The Province

Skate parks open in many Metro cities

Meanwhile, skateboard­ers in Vancouver are still waiting for next phase and the go-ahead

- KEVIN GRIFFIN kevingriff­in@postmedia.com

A skateboard­er who is also a parent of a skateboard­er and a property owner doesn’t understand why Vancouver hasn’t opened its skate parks.

Jeffry Lee said the continued closure of skate parks in Vancouver has sent skateboard­ers into nearby municipali­ties such as Burnaby, North Vancouver and West Vancouver where skateboard parks opened earlier this month.

“I don’t believe there’s any reason to keep skate parks closed as long as, like city parks and beaches, we follow the same rules set out for other sports facilities,” he said.

Lee, 44, skateboard­s with his six-year-old daughter. He lives across from Clark Park in Vancouver. He said the fact the park board has already opened tennis courts but not skate parks tells him that the city doesn’t consider them as sports facilities but as playground­s, which remain closed.

Lee sent an email Friday to the park board about the closure of the city’s skate parks.

On Monday, he received a response that acknowledg­ed the frustratio­n of skateboard­ers but said reopening of skate parks is “based on the cautious and thoughtful considerat­ion” of the park board and city. It said skate parks would be opened in the next phase but did not give a date.

“I didn’t find it particular­ly helpful,” he said about the response.

“I could have guessed that they would eventually open.”

The Vancouver park board reopened two city-owned golf courses on May 1 and 53 tennis and pickleball courts on May 9.

West Vancouver reopened skate parks at Gleneagles and Ambleside on May 8, while Burnaby reopened skate parks at Metrotown and Confederat­ion Park on May 13.

Donna Powers, director of community relations and communicat­ions for West Vancouver, said the province never ordered playground­s, skate parks and tennis courts closed because of COVID-19.

She said in the early days of the pandemic, outdoor sports fields and playground­s were closed by West Vancouver and other cities and municipali­ties “out of an abundance of caution.

“As we move forward and work with the provincial health officer, we know that the province is not asking municipali­ties to close these facilities,” she said.

The skate parks in West Vancouver, she said, have signs that ask people to take their turn and to remember to maintain good hygiene and safe physical distancing.

Skate parks were reopened in West Vancouver, she said, out of an awareness that there weren’t a lot of recreation­al options available for youths.

“We know that we’re in this for the long run,” she said.

“We are going to have to learn how to use outdoor facilities safely.”

 ?? MIKe BeLL ?? Jeffry Lee, sitting outside the fenced-off skateboard bowl with six-year-old daughter Irene Lee, says he wants the Vancouver park board to open skate parks like other nearby municipali­ties.
MIKe BeLL Jeffry Lee, sitting outside the fenced-off skateboard bowl with six-year-old daughter Irene Lee, says he wants the Vancouver park board to open skate parks like other nearby municipali­ties.

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