Field-use equity argued
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Alicia Robinson
A group of Newport Beach athletes may get more chances to play in
town, under new rules to be considered by the city’s Parks, Beaches
and Recreation Commission tonight.
The commission will discuss changes to the policy that doles out
playing and practice time on city fields. The new rules would allot
time on 10% of the city’s available fields to non-recreational or
“club” teams, which have tryouts and don’t just let everyone play who
wants to.
Newport has a growing number of club teams -- mostly soccer and a
couple of baseball teams -- but they weren’t mentioned when the city
wrote its field allocation policy two years ago. Recreational leagues
have been getting 75% of the available fields; the new policy would
give them 70%.
“What’s happened for the most part is we have had to practice out
of the city,” said Bill Allen, who manages a club soccer team and has
four children who play soccer and baseball on recreational and club
teams.
A majority of youth sports teams in Newport Beach, other than
school teams, are recreational and anyone can join, said Marie
Knight, city recreation and senior services director. The city’s
first responsibility is to those teams, but officials don’t want to
ignore the competitive teams, she said.
“We’ve tried to come up with an allocation plan that’s as
equitable as we can make it without being Solomon and splitting the
baby,” Knight said. “Do we please everybody? Probably not, but we
don’t feel that there is ever going to be an allocation system that
will satisfy 100% [of the people].”
Several youth recreational sports representatives said they think
the new plan is fair.
“It really tries to make sure whether it’s a club kid or a
[recreational] kid, they have representation to play on the field,”
Newport Beach Little League President Emery Molnar said. “Everybody
gets the same amount of fields as before. We’re still short of
fields.”
In Costa Mesa, which has a similar athletic field shortage, the
city has a tiered policy that gives first priority to recreational
leagues that serve at least 90% city residents.
The second group to get preference is schools, and club teams are
the third tier, Costa Mesa recreation manager Jana Ransom said.
Other suggested changes to Newport’s field-use rules will set up a
policy for when teams violate guidelines for using the fields and
clarify the criteria for teams that are considered recreational. The
Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission is expected to vote on the
changes tonight.
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