Monday, November 30, 2015

What Happens When A Concrete Skatepark Is Built?

It becomes the busiest recreation facility in the city...

Despite an overwhelming response to the idea of Casselberry building  its own skatepark, the project is moving slowly.  Rather than wait for the wheels of government to grind along at its usual pace, SKATE 32707 took the initiative and created a Skatepark System Plan Proposal and provided it to all of the Casselberry City Commissioners.  One of the skateparks used to illustrate a park similar to what we need to achieve an appropriate minimum level of service is the Zephyrhills Skatepark.

 Zephyrhills, FL has a population of 14,012 and set forth to provide its youth with an 8,000 sq. ft. skatepark in 2014.  It was completed in early 2015.

Since its grand opening, an event which was attended by nearly 500 people throughout the day, the skatepark has been an incredible success.



The Zephyrhills Public Works Director who oversees the skatepark characterizes the park as "always busy". He went on to say that almost a year after opening, he routinely hears from City Commissioners like; "I drove by the skatepark and there were about 50 kids there!"

He visits the skatepark often and says the one thing that has surprised him has been the distance people have traveled to visit it.  Its not uncommon for him to meet out of state visitors who have come to Zephyrhills for the sole purpose of skating the Zephyrhills Skatepark.  He's proud of the fact that they are now what he calls "a skateboarding destination".

In the short time the park has been open, the use of the park has been nonstop.  In order to expand its use further, the city will be installing lights to allow for it to be used in the evenings too.

In February 2016 the Zephyrhills Skatepark will host its first contest.  A big crowd is expected.

Casselberry can learn a lot from Zephyrhills and the skatepark they have built. 

Click Here: Contact the Casselberry City Commission and urge them to get the Casselberry Skatepark Project moving.

If you would like a copy of the proposal that was sent to the Commissioners, request one via the contact form below.



Thursday, November 26, 2015

SKATE 32707 Has A Lot To Be Thankful For...

The community support to create a space for our youth to come together has been nothing short of amazing.

We'll need your continued support over the coming months to succeed.

Our voices have been heard.  Questions are being asked.  Plans are being laid.

Keep sharing the stoke and get more folks to sign our online petition or place a sign in their yard supporting a skatepark in Casselberry.



The more visible support we have the better.

Thanks for everyone's efforts thus far - teamwork makes the dream work!

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Skatepark System Plan Proposal Submitted

SKATE 32707 is leading the way to a neighborhood skatepark in Casselberry Florida.  Since we first approached the City Commission with the idea we've been hard at work keeping the information flowing.

Surely youve seen "Support a Skatepark in Casselberry" yard signs all around town.

You may have even signed our online or traditional petition of support.

What you haven't seen or heard is progress towards identifying a location or budget for the proposed skatepark.

We've met with two of the five City Commissioners on multiple occasions.  As a result of their input, we spent the time to develop and publish a Skatepark System Plan for Casselberry.

Now that they have it in hand, we are hoping to see further movement on the project.  Only time will tell.

Within the plan, as submitted, we determined Secret Lake Park was the best location for the proposed Casselberry Skatepark.

During a recent meeting with a supportive City Commissioner, we learned of their interest in developing an unused area adjacent to the Casselberry Golf Course.



We love the idea.  It has parking, is centrally located and visible, is nearby a trail head that connects a lot of neighborhoods to the east and there is a snack bar at the golf course clubhouse where drinks and food can be purchased.

We'll see where the idea leads as work on the Casselberry Skatepark continues in the future.

Until then, keep sending the City Commission letters or emails detailing your support for bringing this project forward and making the Casselberry Skatepark a reality.

Email Casselberry City Commission

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Would It Get Used?

So far, the "Number 1 Question" that has been expressed as a potential roadblock to The Casselberry Skatepark project getting approval and funding has been...

"Will it really get used?"  

We took a little trip over to Longwood's Candyland Park to check out the modular skatepark the other day to see what kind of use its getting.

The skatepark there is less than desirable.

Their modular steel ramps are not very well thought out in their placement.  As a result, there is no flow.

The number of users on a nice fall afternoon resulted in a lot of standing around and waiting by everyone.

Simply put; with a lot left to be desired, the Candyland Skatepark is very well used.  In the hour and a half we were there we saw 18 skaters come and go along with 7-8 bmx'ers.

The Casselberry Skatepark will be much larger, planning indicates a minimum of 10,000 sq. ft. should be built.

The park is expected to be concrete construction and its design will be through input from the skate community, so expect great things.

When all of the effort is rewarded, we know one thing is for sure, it will be very popular and it will be used a bunch.

The folks that need to know this are City of Casselberry Commissioners.  Please email them to let them know the construction of a Casselberry Skatepark is an important issue that needs immediate attention.

Click the Link Below:

Email Casselberry City Commissioners 


Monday, November 9, 2015

Be Involved at the Local Level - Skate & Advocate

The reality of local government is that only a very few people are involved in making changes for all of us.  You ca neither sit on the sidelines and worry & complain or get involved and see a difference being made.

Casselberry, Florida has no skateboarding options for the estimated 3000 skateboarders that call it home.

By being involved on the local level we're starting to see that change.

Our first accomplishment in the journey to see a Casselberry Skatepark took place at the last Casselberry City Commission Meeting.

Please join us in our journey towards more success and the eventual construction of the Casselberry Skatepark, we'll need your support to make it happen.


Thursday, November 5, 2015

Help Build A Positive Community Gathering Place

Every year on June 21st the skateboarding community celebrates worldwide with Go Skate Day.

Take a look at the wonderful event that marked the occassion at Orlando Skate Park  in 2015

Orlando Skate Park Photo Stream

There you will also find out how skateparks across the state were visited by a group of youngsters that spent their summer at Skate Camp.  Camp was mobile one week, take a look at all of the images to see the different skateparks they visited.

With the help of positive and growth minded residents here in Casselberry, we'll soon have the same type of place where our residents can build their own positive space; The Casselberry Skatepark.


Thursday, October 29, 2015

City of Casselberry - Casselton Drive Skate Dot

With the recent approval of the Casselberry City Commission, design of the Casselton Drive Skate Dot will begin.

One of the goals of the design may be to incorporate a piece of skate art into the project like any one of those shown below.





It could be one of them or several.  The most important component of this project is getting support and demonstrating it clearly to the City Commission.

We continue to need a Skate Dot Ambassador from the neighborhood immediately adjacent to the proposed site on Casselton Drive.

Contact Us Today if you would like to help deliver a high quality Skate Dot to the community.

If you've seen a skate element that should be considered, forward it to us & make sure to plan to attend meetings that will be scheduled to discuss the design further.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

WANTED: South Casselberry Skaters

Last night, October 26, 2015, the City Commission directed City Staff to include a Skate Spot in the ongoing design of the Casselton Drive Improvement Project.

During a public workshop for the preliminary design, a resident who uses Casselton Drive daily expressed the need for a safe alternative to the street for the skaters she sees most afternoons.

While the actual construction is still over a year away, (Late 2016 - Early 2017) the time for making sure the skateboard friendly design elements make it into the final design starts now.

