Sarah
Swagart may be young, but she knows an injustice when she sees
one. Back when she was an eighth-grader, Sarah decided it was
wrong for young skateboarders to be treated like criminals. Kids
who skated in Oak Harbors parking lots and on its sidewalks
were threatened with fines of as much as $500 and 90 days in
jail. Sarah, not a skateboarder herself, could see that the kids
might be annoying, but they definitely were not in the category
of the thieves and vandals who were given such sentences. The
kids were nobody special, she thoughtjust boys who needed
a place to exercise their sometimes awesome and quite legal skills.
She
formed Nobody Special, an organization whose mission
is to get the skateboarders (who are all boys) their placeand
to get the community to recognize them as good athletes, not
hoodlums.
Architect
Terry Ledesky volunteered to design a skateboard park. But there
had to be some place to put it. Sarah realized that no matter
how much it scared her to speak in public, she had to start talking
if the kids were going to get some land and build their park.
She wrote up a petition for land and got signatures from kids,
teachers, police officers, and even some store owners. Leading
a delegation of 40 kids, she stood before the City Council and
pointed out that the town had baseball fields, basketball courts,
a roller rink and a swimming pool where kids could do the sports
of their choice. What would be so different about accommodating
the skateboarders?
The
biggest problem, besides the kids bad image, was insurance
liability. What if a skater got hurt and sued the city? Sarah
and the skateboarders got information on safety and liability
from other towns that had skateboard parks. The City Council
finally agreed there could be a park next to the public swimming
pool. |