News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Skate Park Opens, But It Has A Catch |
Title: | US CA: Skate Park Opens, But It Has A Catch |
Published On: | 2001-09-10 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 18:22:35 |
SKATE PARK OPENS, BUT ITS USE HAS A CATCH
Recreation: Youths Who Go To The Facility Must Attend On-Site
Classroom, Do Volunteer Projects.
For most skate park fans, the sole requirement for jumping ramps and
banking pipes is to show up with a trusty skateboard.
But at a new facility in Los Angeles' Westlake district there's a catch.
Youths can use the park five days a week, but in return they promise
afterward to jump off their boards and step into the on-site
classroom. There they take an array of classes and volunteer programs
designed to help at-risk youths avoid the area's urban ills. Paul
Castro, 13, has taken classes on drugs and gang prevention. And has
volunteered to clean up garbage-strewn empty lots near St. Vincent
Medical Center.
The skating program is a fair deal, he said.
"I didn't know [marijuana] kills brain cells and makes you dumb. And
I learn tricks too," he said. "That's why I come here."
Judging by the turnout Sunday afternoon at the park's grand opening,
many youths echo Castro's reaction. About 100 young skaters showed up
and many said the fenced-in assemblage of portable ramps, rails and
quarter pipes would be a much welcomed urban oasis.
The project is the brainchild of People in Progress, a nonprofit
community group that has been trying for several years to transform
the once-vacant lot up the hill from MacArthur Park.
The idea is to reward teenagers' positive activities in an area where
negative behaviors are all too common. The rules are strict: Children
must maintain a C average, attend the wide array of classes, and be
subjected to drug and alcohol testing.
Those who don't follow the rules, don't get to skate. It's harsh
medicine, but the long-term benefits are worth it, say organizers.
"We want to intervene now on potential problems of the future, to
give these kids a chance," said Bram Roos, a member of the
organization's board of directors.
The park's opening culminates several years of efforts to overcome
bureaucratic red tape and opposition from neighbors who feared that
the skate park would attract rowdy teenagers and drug activity.
The 16,500-square-foot facility--built on a lot that once housed an
apartment building--is in one of the city's poorest, most
crime-ridden areas.
The pressure of urban life was sadly illustrated Sunday by the
absence of one of the youths who fought for the park: He couldn't
attend the opening because his father recently killed his mother,
then turned the gun on himself.
"We deal with kids, some of them who don't know where the next meal
will come from," said Reggi Hulkower, the organization's executive
director. "Or whether their electricity will work, or whether mom
will come home. They come here to forget about all that."
Organizers said the program is one of the few that hinges skate park
access with classes and volunteer work. Youths must sign a contract
that prohibits them from bringing in guns and drugs. And it asks them
whether they are on probation or parole.
James Maradiaga, 12, has been begging his mother for weeks to sign
him up. Drugs aren't a problem, he said, but his report card still
doesn't make the grade.
"If he gets an F, he can't skate," said his mother, Elva Elena
Maradiaga. "That's why I brought him, so he gets better grades."
For information about reprinting this article, go to
http://www.lats.com/rights/register.htm
Recreation: Youths Who Go To The Facility Must Attend On-Site
Classroom, Do Volunteer Projects.
For most skate park fans, the sole requirement for jumping ramps and
banking pipes is to show up with a trusty skateboard.
But at a new facility in Los Angeles' Westlake district there's a catch.
Youths can use the park five days a week, but in return they promise
afterward to jump off their boards and step into the on-site
classroom. There they take an array of classes and volunteer programs
designed to help at-risk youths avoid the area's urban ills. Paul
Castro, 13, has taken classes on drugs and gang prevention. And has
volunteered to clean up garbage-strewn empty lots near St. Vincent
Medical Center.
The skating program is a fair deal, he said.
"I didn't know [marijuana] kills brain cells and makes you dumb. And
I learn tricks too," he said. "That's why I come here."
Judging by the turnout Sunday afternoon at the park's grand opening,
many youths echo Castro's reaction. About 100 young skaters showed up
and many said the fenced-in assemblage of portable ramps, rails and
quarter pipes would be a much welcomed urban oasis.
The project is the brainchild of People in Progress, a nonprofit
community group that has been trying for several years to transform
the once-vacant lot up the hill from MacArthur Park.
The idea is to reward teenagers' positive activities in an area where
negative behaviors are all too common. The rules are strict: Children
must maintain a C average, attend the wide array of classes, and be
subjected to drug and alcohol testing.
Those who don't follow the rules, don't get to skate. It's harsh
medicine, but the long-term benefits are worth it, say organizers.
"We want to intervene now on potential problems of the future, to
give these kids a chance," said Bram Roos, a member of the
organization's board of directors.
The park's opening culminates several years of efforts to overcome
bureaucratic red tape and opposition from neighbors who feared that
the skate park would attract rowdy teenagers and drug activity.
The 16,500-square-foot facility--built on a lot that once housed an
apartment building--is in one of the city's poorest, most
crime-ridden areas.
The pressure of urban life was sadly illustrated Sunday by the
absence of one of the youths who fought for the park: He couldn't
attend the opening because his father recently killed his mother,
then turned the gun on himself.
"We deal with kids, some of them who don't know where the next meal
will come from," said Reggi Hulkower, the organization's executive
director. "Or whether their electricity will work, or whether mom
will come home. They come here to forget about all that."
Organizers said the program is one of the few that hinges skate park
access with classes and volunteer work. Youths must sign a contract
that prohibits them from bringing in guns and drugs. And it asks them
whether they are on probation or parole.
James Maradiaga, 12, has been begging his mother for weeks to sign
him up. Drugs aren't a problem, he said, but his report card still
doesn't make the grade.
"If he gets an F, he can't skate," said his mother, Elva Elena
Maradiaga. "That's why I brought him, so he gets better grades."
For information about reprinting this article, go to
http://www.lats.com/rights/register.htm
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