Wanted:  South Casselberry Skaters


We need supporters of our overall mission to bring a free skatepark to Casselberry in the southern end of our great town to step forward as ambassadors for this smaller project.

 Support a Skatepark in Casselberry


If you live in the southern end of Casselberry, you know that park amenities are non existent.  The linear park space being created is small, yet perfect for a skate dot project.

We have plenty of yard signs available, if you need one or a few, simply send us a message on Facebook: SKATE 32707 or email us from this blog.

We encourage HOA's to contact us to meet and discuss the value a skate spot will bring to the neighborhood and the Casselberry community at large.



    

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Cause & Effect: A Casselberry Skatepark Will Be Popular & Well Used

Casselberry, FL has a robust Parks & Recreation Department that offers plenty of traditional activities and venues for its citizens.  Over the past few decades, skateboarding has grown in popularity across the country seeing participation rates increase, while traditional sports have seen their numbers decline.  Despite this trend, Casselberry remains without a skatepark.

Within the Casselberry City Limits there are approximately 800 skaters based on current demographics and skateboarding participation rates.

If the area of influence a Casselberry Skatepark is expanded to include neighboring cities and unincorporated areas that share our border that are also without a skatepark facility, the number grows  to approximately 3,600 skaters.

Currently, the residents who skate for recreation are left to either skate the streets, parking lots or wherever they can find a space.

The status quo needs to change.

One of the ways that we're trying to influence the City of Casselberry to bring a skatepark to our city is to increase awareness to our mission.

Signs like these: 

Lead to signs like this:




We're starting to see support from our elected officials, so we know public support is working.

More importantly, communicate your desire to have a skatepark to each City Commissioner in person at events, email them and voice your support at Commission Meetings.  

We will have a Casselberry Skatepark, its simply a matter of time.

Keep up the effort, its working.






Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Updated Map of Potential Skatepark and Skate Dot locations in Casselberry Florida

Providing a skatepark in Casselberry is a positive move that will provide a growing population that engages in skateboarding as a part of their everyday lifestyle.

The positive impact to the city, both culturally and economically will be vast.

There are many locations within the city that lend themselves as potential project locations.

Click this link to see where we're looking and what our thoughts are for each location.

Map Link

Continued support for a Casselberry Skatepark is needed.  Sign our Petition:  SKATE 32707 Petition to let the City Commission know you support the project.

Work on including the skatepark in the Parks Master Plan begins soon, be a loud and respectful voice in the future of CASSELBERRY.


Monday, September 28, 2015

Hit-and-run driver sought, 2 skateboarders hurt in Seminole County

Hit-and-run driver sought, 2 skateboarders hurt in Seminole Co.



Just a couple of hundred feet outside the city limits of Casselberry, two young men were struck by a motor vehicle while riding their skateboards along a dark residential street.



Its long past time to take action in Casselberry to provide a skatepark for our citizens to have a safe place away from traffic to pursue their skating.



While this tragic event may not have been avoided even if a skatepark was available, there is no doubt that if having the option to visit a skatepark to skate will allow kids an option of having a safe place, something they do not have today.



Let our elected officials know that we've waited long enough, the time to act is now, build a Casselberry Skatepark.



Friday, September 18, 2015

A Casselberry Skate Dot Possible As Part Of Casselton Drive Improvements

Last night plans for the Casselton Drive improvement project were revealed at a public meeting held at City Hall in order to hear feedback from the public.

Casselton Drive Improvements


The project is a very well thought out plan to change the look and feel of the City's southernmost street to a more appropriate and inviting entry to several residential developments that it provides access to off of SR 436 / Semoran Blvd.

Project Details 

The project will also make much needed repairs to stormwater and drinking water underground infrastructure.  By combining the two, the City staff is hoping to mitigate interruption caused by construction and limit it to happening one time.


The highlight of the effort is to shrink the asphalt covered area of the current roadway and replace it with a green space on the western  edge including sidewalks.

One of the stated goals of the project is to improve pedestrian safety in the area.

During the public meeting one resident of Stonecastle Apartment Homes mentioned twice that the improvements would benefit the many kids she sees in the afternoons that are riding skateboards in the street, allowing them a much safer place once sidewalks are installed.

SKATE 32707 suggested the addition of a "Skate Dot" as part of the sidewalk improvements.  City staff and Consultants working on the design were very receptive to the idea and will work to incorporate the idea into the design.

Example of a Skate Dot


What is a Skate Dot?

A "Skate Dot" is the smallest skateable space possible. Dots are often a single structure and capitalize on existing infrastructure—usually a sidewalk or paved open space. A trash receptacle should be available nearby. Skate Dots can support 3 to 5 concurrent users, one at a time.


Take a moment to contact the City to support the addition of a "skate dot" into the plan.  To do so, email City Engineer, Kelly Brock by clicking on his name.

Public Works is very interested in providing enhancements to the park space & with its limited size a "Skate Dot" would be ideal from a size and cost perspective.

This video shows a Skate Dot in use.



 

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Support Continues to Grow for Casselberry Skatepark

Over the past weekend, our Facebook Page: SKATE 32707 reached 1000 "Likes"

We're now have over 500 signatures on the online petition at Change.org

Our paper petition drive is robust with over 600 names of supporters who would like to see a Casselberry Skatepark.

Our Mayor, Charlene Glancy is actively involved in the effort, having visited 5 skateparks over the past few weeks to better understand the need and process that will take us to our goal, concrete being poured.

We remain hopeful that others on the Casselberry City Commission will take their first step to become more involved.

There is no downside to the project.  Really, its that simple.

Continue to talk with neighbors, family and friends about the Casselberry Skatepark.  Your efforts are being recognized.

Put a sign in your yard.

Call or write the Casselberry City Commission.

Promote the project on Social Media.

More than anything, get out there and Skate!


Thursday, September 10, 2015

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Celebrating 75 Years of Casselberry - The Community Minded City

SKATE 32707 is gearing up to see a skatepark built in Casselberry in order to provide its citizens, especially the many at risk youth that call it home, with another recreational outlet.  Skateboarding is growing in popularity nationwide and its millions of participants are under served as a whole with very few skateparks available.  As a result, skaters are left to fend for themselves in the streets.

In 2014, the #1 mechanism for skateboarding deaths in Florida was collisions with motor vehicles.  In fact, it was the sole cause of fatal accidents involving skaters.

In Casselberry, skateboards are prohibited in city parks and on city owned land.

SKATE 32707 is a grassroots campaign to change that, by advocating for the site selection and construction of a skatepark in Casselberry.

We are proud of our Casselberry roots and will very soon be making available yard signs that celebrate our 75th Anniversary as a City as well as support for the Casselberry Skatepark.

Front

Back


If you would like a sign for your yard, follow SKATE 32707 on Facebook to learn where we will be distributing them.

 

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Where Would The Casselberry Skatepark Be Located?

One of the first questions after "When is the City building it?" that we're hearing is:

"WHERE?"

There is plenty of existing city owned space that would work for a skatepark location in The City of Casselberry.

