Playing space deteriorating
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Stephen W. Rasch
First of all, I must compliment the Daily Pilot on covering a major
problem facing our school district, cities and athletic teams ranging
from youth sports through high school and adult sports. Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach are two cities with little open space remaining.
The major emphasis has to be placed on improvement and maintenance of
existing facilities, as well as better administration of their usage.
Your Saturday report on field conditions in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District only deals with a portion of the problem
(“Difference in fields called ‘discriminatory’”). As a parent and
administrator in AYSO, I have long dealt with “field problems” in
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Before the joint-use agreement, AYSO
dealt directly with the school district in securing fields for youth
soccer practices and games. (Kaiser Elementary School was the first
joint-use facility in Region 97’s area, established several years
before the current agreement.) We consistently asked for help from
the district as to field maintenance and repair.
To my knowledge, during my three years as Region 97’s regional
commissioner and four years as field director, district funds were
used only for irrigation system repair and for mowing and watering
the fields. Needless to say, the school district irrigation systems
are in dire need of repair, as most of us know. Our fields contain
several “swamps” from over-irrigation or leaky sprinkler heads, as
well as “desert” patches from lack of irrigation. Region 97 used its
own funds to repair sod, aerate and fertilize several of the fields,
spending more than $40,000 since my involvement began. In the past
two years, AYSO has not contributed funds to field repair, mainly
because of a recent financial setback.
The major problem facing the Newport-Mesa region has always been
lack of fields and over-usage of the best fields. Yes, as your
article stated, Newport Harbor High School has fine fields on campus
facilities. However, there has always been too little field space for
the several athletic teams fielded by the high school. Over the
years, girls field hockey and boys and girls soccer teams have used
Harper School athletic fields for games and practices. Newport Harbor
High School, to my knowledge, has not contributed a penny to field
repair over the years of usage. Adult soccer leagues use the
facilities on Sundays, and AYSO has use of the fields after 5:30 p.m.
on weekdays and for games on Saturdays.
The fields get no rest, even in the summer, when sport camps and
other adult groups use the facilities. AYSO has consistently paid to
repair field damage, even though field usage and damage is skewed
toward the high school athletic teams. AYSO has asked for help in
field repair from the high school, but there has never been money
available. This year, another of AYSO’s most-used facilities, Monte
Vista High School, has also been reserved by the boys lacrosse team
from Newport Harbor High School on two weekdays, putting additional
wear on the site with little hope of assistance in field repair.
The last two years have seen the implementation of Proposition A
funding. Though providing much-needed repairs and improvements to our
local schools’ buildings, nothing has been done for our fields. To
the contrary, fields at Ensign School, Newport Heights and Woodland
Primary are unavailable for use because of construction damage. Even
at Mariner’s Park, where half of the area is maintained by the city
and half by the school district, the school district side is in
horrific shape, with no repairs scheduled in the near future because
of the long-anticipated library construction.
The facilities operated separately by Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
are some of the finest around, with new and lighted fields at the
Bonita Creek and the Costa Mesa Farm Sports Complex. There are no
lighted fields on the west side of Newport Beach, nor on the east
side of Costa Mesa. AYSO has sought to have temporary and/or
permanent lighting installed at several facilities but has usually
run into the “not in my backyard” response from residents. We have
had temporary lights at Kaiser Elementary in the past, but once
again, the area residents are opposing this year’s request to the
city.
In short, while the number of Newport-Mesa children playing AYSO
soccer has increased, the playing space has decreased, and the
conditions of the fields have deteriorated. While your article says
school district plans for field improvements are in the wings, it is
with real skepticism born of past experience that I await any change
in the school district and Costa Mesa’s concerns for our local
schools’ fields.
* STEPHEN W. RASCH is a resident of Newport Beach.
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