Family Time -- Steve Smith
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“I know we’ve come a long way,
We’re changing day to day.
But tell me,
Where do the children play?’
-- Cat Stevens
On Wednesday, I received a call from my good friend Dave Miller
checking to see whether his Little League Marlins could use the Minor B
division field for their practice. The team I am managing, the Cardinals,
was scheduled to use the field that day but during the Easter -- sorry,
spring -- break, attendance is spotty.
I told Dave that regardless of who showed up, we could practice
together and we agreed to meet at 4:15 p.m.
If our two teams were two businesses, Dave, Marlins manager John
Sullivan and I would not be talking to each other. You see, after the
first four preseason games, the Marlins and the Cardinals are the only
two undefeated teams in the division. Our first official league game is
next Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. against each other on the same field on which
we just practiced.
I know Dave well and I know John a little, and as competitive as we
all may be, it stops cold once it comes to setting the right example for
our players. What the children saw on Wednesday was two teams playing
together and four coaches -- Larry Hill was with me -- instructing
players from both sides. I bet half the kids thought we were nuts, but
man we had a lot of fun. Dave even managed to shag a few fly balls in
center field, courtesy of his son, Adam.
The problem was not the lack of attendance -- the Marlins offered
eight kids, we had four -- but the lack of available playing fields. It’s
a problem here and in Newport Beach Really By The Sea.
In both towns, one controversy that will not go away is the lack of a
skateboard park. Long overdue for an appearance here in Costa Mesa, a
skateboard park has become a pawn in the petty squabbles at City Hall.
I’m waiting for Chris Steel to offer to trade a job center for a
skateboard park.
While the city searches for the absolutely fantastic, positively
perfect location, skateboarders continue to make use of whatever else is
available. Often, it’s dangerous. Enough is enough, folks. Stop the
bickering and micro-managing and stop injecting your personal feelings
into the debate and give kids the darn park.
There is now another park crisis looming, one of epic proportions
mostly because it will dictate where and when our kids play the organized
sports on which we have come to rely so much.
For the last 14 years, Kim Pederson has worked for the parks
department for the city of Newport Beach Really By The Sea. For the last
two years, he has been a member of the Costa Mesa Parks Commission. Kim
is the guy who helps keep the grass green in Newport Beach. When he’s off
the clock, you can find him at any of the various Little League baseball
diamonds, working to ensure that children have a nice place to play. His
two kids are knee-deep in sports.
Kim’s concern is that we’re running out of places for children to
play. “Soccer has come on like gangbusters,” Kim told me. “And more girls
are playing, which is great to see because now all children are playing
sports.” But all that extra involvement has strained a parks system that
was shallow to begin with.
The answer, Kim believes, is to form an alliance among the various
youth sports organizations and meet with the city and the school district
to provide more places for children to play. “I don’t want kids shooting
each other,” Kim said. “I want them playing sports, whatever it is.”
I’m with Kim. Playing organized sports solves a lot of problems, some
having to do with crime and some having to do with getting the exercise
and social involvement that kids need more than ever. In an age when
sitting in front of a TV or computer screen for hours each day passes for
acceptable childhood behavior, we need to start kicking kids outdoors
more and onto the fields we can provide.
At 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the downtown community center in Lions Park,
the city of Costa Mesa is hosting its second meeting to discuss the parks
master plan. A consultant hired by the city to identify the problems is
conducting the workshops to inform the public of the situation and to
encourage community input and involvement.
This is not a Little League versus AYSO issue or a sports versus city
issue. We’re all facing the same challenges, and I believe we all want
the same thing. I urge all of you to attend, even if you don’t have kids,
and tell the city that we’d like more space dedicated to places where the
children can play.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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