We recently took a look around and picked five locations that we feel have enough positive attributes to make them viable site locations.

Some are better than others, but in essence the purpose of the exercise is to show parcels that are appropriately sized (.667 acres - 1+ acres) to accommodate a skatepark roughly the size of Cocoa Beach Skatepark or Zephyrhills Skatepark which are good examples of a community size skatepark.  Both of these parks are co-located within existing parks.

Cocoa Beach Skatepark


To see the map, click on the link below.

Casselberry Skatepark Locations Map




Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Go Skate Day 2015

Go Skate Day is Coming!

Skateboarding Citizen
Casselberry, FL United States
Jun 9, 2015 — Every day is a great day to grab a board and skate, but every skater looks forward to June 21st every year because it marks the first official day of summer and is Go Skate Day. Skateparks and Skate Shops across the world will host events to encourage and support skateboarding with contests and giveaways. Orlando Skatepark is currently undergoing renovations and will re-open in time to host an event to showcase the skateparks' new features. Cocoa Beach Skatepark, New Smyrna Beach Skatepark and many others across the Sunshine State will be hosting events as well.

You wont see one in Casselberry, yet. With everyones continued support and advocacy, we will soon. The Casselberry Skatepark is going to become a reality with everyones hard work. Keep talking about it, posting signs of support in your yard and emailing the City Commission. Remaining top of mind in a positive and community minded way will lead to our success.

Take a break when you have the time to spare and watch the attached documentary: Forgotten Youth

It highlights efforts to build a skatepark in Pensacola and is a powerful and uplifting story. Its exciting to see business leaders and elected officials involved in the process rather than avoiding it.

Have a great summer!

New yard signs are arriving soon. Message us if you want to show your support for getting our kids off the streets and into a park and build a community that supports everyone.

#concretechange #pouritnow #skate32707
Forgotten Youth

Forgotten Youth
Following an up coming professional, who happens to love skateboarding, and his quest to build a skate plaza in his hometown of Pensacola, Florida. A large demographic is being overlooked...
https://vimeo.com/

Monday, May 25, 2015

Casselberry Skatepark Progress

The idea of a Casselberry Skatepark was introduced to the current Casselberry City Commission in March of 2015 during public comment at a regular meeting of the Commission.

The response at that time, from two of the members of the Commission was to show that there was community support for the skatepark.  They also agreed to discuss the idea at the upcoming Budget Workshop.

In the month that followed, petitions began circulating and a Facebook page for SKATE 32707 was made.

Channel 13 News ran a story about the skatepark idea and tidal wave of support was felt on Facebook as a result.

We Will Have A Casselberry Skatepark


At the regular commission meeting following the Budget Workshop, again the skatepark was introduced in the public comment period.  The response from Commissioners was varied after the City Manager hastily advised that a skatepark was not part of the City's Parks Master Plan.  The two supportive Commissioners continued to speak in favor of discussing the skatepark further and recognized the support that was growing, sending a message that the "wheels were turning", referring to the possibility of having a skatepark included in the Parks Master Plan.

The following day, it was learned that the City of Casselberry did not have a Parks Master Plan, only a "draft" plan that had not been adopted since it was made in 2005.

As we prepare for the journey that we are confident will end with the construction of a Casselberry Skatepark, keep a positive attitude and demeanor when discussing the issue.  We will prevail, even if it takes a little longer than we would like.

With a couple of Commissioners already "friendly" to the issue, we need only truly find one more to make it a reality.  We will strive to do so by sharing the facts about skateboarding and how it delivers positive community values and instills a work ethic that breeds success.  If that doesn't allow us to prevail, we know where the ballot box is and we'll make a change for a positive future there.

Keep talking about SKATE 32707, keep signs in your yard, wear a shirt to support the cause and let our community's youth know we care.  The path to victory may be a long one, but we will see concrete being poured and kids in a safe place off the streets in short order!

Keep Sharing:  Online Petition For Casselberry Skatepark

 


Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Team Pain Skateparks Interview Regarding Casselberry Skatepark Advocacy

Original Content:
http://teampain.com/2015/05/the-need-for-a-public-skate-park-in-casselberry-fl-exclusive-interview-with-skate-32707s-larry-littrell/



Q) Hey Larry, let’s start with a brief introduction.  Tell us a bit about yourself and what you’re trying to do for the community of Casselberry, Florida?

A)  I’m just an average, everyday guy that has been given one of life’s greatest rewards, being a father.  I grew up in rural East Tennessee and it was there on a neighbor’s farm where I learned a lot about how hard work and dedication is rewarded.  As a father, I am dedicated to doing whats best for my son and the community he calls home.  When he asked for a skateboard two years ago, I had no idea it would lead to where we are today, asking our local elected officials to dedicate space and resources towards constructing a skatepark in the community.  Despite having been involved in soccer, he gravitated more towards skateboarding over time.  I think a lot of the reasons why were due to being able to choose when and where he wanted to participate, rather than having a schedule he had to keep with practices and games.  At the end of the day, I wanted to make sure he was outside, engaged in an active lifestyle and skateboarding was delivering that and more.  As he became more invested in skating we began spending a lot of time at skateparks.  Unfortunately, they are not where we live and call home.  To get to a quality, concrete skatepark we were forced to travel to Orlando, Oviedo, New Smyrna Beach, Cocoa Beach and beyond.  Staring through the windshield, fighting your way through traffic gives you plenty of time to think.  The thought that kept creeping into my mind was; why don’t we have a skatepark in Casselberry?  That recurring thought lead me to begin investigating how to make it happen.



 You’re the mastermind behind SKATE 32707 can you explain what exactly this grassroots effort is and how it all came to be!?

A)  I’m pretty sure if you mentioned my name and mastermind to any of my friends, you would get a chuckle or two.  My initial approach to our City Commissioners regarding the idea of a Casselberry Skatepark was a simple email that detailed the lack of a facility for skateboarding in the city as well as pointing out that all of our city parks actually have signs announcing the prohibition of skateboards being used in the parks.  I asked what we could do as a community to change that and included a recent feasibility study from Ocala, FL as an example that provided factual information regarding the issue, participation rates and how they were planning to address the obvious void in their recreational offerings to correct it.  I received only one response from a Commissioner.  In it she invited me to call her to discuss the issue further.  It wasn’t the most productive call at first, but over the course of it, I was able to listen to her fears and offer answers that helped to somewhat dispel her misconceptions about skateboarding and skateparks in general.  We ended the conversation with her encouraging me to take the next step and come talk to the City Commission during public comments at the next meeting.  That’s exactly what I did.  In the three minutes I was given, I laid out the current lack of skate friendly recreation space in our community and asked what could be done to change it.  I acknowledged the great job our city has done with recreation  over the years and simply pointed out that as times have changed and skateboarding’s popularity has grown, the city should endeavor to meet the community’s changing needs.  In response to my comments, the Mayor and a Commissioner spoke favorably in support of building a skatepark, so long as there was community support.  SKATE 32707 was born at that moment as a way to begin advocating for and demonstrating support within the Casselberry community and beyond.



