Toronto Star

Fully accessible baseball field slated for Scarboroug­h park

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Harry Barberian has dreams of a field where anyone with any level of physical or mental ability can play barrier-free team baseball.

On Tuesday, the teenager with cerebral palsy was thrilled to help announce that dream will be a reality with Toronto’s first fully accessible baseball diamond.

“I see so many kids in my position who are not active in sport and who become isolated and I think to myself, ‘What if they had a chance to play on a team?’ ” Barberian told dignitarie­s and reporters at Highview Park, near Birchmount Rd. and Danforth Ave., as kids from nearby Variety Village played games.

“Everyone has the right to play and this ballpark will allow kids of all abilities a chance to feel great about themselves, and to experience the thrill of rounding the bases. I can’t wait to see our field of dreams come to life.”

The field will have an infield made of wheelchair-friendly vulcanized rubber. Bases will be flat. Dugouts and other features will be wider than normal. Ample accessible parking will be nearby.

Jays Care Foundation, the charita- ble arm of the Toronto Blue Jays, has pledged $1 million to launch the project, which will also see an aging playground in the sprawling Scarboroug­h park upgraded and made fully accessible. Pathways and washrooms will also be improved.

A City of Toronto spokespers­on said the total cost of the makeover could reach $2 million, but it will happen at little or no cost to the city because the Jays Care Foundation has agreed to fundraise the remainder and support programmin­g at the public park.

Constructi­on could start next year, but no completion date has been set, said Matthew Cutler of the parks department.

Robert Witchel, Jays Care executive director, said Toronto is following the lead of Vancouver, Moncton, N.B., and Ottawa in building fully accessible baseball facilities. The park was chosen partly because of its proximity to Variety Village.

About 2,500 youths with physical or mental disabiliti­es across Canada play in the foundation’s Challenger baseball program — for many, their only chance to be on a sports team, Witchel said.

Baseball gives them a way to be active and healthy but also teaches resilience and self-confidence, he said, adding the Jays Care Foundation would “love” to partner with the city on other accessible fields if Highview Park proves busy and successful.

Barberian, a grandson of Barberian’s Steak House founder Harry Barberian, said he has played catch with family members, but the new field will give him and others an important new opportunit­y.

“We’re going to change the way kids think of baseball, not just for those who can stand, but for those with all different disabiliti­es and abilities,” he said.

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