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| ROLLING WITH THE BUNCHES:
(Article from BGCT - Baptist
General Convention of Texas) |
| Church opens skate park |
By Mark Wingfield
Managing Editor
CORPUS CHRISTI--Local businesses told them to scoot. City leaders
put the brakes on their requests for help. But now, a church has stepped
forward to help the skateboarders of Corpus Christi.
First Baptist
Church of Corpus Christi opened its $90,000 Susie Dugan Skate Park Nov.
9. The skate park was built on church property, between the recreation
center and the main church building. The 8,000 square foot park features
eight obstacles, including two freestanding rails, three quarter pipes,
a half pipe, fun box, wedge ramp, launch box and spine.
Church leaders see
the skate park as an investment in ministry. Local youth skaters
consider it an answer to prayer.
Conflict between
skateboarders and business owners has made headlines in Corpus Christi
off and on for the last several years. When businesses shooed the skate
enthusiasts away from downtown streets, city leaders talked of building
a skate park but never moved forward
on the idea.
"We
were looking for a new way to minister to children in our community,"
explained Mark Nichols, minister of recreation at First Baptist. "We
believed we could be a place where we could tell the kids who have been
told they are not wanted that we do want them."
The
skate park idea originated in a committee and then moved cautiously
through development before construction began. Nichols took the idea to
the church on several occasions, first to ask the church's blessing on
seeking city zoning approval and then to clear the final concept.
The church had to
obtain a zoning variance from the city. Once that obstacle was crossed,
Nichols had to find a way to provide liability insurance, a hurdle some
church members thought might be impossible.
Nichols and Beth Gaddie, a church member who is heading the volunteer effort to develop
and run the park, started investigating and learned about the Skate Park
Association USA, a network of skate parks that provides low-cost
insurance to member entities.
For $100 per year,
the church gets a membership in the association, including liability
coverage. Skaters in the park must pay a $30 annual registration fee and
must complete a training session to gain admittance. Because of a
$10,000 grant from the Rachal Foundation, First Baptist has cut the
actual cost to skaters to $20 per year.
That fee is no
barrier to skaters who are eager to have a place of their
own to twist,
turn, glide and skid. More than 130 skaters signed up and attended
orientation sessions before the park ever opened.
The vast majority
of those skaters are not members of First Baptist Church, and many are
not active in any church.
First Baptist
requires the youth, who typically are between 10 and 15, to attend
orientation with a parent. In those sessions, skaters and their parents
learn about skateboard safety and about eternal security.
So far, 300 youth
and parents have attended the orientation. Three families visited the
church as a direct result of the orientation before their children ever
hit the pavement of the new park.
Funding for the
skate park has come entirely from donations. About half the money was
given in memory of Susie Dugan, a beloved church member and youth worker
who died this year.
The park will be
open every weekday afternoon and nearly all day Saturday. Two church
volunteers will work at the park all the time it is open. Their roles,
Nichols said, will be to maintain safety but also to roll out a
Christian witness.
"We're stressing
to the volunteers that their job is not to protect the equipment but to
build relationships," he said.
He considers the
skate park ministry an extension of the church's already successful
Upward Basketball program, which draws about 500 children and youth
annually. As with Upward, the skate park will combine sports with a
spiritual lift.
The church has
developed a reputation for community service through programs like
Upward Basketball, a weekly free play day for preschoolers, a Noah's Ark
costume party every fall, an annual Easter egg hunt and a Breakfast with
Santa, at which Santa tells young children the real story of Christmas.
Even though First
Baptist offers a number of innovative outreaches to young families in
the community, building a skate park was not a natural fit for the
congregation with more older members than younger. At first, the idea
was a hard sell, Nichols admitted. But in the end, senior adults proved
to be some of the staunchest supporters of the ministry.
The park was built
over what once was a vehicle drive-through and passenger drop-off zone.
Losing that was an additional inconvenience, especially to older adults.
Nevertheless,
Nichols reported, some said: "It's just an inconvenience. If Christ can
be shared with kids, what's an inconvenience?"
Skate park
coordinator Beth Gaddie and Minister of Recreation Mark Nichols have
raised support, built a park, recruited volunteers and signed up
youth--primarily between the ages of 10 and 15--who want a place to
skateboard. This weekend, they opened the gates for the first time. |
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