You mentioned there’s no immediate skatepark in the community of Casselberry, how does this affect the local skaters/bmxers ability to progress in their chosen sport? Would you say having to travel outside the community, almost an hour or more at times, to skate a well designed and built park puts these young skaters/bmxers at a learning disadvantage compared to  skaters/bmxers in other communities that have a free well built and designed skate park?

A) I’ve had a front row seat for the past two years watching my own son as he’s progressed from a shaky kneed kid wobbling along, arms spread trying to get his balance and tackle his first transition at a skatepark to more recently seeing him display drive and determination to tackle dropping into a bowl, carving it and pulling off a trick that he’s been working to land for hours.  Watching his progression, compared to other kids of his age that live near a skatepark has been a clear contrast.  He’s being left behind.  Sadly, its not because of effort, its the amount of time he gets to spend doing what he loves.  Driving in the late afternoon in Orlando isn’t convenient, everyone knows that all too well, so going across town daily to get to a skatepark isn’t a reality.  As a result, he gets to skate a park a lot less and it shows.  Further, he has friends at school who have skateboards and they’re even further limited to their driveways; they’re not even able to go to the neighborhood park in Casselberry where its outright prohibited.  My son and every kid in our community deserve better.  They’re a product of their environment and their generation skates.  The mission of SKATE 32707 is to shine a light on those facts and get our community to grow in a positive way to be inclusive of our youth and provide them an appropriate recreational space; the community skatepark.



Q) Would you say that this is fair? I mean there are baseball fields, basketball courts, and football fields all over Casselberry but no skatepark? We live in a country that preaches freedom, justice and equality for all but yet skaters and bmxers seem to fall through the cracks?? How do we fix this problem?

A)  Casselberry points out on the city’s website that there are 17 parks across the city offering a full range of recreational opportunities for an active lifestyle.  You’re absolutely right, they’ve got all of the so called traditional sports covered as well as offering some really progressive things like canoe and kayak rentals for a fantastic paddling trail through several of our local lakes.  I love what our city has done in the past, its just time to re-calibrate their vision for the future.  Skateboarding is the second fastest growing sport in the United States and while plenty of other communities have recognized it, we’re still behind the curve here in Casselberry.  More so than falling through the cracks, skateboarding has apparently been black listed in our community based on what I see on signs at all of our parks.  That has to change.  The only way to fix it is to tackle the issue head on at City Hall.  Everyone there, from the elected officials to the staff, works for our community; we have to do a better job letting them know what is needed and to be unyielding in getting it delivered.

Q) So let me get this straight, the city of Casselberry has 17 parks across the city for traditional sports and even canoeing/ kayaking but doesn’t seem to see the need to build a public skate/bmx facility? But yet skateboarding is black listed and banned from all parks and most areas in the city?

A) The City of Casselberry has an extensive number of parks of all shapes and sizes for many different user groups, even dogs. Despite greater participation rates than Little League baseball, they haven’t seen skateboarding & bmx as a recreational priority historically.  The focus over the past few years has been developing what they call passive use parks and bike/walking paths.   Even in light of some desperate kids who built extensive bmx ramps on private property a few years ago, they saw it as a nuisance and spent thousands of dollars to shut it down, rather than recognize it was a large user group that has no home in the city’s parks.  It’s really frustrating to know that plenty of other cities have recognized the growth and popularity of skateboarding and leapt at the chance to include a skatepark for their youth, only to have Casselberry flinch at the idea and make every effort to stall and delay even having a public conversation about one; including using a non-existent Parks Master Plan as an excuse for why it’s not possible.  It’s simply disingenuous when we’ve watched the City Commission make an unexpected expenditure of over $200K to purchase land to expand a park where skateboarding and bikes are prohibited, this year alone. The process has lost its way, with meetings held at times inconvenient to work schedules and elected officials who would rather lecture the citizens they are supposed to represent on how government works, rather than initiating an open and transparent discussion where the issue can be studied.  In total, I’ve been allowed to speak 6 minutes in the past two months in an effort to have Casselberry study a skatepark, an idea which is well supported by a growing number of city residents who agree, the kids need to be off the streets and have a park where they’re welcome.  Every day that passes without that dialog beginning, is another day our kids are denied equal access to their city’s parks.



 Q) You’re 100% right skateboarding is only growing and we need more skate friendly areas to accommodate this growth.  I’ve been skateboarding for 19 years and in my home town we didn’t have a public skatepark either. This forced us to skate the streets or build our own obstacles, which usually led to us getting heckled by cops/security guards, getting citations, and even having our home owners associations tell us we were not allowed to build ramps and obstacles in our own backyards.  This seems to be an issue of fairness, and in the big picture we’re kind of backed into a corner. We’re told not to skate on the streets, if we build our own stuff we’re told to tear it down.

Do you think if the city officials of Casselberry do provide a public skatepark for the community it would decrease the amount of skaters/bmxers getting into trouble for not having a proper place to partake in their chosen sport and in the big picture have a positive impact for the community?

A)  There is no doubt it would decrease the potential for our neighborhood kids getting in trouble.  I’ve had the awesome opportunity to talk with lots of them and they are so desperate for a space they can enjoy and call their own without fear of who is going to come around the corner to run them off.  They’re just good kids that want to skate or ride, it that simple.  The positives a skatepark will bring to Casselberry is going to surprise even the critics that will surely surface as plans move forward.  The discipline, focus and determination that it takes to learn tricks becomes part of the kids who are out there pushing hard to land them.  The lessons they learn at the skatepark will make them better citizens and successful business owners in the future.  Beyond the character building that happens, I know that our community will benefit from the visitors that will make Casselberry a destination just for a chance to skate our park.  Restaurants, convenience stores and local shop owners will benefit from the money spent by skaters who will visit from around the state.

E) That’s a wrap Larry, thank you for your time and your insightful words of wisdom.  Hopefully the city officials of Casselberry will recognize this need and in the interest of fairness make this skatepark a reality for the community. We wish you the best of luck on your mission with SKATE 32707 and as fellow skateboarders we thank you for your commitment. The skateboard community needs more dedicated people like you that care and create the spark!!



Sunday, April 26, 2015

Media Coverage for Casselberry Skatepark

http://www.baynews9.com/content/news/baynews9/news/article.html/content/news/articles/cfn/2015/3/29/casselberry_skate_pa.html


Larry Littrell spent much of Sunday at one of his son Wyatt's favorite spots: a skate park in New Smyrna Beach.
But Littrell's family lives in Casselberry, and they would prefer not to have to make the hour-long drive every weekend to have their fun.
"He can't skate much during the week," Littrell said. "A lot of the kids he's met and skated with over the last two years have gotten much better because they've been lucky enough to live in a town that has a skate park."
Casselberry doesn't have a skate park, and skateboarding isn't allowed at the parks the city does have.
"A lot of my friends like skateboarding, but they don't have a park," Wyatt Littrell said. "All they do is go down the driveway."
Larry Littrell is now leading a growing grassroots effort to convince Casselberry city leaders to build a skate park. He recently brought it up at a City Commission meeting.

