Consider all the children
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Pam Garrett
The problems American Youth Soccer Organization Region 97 faces are
no different than those of many other youth and adult sports leagues.
There is too little space and too many groups competing to use
this space.
There are actually three AYSO regions in the Costa Mesa- Newport
Beach area. These regions are roughly divided along high school
attendance lines. AYSO Region 57 serves players in the Corona del Mar
High School attendance area.
AYSO Region 120 serves players in the Estancia and Costa Mesa High
School attendance areas. AYSO Region 97 serves players in the Newport
Harbor High School attendance area. The soccer players in Region 97
are split between the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
This has created some unique problems for our region, as we must
work with both cities to gain access to fields. The area covered by
Region 97 has almost no undeveloped areas available for construction
of new fields. We have upwards of 1,700 players and 170 teams each
fall.
Although we have access to several fields, we share these fields
with school teams and other youth and adult sports leagues. AYSO
Region 97 is ready and willing to work with the cities of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach to help create and maintain fields.
Since many of our families have multiple children playing AYSO
soccer, keeping these fields reasonably close is an important
consideration. There has been some discussion of creating a park with
sports fields on the bluffs above Coast Highway at Superior.
Others have suggested creating a similar complex on the Balboa
Peninsula where the mobile homes are now. There may be other
possibilities, and clearly there is a need for more sports fields,
lighted and not.
The next time you see a patch of empty or underused land, picture
a green soccer field with 7-year-old soccer players running across
it. Picture their smiling faces and exuberant high fives. Families
line the sidelines cheering and smiling.
Many of these players may never make a high school team, but as
long as we have organizations like AYSO and fields for them to
practice and play on, they will not miss the opportunity to
participate in sports. As a community, we need to support the
maintenance and development of more playing fields for our children
and adults. Costa Mesa and Newport Beach were not planned
communities, so we did not set aside space for sports fields like
those in Irvine. We can start planning for the future now, however,
and work together to look for the possibilities.
I am one of the older volunteers in AYSO, so I grew up in a
different time. One of the rites of spring in my neighborhood was
clearing a baseball field in the abandoned orchards behind our
neighborhood. Each child came with a rake or hoe and cleared base
paths and leveled the fields. Those days are gone. Most vacant fields
today are either construction sites surrounded with fences for
liability reasons or protected areas. Our children can no longer
build their own fields. We must build these fields for them.
Unfortunately no one seems to want these fields in their
neighborhood. Most of us would love to live in the perfect place, but
I doubt one exists. I have lived in several areas in my life, but
each had its challenges. Gilroy is surrounded by beautiful green
hills, but you have to adjust to the smell of garlic, as it is
processed there year round.
Fresno will win no beauty award, but life was pleasantly slower
there, and living in Fresno was a little like living in the more
relaxed atmosphere of the Midwest. Currently I live on the Balboa
Peninsula. It is beautiful, but it too has drawbacks. I live an arm’s
length from my neighbors, so I must learn to cooperate and get along.
Newport Beach depends upon tourism as a major industry, but
sometimes tourists just have too many cars and make too much noise.
There are days and times when I try not to leave my home because I
know the traffic will be incredible. On the other hand, I fall asleep
to the sound of waves crashing on the beach and have learned to
forgive the over- zealous partyers returning from bars at 2:00 a.m.
and calling out to fellow bike riders as they pass my bedroom window.
There is no perfect place to live. We share this planet with many
other people and must often provide for the greater good of all,
setting aside our selfish interests.
* PAM GARRETT is a Newport Beach resident and an AYSO volunteer.
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