Trail Skaters

Mike Orr – Trail, BC

AND NOW IN 2011 THE DECISION HAS BEEN MADE TO BUILD TRAIL’S SKATEPARK

http://bcskateboarding.org/2011/08/15/trail-skatepark-2/

August 31st, 2010

  • A well written article by Jim Bailey of the Trail Daily Times…CLICK HERE

August 24th, 2010

  • Although details  of skatepark choices are “secret” good news on the movement…CLICK HERE

Jan 26th, 2010

  • Trail City Council has moved forward on establishing their skateboard park committee membership to hash out the details regarding a future site in town. Read more………
  • The city of Trail will be reviewing the proposal on October 13th. Get down there and show your support. - BREAKING NEWS success with the proposal more planning and perhaps ground breaking 2011.

July 28th, 2009: Trail Rossland News

Trail skatepark idea rolling along

Skater — Ashley Escott, 19, has been lobbying for a skatepark in Trail. The teen now has a petition with more than 1,000 signatures on it. First a location has to be picked and then funding needs to be put in place.

Trail Rossland News

By Trevor Kehoe – Trail-Rossland News

After a few failed attempts at a skateboard park in Trail in the past years, one local skateboarder is pushing forward despite opposition.

Ashely Escott may be only 19 years old, but he understands the need for positive youth activities to keep teens off the wrong path.

Escott has been pushing for a skateboard park in Trail in recent years — learning the bureaucratic processes involved with the undertaking along the way.

Starting a petition recently that has gained thousands of signatures, there is clearly a market for a skateboard park in the area.

“I think skateboarders generally get a bad reputation just because they don’t play ‘organized’ sports,” he said.

“The stereotypes are usually wrong and unfair.”

Escott, who lives in the Waneta area, said that most people who don’t understand the sport think of it as destructive and one that only causes problems.

Misguided stereotypes of skateboarders sometimes portray them as drug dealers, drug users and violent individuals, which is very misguided noted Escott.

“I’m always stereotyped as a punk kid, when most often skateboarders are the most down-to-Earth people I know,” he said.

Despite the roadblock of having the last skateboard park proposal shut out by city council and citizens concerned with the “not-in-my-backyard” attitude, Escott stays positive in hopes the youth of the Greater Trail Area will one day have a place to work on their skills.

“It’s a shame it didn’t work out last time,” said Mayor Dieter Bogs.

“But I think it is possible and I am hopeful we can make it happen.”

Bogs would be excited for a park in Trail after recently visiting the Saskatoon skateboard park and seeing people of all ages hanging around the skateboard park creating a community atmosphere.

Location has been a major issue for the proposed skate park after the initial area suggested between Gyro Park and Sunningdale was deemed unviable.

After a location has been approved by city council, funding is the next step in the process.

Some councillors are concerned Trail may foot the bill for something that will be used by the greater area.

“If there’s going to be kids using this from these neighboring areas I would like to see some funding coming,” said Councilllor Robert Cacchioni during city council.

Support from local businesses, corporations and the community with matching funds from government is often the route that makes a youth skateboard park possible.

Escott said businesses such as the Rotary Club, Kootenay Savings, Red Bull and Teck are some of the players that may make the idea become a reality.

One of the major factors in making the skateboard park happen is the fact that youth in the greater Trail area who don’t play typical sports such as baseball and hockey don’t have an outlet for positive energy when it is stifled by cities such as Trail.

The stereotypes can kill positive action by teens like Escott.

The newest proposed site at Gyro Park on the beach is monitored by surveillance cameras and has all the necessary amenities like the concession stand and washrooms nearby.

The biggest thing standing in the way is the push from council and support from the community.

“I’m excited that the topic is coming up again,” said Mike Kent, community development leader with inner compass innovations.

“People need to know that this will be a positive thing for the community and Ashley has done an incredible job taking this on.”

With all ideas on the table public input is needed for it to be a win-win situation for the community and their youth.

Escott is hopeful that soon teens won’t have to drive to another town to skateboard legally, he notes that skateboard parks actually bring people to cities instead of pushing them away.

July 24th: Trail Daily Times

Teen gathers support for skate park

Ashley Escott collected 1,100 signatures in favour of Trail park

Trail Daily Times

Fri Jul 24 2009

Byline: Valerie Schillaci

Source: The Daily Times

A 19-year-old Trail resident is pushing for a skateboard park and the wheels are turning.

Ashley Escott handed out petitions to Greater Trail businesses about a month ago and has collected a whopping 1,100 signatures, not counting Rossland’s total, for the implementation of a park in Trail.

“I’ve been hoping for it, not really doing anything about it,” he said Wednesday, before he met with Trail Mayor Dieter Bogs and Mike Kent, a community development leader for Greater Trail.