"So far, I've received positive feedback from the mayor, as well as a couple of other city commissioners — both from their public feedback at that meeting as well as in follow-up emails," Littrell said.
Littrell said city leaders want to see a strong show of interest from the public before moving forward with the idea of a skate park. Littrell started a Facebook page, and it includes Casselberry's zip code. It already has almost 300 likes, and Littrell hopes it gets hundreds more soon to show high interest in the skate park idea.
"The thing I love the most about skateboarding is that it's all on him, and it's teaching him a life lesson that when he falls down, he has to pick himself back up, dust himself off and get back after it," Littrell said.
Casselberry city leaders begin budget workshops Monday, and the possibility of a new skate park is something they are expected to discuss.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Where Do We Put A Casselberry Skatepark?

From Landscape Architecture Magazine, September 2004

Skateparks at a Dead End

Skateboarding is one of American teens’ most popular sports. So why are skateparks sited where teens can’t reach them?
By Tom Miller

A pile of broken glass lies in the bottom of a four-foot bowl in Canby, Oregon’s public skatepark. A trio of preteens circumnavigates the glass shards as if they do not exist. The skaters explain, “We can’t skate with glass all over the bowl, so we use our shoes to push it all into one place.”
Raise the issue of the skatepark in Canby’s Police Headquarters and heads turn in consternation. Patrol Officer T. Brittain concedes with a field guide of concerns. “The park routinely floods, we see regular graffiti, adjacent businesses complain about property damage from skaters and now have cameras on-site, the helmet requirement is so regularly ignored we could issue exclusionary citations every day. The skatepark has become a hindrance for us.”

What’s up with this place?

Sam Haney, 15, answers bluntly: “They should have put it closer to town.” Like Haney, other skaters are bewildered by the decision to site the skatepark at the terminus of a dead-end road on the industrial edge of town.

Carla Ahl of Canby Planning & Building confirms Haney’s observations. “It has become a place to meet at night for bad behavior. Overall, the skatepark is a good thing, but we could have put a little more thought into its location.”
Canby’s unfortunate situation is all the more striking when one learns that in a state renowned globally for its unparalleled concentration of premier skateparks, Canby’s skatepark, at $330,000, was Oregon’s second most expensive. To understand how this occurred, and how to avoid it elsewhere, a review of skateboard demographics is insightful.

Skateboarding is among the nation’s fastest growing sports. With the International Association of Skateboard Companies counting nearly twenty million enthusiasts its place in the popularity polls is wedged between more traditional—and much better accommodated—sports like soccer and tennis. Skateboarding is more popular among youth ages six to seventeen than baseball.

Yet unlike baseball (or soccer or tennis), there are very few facilities to accommodate skateboarding. Nationwide the number of skateparks hovers around two thousand. A contrast quickly focuses into view: the nation’s cities and towns are unprepared for the waves of skaters flooding their streets, parking garages, and plazas. To cite just one example, Portland, Oregon offers one hundred ninety three municipal baseball fields and just two small skateparks. According to Portland Parks & Recreation, each field is about one hundred thousand square feet
so baseball gets one ninety three million square feet while skateboarders have just sixteen thousand square feet. Put another way, Portland Parks & Recreation devotes twelve thousand times more square feet to baseball than skateboarding, despite skateboarding’s greater popularity among youth.
It appears that skateboarding has kickflipped its way into everyday America and skaters need places to call their own. When officials neglect to provide skateparks, skaters simply make do with the local steps, benches, and ledges. This much Canby understood. Where Canby erred was in allowing the sport’s detractors, rather than its supporters, to determine where and how it would be accommodated.
Canby’s skatepark detractors wanted the skatepark out of sight out of mind. As a result, the town missed the first rule of thumb, which applies universally: skateparks should be sited in high visibility locations. Although skaters can vary from ages five to fifty-five or beyond, the National Sporting Goods Association pegs the average skater at fourteen years of age. The demographic will mature slightly as well-built skateparks encourage longevity among older skaters, but skateboarding is likely to remain primarily the province of teenagers.

When user age demographics are understood, two key skatepark siting criteria become apparent. First, a majority of skaters need to be able to conveniently access the skatepark without dependence on Mom or Dad or mass transit. (Parents are typically working and unavailable to shuttle kids to and from skateparks.) Mass transit is fine where available, but often non-existent in some towns and sporadic in others. The closer to schools or other youth centers the better.

Second, it is important to acknowledge that teens—skaters or otherwise—can be prone to doing foolish and sometimes dangerous things. Adult supervision is critical, but the kind of adult supervision is even more important. When possible, siting skateparks within existing high use areas, such as busy parks or near town centers, establishes the best patterns of oversight. A steady flow of spontaneous spectators and passersby creates consistent de facto supervision which rewards skaters with a needed sense of community inclusion as well as safety and security. By contrast, forced surveillance in the form of de jure supervision can direct a town’s skatepark budget away from needed skatepark square footage and immediately establish an unproductive “them versus us” attitude between skaters and city officials. Encouraging community policing of the skatepark through site design has proven to be the cheapest, most effective way of ensuring youth use the facility for the park’s intent: skateboarding.

Dan Hughes of Renton, Washington, who has twenty-six years of skateboarding experience, notes that skateboarding for the past twenty years has largely been an alternative recreational undertaking. Property owners, city officials, and others in the mainstream have long frowned upon skaters. Non-accommodation has calloused skate culture with non-conformity.

Canby’s decision to site the skatepark on the edge of its industrial zone was the result of the “not in my backyard” effect. Neighbors to more centrally located community lands felt uncomfortable with the prospect of an unknown recreational use close to home or work. The skatepark became the ugly duckling nobody wanted nearby, and the skatepark’s feared impacts were predetermined as a result.
By contrast, in San Jose, California, long a hotbed of skateboarding, police and city planners worked with Dreamland Skateparks to determine the best site for a skatepark. San Jose’s CPTED process determined that the ideal location for a skatepark for police is one that can be passed and observed from the ease of their own vehicles. By reducing the supervisory presence from on-site oversight to simple drive-bys as necessary, San Jose’s police believe they will decrease inevitable unease that occurs when skaters and police meet face to face.

Design Matters

Good visibility is critical to a skatepark’s success, but high quality design is just as important says Carter Dennis, director of the San Antonio Skatepark Coalition in Texas. Proper design helps to establish respect at and for the skateparks because it attracts older, more mature skaters who have a clear appreciation for the privilege of a skatepark. Adult skaters tend to be comparatively more proficient than teens and their combination of age and ability sets the tone and example for other users. “Skaters need to be excited about their park’s potential if you want them to care for it. You have to hire designers who actually skate. And I don’t mean ‘used to skate.’ I mean, they skate today; they know what’s going on in skateboarding right now.”

Steve Gump, a 40-year old skater and father of two who frequents Newberg, Oregon’s skatepark, supports Mr. Dennis’s suggestions. “No amount of non-skater supervision can replace the calm efficiency of adult skaters self-policing the skatepark. We regulate by example. It’s a cultural thing. But it only happens when the parks are good enough to attract skaters of all abilities, including the older generation. I don’t waste my time at poorly designed parks that don’t challenge me. Each park establishes its own behavior. If you want older, more responsible skaters out there, you need to design for us too. That means providing terrain that challenges high level skaters.”

