much time inside
watching TV, playing computer games and eating junk while doing so.
Staying indoors is more hazardous to kids’ health than anything
they’re likely to encounter outside, including the near-myth of
“stranger danger.”
But on the other hand, we kick our kids off the local soccer
fields and baseball diamonds where healthy activity happens.
Along comes a guy like Rick Campo, or any of the other coaches
around town who are trying to motivate kids in sports and get them
out of the house. “I get as much enjoyment out of coaching as they
do,” Campo said.
He’s trying to do the right thing but keeps running into the same
bureaucratic roadblock -- a permit to play. That’s really what it is,
folks: in this town and in far too many others, kids need a permit to
play.
In Campo’s case, a permit was required when 10 or more people
showed up on the baseball diamond. When Campo protested that he only
had six kids there, the park ranger threw in Campo and his three
coaches to make 10.
Why 10? Why not nine? Why not 11? I’ve got a better number still.
How about zero? How about allowing kids free access to the soccer
fields, baseball diamonds and basketball courts without charging them
the $25 per hour required by the city?
We will never get our kids physically fit and end the epidemic of
childhood obesity as long as we send the mixed message that the
dangerous, unhealthy pattern of sitting around indoors is free, but
the healthy option of getting your friends together for a basketball,
soccer or baseball game costs $25 an hour.
That’s far too many soda bottles, folks. Let’s end the “pay to
play” program.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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