Newport rolls out new skate park plan
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- The city manager has initiated talks with Costa Mesa
officials to create a skate park for both cities, Mayor Tod Ridgeway
announced Tuesday.
The announcement came as a surprise to many, including Councilwoman
Norma Glover. The mayor made it known after several members of a local
Boy Scout troop implored the city to build a skate park.
“I proposed the city build a skate park,” Scout Cage Morgan said. “It
would reduce property damage.”
A long-running debate in the city over whether to build a skate park
has met with years-long opposition from residents who don’t want such a
facility near their homes.
“I can assure you no skate park will ever be built in a residential
neighborhood in this city,” Ridgeway said.
In their study session before the council meeting Tuesday night,
officials learned that anti-skateboarding signs had been removed from
some city parks.
City Councilman John Heffernan objected to signs placed at the
entrance of city parks that forbid certain skateboarding. The signs were
to inform residents of a new ordinance that prohibits skateboarding in
some areas of most city parks.
In city parks, skateboarding is outlawed in any area with a slope of
6% or more, or on items such as stairs, benches and planters.
Heffernan objected to the signs because they seemed to forbid
skateboarding throughout the parks. The signs that showed a silhouette of
a skateboarder with a red circle and line are being replaced with signs
that are specific about where skateboarding is forbidden.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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