“People are always saying, ‘We need a skate park’ but nobody does anything about it, so that’s why I did.”

There has been a tremendous response from residents, including the mayor.

“Like I told council, you know where my heart lays,” he said Wednesday. But Bogs said this kind of idea has to be supported by local youth, a well-established youth organization and a sponsor.

“He’s determined and dedicated but how much support will he have from young people? I don’t know,” said Bogs. “We need Trail youth attached to a Trail youth committee,” he said, referencing the value of having Kent on board.

“In cooperation with youth coordinators at the Columbia Youth Community Development Centre, Mike Kent will look at bringing the skateboard park idea to the youth advisory committee,” explained Bogs.

This committee already looks at several different aspects of Trail’s youth community and could potentially take the park under its wing.

Last year, the B.C. Healthy Living Alliance devoted funding to a province wide initiative, which sought to improve youth communities across the province.

The $10,000 was granted to the Greater Trail youth advisory committee, which is supported by the Greater Trail youth action team, made up of community stakeholders – including Bogs.

Kent will bring the skatepark idea back to Tasha Henderson, YCDC coordinator, who will introduce the project to the 10 teens on the advisory committee. If there isn’t enough interest, then the group would have to recruit those willing to take it on, he explained.

Kent said it’s not his role to decide whether the project will move forward, it’s up to those on the committee and “not every youth will be keen on the skate park.”

Bogs has his fingers crossed that the group will support this project.

“They are an integral and important part of it. If that group doesn’t see the value . . . it will be disappointing and we’ll have to revisit the whole structure.”

Such a project will also need a signature sponsor, said Bogs, adding that he has contacted the Kinsmen and Rotary clubs.

Larry Plotnikoff, director of parks and recreation, and Trisha Davison, deputy director of parks and recreation also sat in on Escott’s meeting, as they’d be responsible for surveying a potential location if the skate park was given the green light.

An ideal site would be on the Columbia River bank, between Gyro and the boat launch, said Bogs.

The spot is close to washrooms and the Gyro concession, but is far enough from residents. It is also monitored by a surveillance camera and security.

A Trail skate park was an initiative four years ago, but Sunningdale residents shot down the potential location between Gyro Park and Sunningdale.

“There was quite the uproar from residents,” said Bogs. “We do not wish to revisit that location.”

Over the years, residents have argued that a skateboard park would cause loitering, vandalism, and drug dealing, while some have said such a park would benefit area youth.

Escott believes people attach stereotypes to these parks and to those who’d be using it.

“Obviously there are going to be people there after curfew but that’s what security at Gyro is for. This location has everything, we don’t need to build anything but a skate park.”

With nowhere to grind his wheels legally, Escott and other boarders must either stop skateboarding all together or break city laws.

“I skateboard downtown, pretty much where you see ‘No skateboard’ signs,” he said, adding that he also hits the Castlegar skate park whenever he has the opportunity.

“People get scared, they think we don’t have control and that we’re going to hit them,” he says, for those who shake their fists as he rolls by.

Escott has been skateboarding for nearly a decade. He started because “it looked cool” and he thought it would be fun.

He continues today because “it’s fun, keeps you active and keeps you outside.”

“I’ve gotten to know a lot of people because of it. To tell you the truth, I probably wouldn’t have started snowboarding and then I probably wouldn’t have the career I have, as a ski patrol,” he said.

Escott has mastered many tricks, including “heel-flips, front-slides, 180s, 360s, nose-slides” and the most challenging, a 360-flip, when the skateboarder kicks the board to initiate a kick-flip and spins the board backside in a “360 shove-it.”

Escott is keen to work with the city and Kent to get the park in motion.

It’s time well worth it, said Escott, who is finishing high school at Trail Middle School and working part time.

Once he’s done school, he hopes to pursue a career in first aid, perhaps as a paramedic.

Bogs hopes to see Escott’s vision played out, but the city will not take the project seriously without a well-organized presentation and structured approach, he said, adding that a pitch can be made to council in October.

The youth committee will meet next week, where they’ll learn of the potential project.

Youth interested in joining the committee can contact Tasha Henderson, coordinator at the Columbia Youth Community Development Centre, at 364-3322 or email her at coordinator@columbiaycdc.ca

© 2009 Trail Daily Times

4 thoughts on “Trail Skaters

  1. I’m very glad that this is happening again that the idea has once again reemerged. I strongly think with enough support this will happen. cuz i see lots more skateboards in trail now with no where to skate so this is almost a necessity.

  2. Great to hear a voice from the Trail skateboard scene. Get down to the Trail council meeting in October and show your support for Ashley and the skatepark initiative.

  3. In trail it is illegal to to skateboarding, thats neglecting a sport, people have been skateboarding for a long time in trail and you never no a few year there can be sine really good skaters and lots of people like to watch it with no park its unfair.

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