Visibility and design help to select the best site for a skatepark. Knowing how many will skate and frequent the skatepark may be equally valuable, as the number can surprise even recreation professionals. A recent survey directed to skatepark managers through the National Parks & Recreation Association revealed that the single most common complaint among skatepark managers is that they did not build their skateparks large enough to meet need. As a result their parks are overcrowded and unsafe, which translates into skaters inevitably returning to the locations they used to skate prior to the establishment of the skatepark.

So how many will skate? Counting hands at community meetings rarely provides an accurate assessment of how many will use the skatepark. There is the challenge of getting youth to city meetings. Another is the indifference many young adults have today for government process; even if they can attend they may be unlikely to bother. Further complicating matters is the reality that skateparks will necessarily be destinations more regional than local until each community has provided its own facility. With just two thousand spread thinly across the nation today, skaters will be traveling across city lines to share skateparks for years to come. And because each skatepark is unique—more like a golf course than football field—skaters will always travel to “session” something distinct, no matter how many skateparks are provided.

Unfortunately no known data collection exists to determine the number of skateboarders in any given area. One crude but approximate measurement to gather a number of local skaters is to extract a local number from the estimate of twenty million nationwide. The US Census reports over 292 million residents nationwide. The International Association of Skateboard Industries suggests 20 million Americans skateboard, so 7% of Americans skateboard. Assuming Philadelphia, Pennsylvania has an equal share of that percentage, more than 105,000 of Philadelphia’s 1,500,000 residents skateboard. Philadelphia is at the forefront of skatepark controversy today with the city’s decision in 2002 to render inaccessible to skaters “Love Park” (aka JFK Plaza), a city plaza globally renowned for its unintentionally attractive skateable elements. Inevitably, that decision prompted outrage among local skaters who began to organize and lobby for skateparks. The city is currently in the process of planning a million dollar plus investment in skate facilities. While there is no established guideline for skatepark size, if Philadelphia employs a standard based on Oregon’s acclaimed parks—about one to two square feet of skateable surface per resident—that investment will initiate the beginning of continued financial support for city skateparks in Philadelphia.

Once a reasonable guess at the number of expected users is generated and high visibility sites are identified, some communities favor sites that offer opportunities to expand in the future. Given skateboarding’s burgeoning growth over the last ten years it is unlikely many communities have the financial resources to meet the skatepark need all at once. As the nation’s youth trend away from traditional team sports to more individualized activities like skateboarding, developing skateparks in phases can be a wise move. A practical way to develop skateparks in phases is to ensure the sites selected allow for expansion.

While developing a successful skatepark can be a challenge, it need not spin communities new to the process like a Tony Hawk 900. By taking into careful consideration the three key elements of high visibility, proper design, and adequate size that compliment the traditional environmental concerns such as topography, subjacent support, and drainage already familiar to landscape architects, city decision-makers are well poised to provide superior skateparks for their communities. The kids get it. Canby skateboarder Haney ponders the glass in his bowl and offers, “We don’t want hassles with cops and whatever. We just want to skate.”

References
“The Makings of a Skatepark,” Landscape Architecture, April 2004.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Why Support A Casselberry Skatepark?

