Houston Chronicle

SPARK program working to make area more of a park place

- mike.snyder@chron.com twitter.com/chronsnyde­r

Moms holding their kids’ hands trudged along a footpath, heading home from school to one of the apartment complexes lining a stretch of Spears Road in northwest Harris County. Whatever lay ahead for these children for the rest of the day — homework, dinner, TV, playing with friends — it’s doubtful that a visit to a park was on the agenda.

The nearest public park to this spot is more than 2 miles way, at Kaiser Elementary School in the Klein school district, according to a map developed by the nonprofit Trust for Public Land. Kaiser participat­es in SPARK, a program that makes school playground­s available for public use after school and on weekends.

This site, near the intersecti­on of Spears Road and Veterans Memorial Drive, ranked third among Harris County locations outside the city of Houston in the Trust for Public Land’s assessment of “optimum new park locations” — places where parks are most needed. The analysis took into account not just the proximity of parks, but factors like the number of children in the neighborho­od and the residents’ income levels.

I learned about this research when Ernest Cook, the trust’s senior vice president and conservati­on director, contacted me after reading my May 10 column about access to parks in greater Houston. The column noted that Houston’s vast suburban areas were seeing relatively few benefits from the philanthro­py supporting spectacula­r new green spaces like Buffalo Bayou Park and Discovery Green.

“Generally, it’s true that neighborho­ods outside the city are not as well served as those in the city,” Cook told me.

The trust’s analysis of parks in Harris County, funded by a grant from Houston Endowment, will be a model for similar work in cities around the country, Cook said. Local government­s and nonprofit agencies can use the data to help determine where they should focus their resources.

SPARK parks could be an important tool in the effort to improve Houston’s ranking for park accessibil­ity. In 2015, Houston ranked 58th out of 75 cities studied by the Trust for Public Land; just 45 percent of Houston residents had access to a park within a half mile, a distance considered walkable.

Created in 1983, SPARK

was the brainchild of then-City Councilwom­an Eleanor Tinsley, who died in 2009. Tinsley, a former school board member, was keen on intergover­nmental cooperatio­n, recalled her former aide, Madeleine Appel. Using school playground­s as public parks was a way “to get the city and the county and the school district to work together,” Appel told me.

The late councilwom­an and her staff chose five schools to kick off the program. Today, 33 years later, more than 200 schools participat­e, according to the group’s website.

It would be easier for the families living in the apartment developmen­ts on Spears Road to get to Claughton Middle School, just down the street. But Claughton doesn’t have a SPARK park.

The SPARK program has never recruited schools, according to Kathleen Ownby, who runs the nonprofit that oversees the program. (Ownby is Eleanor Tinsley’s daughter.) Instead, the program has worked with schools whose leaders asked to be included. This strategy has been driven in part by conditions attached to federal funds that pay for improvemen­ts — new playground equipment, benches, picnic tables, lights and other amenities. Generally, these funds are limited to low-income neighborho­ods.

“We have never focused before on the ‘park desert’ theme,” Ownby told me, although the approach may soon change.

The Trust for Public Land’s study found that about one in seven Houston residents, or 317,000 people, had access to a SPARK Park. Eighty-six percent of the users surveyed said the school playground was the primary park they visited.

This was certainly true of my family during the more than 25 years we lived a few blocks from the SPARK park at Travis Elementary School in Woodland Heights. My daughter spent countless evenings enjoying the playground equipment while my wife and I walked around the track, and many a birthday party included some time playing “Red Rover”.

A school playground, of course, isn’t Discovery Green. But SPARK parks can be a valuable part of a strategy to increase access to green spaces throughout the Houston area, and to distribute them more equitably. I imagine the kids in those apartments on Spears Road would be happy to have one nearby.

 ??  ?? MIKE SNYDER
MIKE SNYDER
 ?? Steve Gonzales / Houston Chronicle ?? Reliant Energy volunteers, from left, Mandy Deas, Mark Eddings and Laureen Hicks, help organize items in the toy closet in the Houston Area Women’s Center on Thursday as part of NRG’s Global Giving Day, an annual day of volunteeri­sm. Reliant will...
Steve Gonzales / Houston Chronicle Reliant Energy volunteers, from left, Mandy Deas, Mark Eddings and Laureen Hicks, help organize items in the toy closet in the Houston Area Women’s Center on Thursday as part of NRG’s Global Giving Day, an annual day of volunteeri­sm. Reliant will...

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