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Skaters
unite
Friends
push park proposal to City Council
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Justin Hayes does tricks on his skateboard at Jackson Park. Hayes
is part of an organization called Hendersonville Kids Alliance to
Skate that is trying to get a skate park built in Hendersonville.
(Mike Dirks / Times-News)
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In February, five teenage friends launched Hendersonville
Kids Alliance to Skate, in an effort to bring a
skateboarding plaza to Hendersonville.
A web site about their proposal is located on the Internet
at
www.skatehendersonville.com |
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If you give Zac Cawthorn a skateboard, he can
pull off a body variable pop shove-it 180 without flinching. And yes, it’s
as difficult as it sounds.
But speaking before the Hendersonville City Council on behalf of
skateboarders, that’s a whole other matter.
Zac, 15, and four friends pitched plans for a skateboard plaza to the City
Council on Thursday night. He was a little nervous taking the podium in
front of 30 people.
That’s because the meeting was the culmination of months of work for Zac,
Chris Merker, 16, Justin Hayes, 14, and twin sisters Amy and Jenny
Mathison, 16.
But in the end, Zac had no reason to be nervous. The teens came prepared,
citing everything from shop owner surveys and state liability laws to
medical journals and city ordinances.
“Your findings from the survey speak volumes about the direction we need
to go,” Mayor Greg Newman told the teens. “What I’d like to do is see what
is possible for us as a city to provide, and I think we’ll take a very
serious look at it.”
The teens, who met through the Henderson County Homeschool Association,
share a love for skateboarding. They say they also share a problem — there
is nowhere to legally skate in Hendersonville.
So in February, the friends decided they would take action. They formed
the Hendersonville Kids Alliance to Skate and hashed out plans to bring a
skate plaza to their hometown.
“There’s nothing to do in Hendersonville,” Zac said before the meeting.
“We pretty much skate at each other’s houses, and anywhere we can get
permission. If you skate, you have to practice. We need somewhere to
practice.”
Zac kicked off the presentation by inviting city leaders “to see
Hendersonville through the eyes of the skater.” He cued the city clerk to
play a video, and soon the ‘70s song
“Signs, signs everywhere there’s signs,” blared as NO SKATEBOARDING signs
flashed on the screen — one in front of the Visitor’s Center, another in
front of the Post Office, others outside churches, doctor’s offices and
the library.
It was only part of the pitch.
Before the meeting, the friends collected petition signatures. They made
T-shirts, created a logo of a man skateboarding. They handed out fliers.
They even launched a Web site,
www.skatehendersonville.com
The teens went door to door downtown, collecting signatures and support
from merchants. Thirty-six merchants signed on, including shop owners who
have had trouble with skateboarders on Main Street. The teens behind the
Kids Alliance to Skate say they do not condone misbehavior and would not
tolerate it at any facility they support.
Barbara Hughes, the president of the Downtown Hendersonville Merchants
Alliance, urged city leaders to support the teens. The prospect also
gained support from Executive Director Lee Henderson-Hill and the board
members of Downtown Hendersonville Inc.
Henderson-Hill conducted a survey downtown, in which 65 of the 69
respondents said they would support the skate plaza.
“We see this as a win-win for everybody,” Henderson-Hill said.
Amy quoted state laws that said the city would not be held liable for
accidents at the skate plaza. Chris discussed the social benefits the
skate plaza would bring, Jenny talked about the health benefits of the
sport and Justin presented city leaders with the plans for the first skate
plaza, built in Kettering, Ohio.
The teens even issued news releases to the media.
“According to recent statistics, in 2002, there were about 16 million
skateboarders and an estimated 400 public skate parks,” one release said.
“That number is up from 11.5 million skaters in 2000. Incidentally there
were only 9 million little league baseball players in the U.S., yet most
cities with multiple baseball fields had yet to build skate parks.”
The plaza would differ from the common skateboard park. It would hold
obstacles for street skating — stairs, ledges and rails skaters could
grind and jump. But it would also host green space and landscaping.
“It’s a place they can have festivals, music,” said Priscilla Cawthorn,
Zac’s mother. “It’s for all ages, a park for all ages.”
When it comes to money, the teens are exploring corporate sponsorship from
the skateboarding industry and other companies. Grants are also available.
The skate plaza that opened last year in Kettering, Ohio, cost $600,000,
the tab covered by a professional skateboarder, the town and a shoe
company. A photo of the Kettering skate plaza can be found on the teens’
Web site, plus a national news article about the unique center.
“If we get this, it will be really big,” Zac said. “People all over
America will come to it.”
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