1. The skatepark will provide a safe place to recreate.
A majority of the deadly accidents that happen to people while they’re skateboarding involve a motor vehicle. In towns and cities across the nation the most interesting terrain for skateboarding is found in the streets and sidewalks. The skatepark will be the safe place to skate but for it to be effective it must be more interesting than what’s out “in the wild.”
2. Skateparks, if designed and constructed correctly, are fiscally conservative and require very little maintenance.
When a skatepark is built correctly it will require virtually no structural maintenance for years. The nation’s oldest skateparks have been servicing skateboarders for 30 years and most have required little more than cosmetic maintenance. For a skatepark to meet this high expectation it should feature no fixtures; all of the materials used that are intended to be skated on should be fixed into the forms with grout and concrete. (In other words, skateparks that require no maintenance have no kick-plates, screws, bolts, or other components that will loosen through vibration and weather over the years.)
3. Skateboarders are currently under-served in the area.
As a community we understand that we need to support our youth who wish to pursue active, healthy lifestyles. Without community support those groups are required to build their own support systems outside of our community. Do we want to sit by while a significant portion of our youth meet their recreational needs with no support or involvement from our community?
4. Skateboarding has millions of participants nationally and is growing while team sports participation is in decline.
When one considers that skateboarding is the third most popular recreational activity for kids between 6 and 18 years old, it might be assumed there would be skateparks all across our community. We have baseball fields, soccer pitches, jogging paths, and plenty of other places for people to be active. Yet we have no skateparks! It’s time to address the needs of today’s recreational youth.
5. Skateboarding is a 2.5-billion dollar industry.
For decades skateboarding has been on the leading edge of youth marketing. Today it’s serious business with lucrative video games, television shows, and brand names that launch dozens of product lines. With all of this marketing, more kids than ever before are eager to learn to skate. The demand is enormous and skateparks are the place to start.
6. Skateboarders are a vital part of urban communities.
Skateboarding has been a commonplace feature of the urban environment for over 40 years, and a part of American culture since the 1950s. It’s so popular with youth that today there is no city on the planet that doesn’t have it’s own skateboarding group of kids. Our local skateboarders are not part of a fringe group of kids who are into something unique and uncommon.
7. A skatepark can attract skateboarding tourists if designed to do so.
Dozens of skateparks in the United States—and abroad—enjoy a reputation for being places that skaters dream of visiting someday. For skaters, places like Burnside, Kettering, Orcas, Louisville, Black Pearl, Lincoln City, and others share an allure that rivals Disneyland.
8. With national health issues looming for today’s youth, it’s time to offer a greater number of healthy, athletic choices.
You don’t often see obese skateboarders. Lots of skateboarders skate several times a week and often for hours at a time. There is clearly a commitment for these kids to develop their skills, yet they do this without coaches, leagues, and often without even an appropriate place to do it.
9. The low cost to participation makes it accessible to everyone.
Skateboarding is inexpensive and is economically feasible to any family’s financial situation. While hand-me-down equipment is commonplace, even a new skateboard can be purchased for around $60 and last for years if taken care of. That’s all a person needs. There is no additional equipment, no “green fees,” no travel expenses. To get into skateboarding one only needs a skateboard and a place to do it.
10. Thousands of other communities understand the value of skateparks.
If they had the opportunity to do it again, when asked what they might have done differently with their skateparks many Parks directors claim they would have made the skatepark larger. When skateparks are designed to succeed, they succeed wildly. If you contact any Parks Department with a successful skatepark, they will rank it as one of their most popular, well-used facilities. (Seriously, try it!)
11. Skating in a park is much safer than skating in the streets.
In 2006, 42 people riding skateboards died. Of those, 40 of them were not in a skatepark and 27 of those involved a motor vehicle. In other words, of these 42 deaths, 40 of them might have been prevented had the person been skating in a skatepark instead of the streets.
12. Our community already has hundreds, and maybe thousands of skateboarders.
The skatepark visitors are ready to go. We don’t need to wait and hope that patronage emerges over time. They are here now.
13. In the future there are going to be many legitimate places to skate in the city. The time to embark on that positive future is now.
Creating a skatepark in our community is inevitable. It’s only a matter of time before everyone comes to understand the opportunity skateparks represent. There is no reason to delay the investigation any longer. The time to start this process is today…right now.
14. A skatepark is a place where skateboarders and other people who might not cross paths in the street can come together.
Skateparks are social spaces that will attract interest from all parts of our community. In cities across the nation the local skatepark is a landmark that everyone is familiar with. Our skatepark will include amenities that visitors can enjoy so that it’s understood by eveyrone—skaters and onlookers—that we appreciate and support what these kids are doing.
15. Skateparks can displace other less desirable activities in an area.
Skaters love skateboarding. That’s what they’re into. For the dedicated skater, any activity that disrupts their time skateboarding is going to be a problem…and few obstacles will prevent the skater from pursuing it. When skateparks are built in places where there are existing problems—criminal activity, vandalism, and so on—the skaters will serve to displace those people who prefer a remote, secluded environment.
16. The skatepark can be an attraction for family outings.
It is increasingly common to see families skating together. Often, a mother or father that skated in their youth has their interest rekindled when their children get into it. It’s a great way for a family to spend time together yet without requiring a lot of planning, expense, or preparation.
17. Skateboarding is cool and the skatepark will enhance the community’s reputation.
There’s no doubt that skateboarding is often at the center of whatever happens to be popular among today’s youth. For lots of people, spending time at the skatepark will be something cool to do that doesn’t cost any money. For our community, having a great skatepark will serve to show the region that we understand how to engage our young adults.
18. Good skateparks have volunteers to help maintain the facility.
The central members of the skatepark committee will become the stewards of that facility. As skateboarders dedicated to the park, we will work with Parks to host lessons, workshops, and other events. We will be at the skatepark regularly and will protect the facility that we’ve worked so hard for.
19. Skateparks can draw skateboarders away from less appropriate areas.
If we don’t have a skatepark, people will continue to skate wherever there is compelling terrain. We should put the skatepark where we want there to be activity and away from those places where we don’t.
20. Young and old people enjoy skateparks.
Skating has been a part of our culture for more than 50 years. There are skateboarders well into their 50s who still enjoy pushing around a park. The skatepark is a place where the young and old can recreate together as equals. This is important for adult skateboarders but equally important for the younger set.
21. Skateparks support vibrant, healthy communities, just like many other athletic facilities.
Every good skatepark has a group of regular patrons. These people may not know each other socially outside of skateboarding but at the skatepark they are friends and colleagues. The brotherhood of skateboarders has strong bonds that cross economic, geographic, and even language barriers. Skateparks are a great way of starting that kind of social cohesion right here.
22. Skateboarding is mainstream.
With 13-million participants in the U.S., skateboarding can hardly be characterized as a niche group of special users. In fact, skateboarding is as popular (and often more so) than most “all-American” sports. We see skateboarding in commercials. There are television shows about skateboarding and starring famous skaters.
23. Skateboarding is a popular spectator sport.
There are more than 2-million skateboarding videos on YouTube with many featuring over 5-million views each.
24. Skateparks are flexible in design and can work in many different size plots.
Donald, Oregon features one of the nation’s most well-known skateparks. It is 2,500 square feet, cost $35,000 to build, and serves a town population of 750 residents. Yet it attracts celebrity skateboarders and others from across the nation.
25. The skatepark will be a place to go after school.
For skaters, the skatepark provides a third place in their lives. For the most dedicated skaters they will spend most of their free time at the park. The skatepark will have the amenities necessary for providing a comfortable place for its visitors, including secure places to drop a backpack, set a bottle of water, or just sit and relax.
26. Neighborhood skateparks allow younger skaters to recreate safely close to home.
As a matter of public safety we prefer to have our children recreating close to home or in places that are safe in the public eye. That is why our skateparks should be near where the skaters live.
27. This skatepark effort will turn skaters into community activists.
While some people may consider skateboarders the dregs of society, we will see their passion applied to phases in the process that will rival any other community action group.
28. There are experts who will help our community plan the skatepark.
The people behind the world’s most successful skateparks are available to help us plan for our own success, and they’re eager to be involved. With so much experience at our disposal we are confident that our new skatepark will be phenomenal.
29. The best time to start the new skatepark is today.
It costs us nothing to begin planning for the new skatepark. However, those plans will become a catalyst for local youth to engage in the civic process. The only thing we need right away is a commitment to mutual collaboration on the new skatepark plans. There is no value in delay.
30. If a city doesn’t have a skatepark, it is a skatepark.
Skateboarding is happening with or without a skatepark. By not supporting our local youth with a skatepark, it doesn’t mean they’ll quit skating. It just means we are putting them at risk of injury and run-ins with law enforcement.

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Its Time To Make Some Changes:

Skateboarding Is Still a Crime, But the Sport Is Admirable
Laura Beth Nielsen

More than 25 years after I met and fell in love with my skateboarder boyfriend-now-husband, skateboarding is still a crime. When he takes our sons Zach, 16, and Skyler, 13, skateboarding in our home town of Evanston, just north of Chicago, they still are met with the possibility of tickets and fines up to $500 for skateboarding in the wrong place. Those wrong places include any municipal garage, parking lot, street, certain sidewalks, and on any planters, curbs, benches, ramps or rails. And yet, with the launch of spring, more skateboarders will be headed outside to practice their sport.

Even more insidiously, my sweet but long-haired kids are subject to the continued supervision, tacit disapproval, and even harassment by police officers, business-owners, and ordinary people for their choice of sport. That is even though it is a sport exemplifying the values of sportsmanship, dedication, perseverance, and determination that we celebrate in hero-athletes like NFL great Joe Flacco and and the college athletes we are watching this week in the NCAA basketball finals.

Skateboarding emerged in the 1960s, developed by surfers for an activity when the ocean waves were no good. It took off and was perceived as a money-making fad by big business in the 1970s. But skateboarding is a profoundly difficult and technical sport, leading many skaters to give up, and institutional backers pulled out. The primary skate magazine,Quarterly Skateboarder, was published from 1964-1965, and was revived in 1975 as Skateboarder only to fail again in the early 1980s.

In the 1970s and '80s, cities enacted ordinances prohibiting skateboarding, skate parks were filled in, and people who had fallen in love with the sport of skateboarding were left with nothing more than their skateboards and the curb in the local grocery store parking lot. And then only until the manager shooed them off his private property. That's when skaters started to create their own culture, networks, and commerce from the ground up.

For the next 50 years, skateboarders developed a largely independent sports industry now estimated to include more than 11 million skaters supporting a $4.8 billion market in the United States alone. The National Skateboarding Association was established in 1981 and the first X Games, which featured skateboarding, were held in 1995. By 2011 the X-games had an estimated U.S. viewership of 37 million and a world-wide audience of 232 million people in 192 countries. Now, even non-skating kids do not remember life before the X-games,Tony Hawk andThrasher Magazine. At least one public school in North Dakota has even added skating to its physical education regimen.

