South China Morning Post

About 1 million residents have no access to sports grounds, report reveals

- Fiona Sun fiona.sun@scmp.com

About 1 million residents do not have access to sports grounds, according to a report by the Audit Commission, which urged the government to improve planning and provision of facilities to make them more user-friendly.

The report, released by the commission yesterday after its review of the provision and management of these facilities, found that the city was estimated to lack 4.6 sports grounds.

The commission had calculated the shortfall based on a provision standard of one sports ground per 250,000 residents, Hong Kong’s total population of about 7.4 million in 2020, and the 25 sports grounds currently managed by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department.

The report estimated that by 2026, there would be a shortfall of four sports grounds, which contain facilities for athletic track and field events, as well as infield turf pitches, even with the expected provision of two new ones in Tuen Mun and Kai Tak.

The average usage rate of sports grounds reached 99 per cent annually from 2016 to 2020, exceeding the target of 95 per cent, with joggers accounting for more than 80 per cent of the total usage, the report said. The rest were used by schools and organisati­ons.

The report also found that as of November 2021, a total of 99 water dispensers were provided in the 25 sports grounds. Among them, only four were for filling water into bottles and were preferred for addressing contaminat­ion concerns, while 55 were drinking fountains. The remaining 40 had dual uses.

The report recommende­d the department step up replacemen­t of drinking fountains to address contaminat­ion concerns.

Currently, only the outer three lanes of the running track of a sports ground can be used for jogging when ball games are conducted on the infield turf pitch, to provide adequate buffer for users’ safety.

But the review found that due to local demand, the outer four lanes, instead of three, in the Aberdeen Sports Ground and the Kowloon Bay Sports Ground were used for jogging.

Meanwhile, the review also found room for improvemen­t in the provision of equipment for emergency use in sports grounds.

After examining three sports grounds – the Aberdeen Sports Ground, the Kowloon Bay Sports Ground and the Sha Tin Sports Ground – the review found that items were missing in the first aid rooms in at least one of them, and notices showing locations of automatic external defibrilla­tors were not conspicuou­sly displayed.

The report made recommenda­tions for the department to better plan, provide, operate and manage the grounds.

Suggestion­s included taking into account the usage rate of these premises for key functions such as holding sporting events, reviewing the arrangemen­ts for concurrent use of infield turf pitches and running tracks, and ensuring the guidelines on the provision of equipment for emergency use were adhered to.

The department said yesterday that it agreed with the commission’s recommenda­tions, and would review and follow up on them as soon as practicabl­e.

 ?? ?? The report wants sports facilities to be made more user-friendly.
The report wants sports facilities to be made more user-friendly.

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