And yet Evanston, like other college towns, will not consider a skate park as part of a new recreation center. No university has a skatepark, though the University of Maine is considering one. A planned skate park in Skokie, Ill., the town adjacent to Evanston, was scrapped despite support from the Chamber of Commerce and Chief of Police.

Because there is a city ordinance prohibiting skateboarding on the street in Evanston, walking down the street with skateboard in hand can lead to a conversation with the police. They ask skaters to fill out "contact cards" in order to create a record of interactions with police -- documents that are, at the very least, constitutionally suspect. Yes, in the summer we can take the train to an outdoor park in Chicago. But in the winter, we are left driving 75 miles to Milwaukee to practice our sport.

Resistance to skateboarding and skateboarders at the local level despite the commercial and corporate success of the sport are astounding. Companies such as Fallen, Anti-hero, SpitFire, and Independent support the sport as well as more mainstream corporations like Vans and Nike.

But I am not just a rabid skate-mom, who wishes my sons could practice their sport closer to home and wear their skate logos without judgment. I also am also a Northwestern University sociologist of law who is trained in participant-observation and makes a living observing and analyzing social interactions.

As any soccer mom, basketball mom or football mom knows, having two kids who practice the sport means I've spent lots (and lots and lots) of time in skate parks all around the United States and parts of Europe. And what I observe is a sport practiced by dedicated and enthusiastic young people who should be admired, not scorned.

Skateboarders are dedicated; they show up to practice, rain, shine, or snow (if they have a place to do it) without a schedule. No coach tells them when to arrive, how long to work, or what the next trick is.

And yet they make progress. Even when the next trick involves staring down a 7-stair jump, dropping into a bowl that secretly terrifies their mom, or trying a 360 flip to manual for 12 years before landing it, skaters keep at it.

Skateboarders have a unique community; they teach, coach, learn, practice, and regulate their practice area silently but effectively. If you have ever watched skaters at a skate park, you know that two skaters cannot drop into the bowl at the same time. Avoiding collision in the bowl is crucial to avoid a trip to the hospital. And yet, no queue is formed because everyone wants to start their run from a different place in the park. Somehow, an unspoken arrangement plays out where everyone gets their turn.

When newer skaters show up who don't yet know the arrangement, they are gently guided, then chided about how to assess the park and determine whose turn is next. Better skaters coach weaker skaters saying things like, "your weight needs to be forward," "bend your knees more," or just, "try man." No one thinks twice if the more advanced skater is 8 years old and the skater getting the advice is 45.

Skaters are independent and self-sufficient; the sport is built on American principles we hold dear. It is practiced by independent trail blazers with unshakable belief in their athleticism and their sport. They gently enforce a set of guidelines for the benefit of the greater whole with the elders firmly but fairly guiding the next generation.

Despite these admirable qualities and the development of a sport that everyone wants to watch on television, communities still refuse to support this sport and skaters continue to be viewed as trouble. Skate institutions (like my own family's summer home away from home,Lake Owen Camp), are shutting down. Police stop skaters while business owners and citizens shoo away these athletes with thinly veiled threats. .

To be sure, some skaters want to be perceived as outsiders. Rebellion is part of the allure of the sport. But this edge has emerged because of the continued wholesale rejection of the sport and its athletes. And, despite the stereotype, skateboarders are no more likely to smoke pot than any other teenage boys.

It's time to make some changes. When a skater is practicing on a curb or stairwell, stop and admire his or her grace and athleticism. Compliment the trick. If your baby is sleeping or you are in a meeting and the noise is bothering you, consider explaining this to skaters rather than simply yelling, "I'm calling the cops!" Then, encourage your city to build a skate park (or at least don't protest it) because, as the skaters will tell you, "if your town does not have a skate park, then your town is a skate park."

Laura Beth Nielsen is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Law at Northwestern University, Research Professor at the American Bar Foundation and a Public Voices Fellow through The OpEd Project. She can skate flat in heels, roll into a bowl, and never, ever pushes mongo.

Skatepark Advocacy Inspires Casselberry Youth

Seeing the issue of advocating for a skatepark in Casselberry, Florida inspire a couple of teens to spend the day traveling through the neighborhood seeking supporters for the SKATE 32707 petition is nothing short of uplifting.

Active sports like skateboarding and BMX teach lessons that translate well to real world success and  they are clearly evidenced here as well. 

To get the attention of our elected officials at Casselberry City Hall, SKATE 32707 is going to make the issue of bringing a skatepark to Casselberry top of mind until there is positive movement towards that goal.

Despite being given an initial answer of "show us support for the idea"; despite clear & obvious support, the goal line was moved forward without any clear or achievable finish line.  Instead, our request became the catalyst for the creation of a Parks Master Plan, something the city has not had nor studied since 2005.

No different than learning the next trick on a skateboard or bike, we're going to stay focused, continue to work & persevere.  We know this: its not if a skatepark will be built, its a matter of when.

The kids of Casselberry deserve their own place where they can enjoy skateboarding and BMX.  Its tiem to get them off the streets and into a park.

With determination and focus like the kind displayed by our youthful supporters today, we will succeed in seeing our goal achieved.


Friday, April 17, 2015

Support for Casselberry Skatepark Building

The idea may have only recently risen to the top, but in a month's time community support is growing.

Almost daily, signs of support are springing up in the quiet neighborhoods of Casselberry, Florida.

Support a Skatepark in Casselberry


Adults and kids of all ages are excited at the prospect of seeing their sport of choice receiving funding to build a skatepark.  As the second fastest growing sport in America, many other cities across the nation have seen the need and applied a policy of equal access to recreation funds beyond so called "traditional sports".  As Casselberry, Florida moves forward to improve their city, in hopes of attracting new residents, the addition of facilities like a skatepark for residents who engage in a healthful and active lifestyle will only serve to support that bid.


Monday, April 6, 2015

Sign Our Petition

SIGN OUR PETITION FOR A CASSELBERRY SKATEPARK

We need community support to leverage the City Commission into action.  For years tax dollars have been spent providing facilities for so called "traditional" sports.  Most recently, $1.3 Million was spent to complete a one mile bike and walking trail.

A skatepark is needed in Casselberry.  Lots of kids are stuck with nowhere to skate because they are unable to travel to nearby cities to enjoy a skatepark.

Its time to change that and bring a skatepark to Casselberry.  Support providing our city's youth with a first class facility for their active lifestyle choice.



Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Support The Casselberry Skatepark

Building a free and open skatepark in Casselberry is going to take community support. 

SKATE 32707 is a leading the effort to advocate for a skatepark with our elected officials on the Casselberry City Commission.

The most important thing that you can do as a supporter of skateboarding and a new concrete skatepark in Casselberry is write a letter or email to the Casselberry City Commission voicing your support.

SKATE 32707 has sample letters available if you need.  Contact us via email or message on the SKATE 32707 Facebook page.