The Department of Parks and Recreation has ruled the all facilities in the parks must be kept open to all including youth batting cages and fields.
What will be the impact of this decision. We guess that means that the new homeless shelters will be at Washington-Lee and Yorktown High School batting cages. Per direction Parks, locks securing the Greenbrier and Quincy batting cages will be immediately removed to permit full public access.
The impact of this decision will be dramatic. The youth softball program, Arlington Girls Softball Association will be forced to remove valuable equipment from Greenbrier and Quincy. The impact will be significant to this program. Yorktown and Washington-Lee High School will have to disrupt their spring softball programs to find shelter for their equipment.
You have to wonder does anyone ever want to discuss before issuing edicts! These programs will recover, but no thanks to the bureaucracy.
The good news is that the Parks Department serves the Community. This is a policy decision that probably needs to be discussed further. If the Community disagrees with this decision or conversely agrees with it, make your thoughts known.
This an effort to bring attention to the inequities for the High School and Youth Sports programs that use Quincy Park Complex in North Arlington. This is a facility that has been neglected for far too long.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Here's One Idea for Quincy Park that has Merit
This plan recently submitted pictured below could result in the redefinition of the park as youth sports facility. By simply shortening the fence distances on the softball field to girls fastpitch and youth baseball dimensions of 200 foot fences, space could be created for public access or even two youth sized soccer fields.
Problems Continue at Quincy Park
Despite efforts to alert the County and Schools to safety and security issues at the ball fields. Issues continue. Today, March 25, 2011 as the W-L Varsity Softball Team prepared to ride a bus to the game at Mount Vernon High School and the Junior Varsity prepared for a home game against Mount Vernon, we got this snapshot of the increased number of vagrants who are populating the Park. We hope it won't take an incident before action is taken.
Monday, March 21, 2011
So What is the Problem with Quincy Park, It looks Good to me?
Arlington Public School ran out of money when rebuilding Washington-Lee High School. Something had to be sacrificed. The answer: no new girls’ softball field, which was supposed to be built adjacent to the new football stadium. That open space is now being used as the lacrosse practice field.
And what’s become of the softball team? Well, they were told they must continue to share an old softball field behind the Central Library at Quincy Park. And share they have - not only with adult and co-ed softball teams, but with vagrants who use the dugouts for shelter and electricity, drug users who frequent the port a john and leave used needles in the batting cage, dog walkers who often fail to pick up their pets’ excrement, and anyone who wishes to do anything on the field. Concerns about security, emergency preparedness, and public health at a site remote from the high school? Don’t worry about that. It’s fine for the girls to cart their equipment from the W-L High School down Quincy Street, across busy Washington Boulevard, and to a distant field behind the Central Library. Out of sight, out of mind.
By far the worst high school softball field in Northern Virginia, the aging field at Quincy Park never was designed for youth softball, and it shows its years. Rusted-encased backstop. Rotting dugout boxes. Rock-hard infield lacking any sort of drainage and built on years of backfill when the site was used as a dump. Rutted outfield that is a hazard to any athlete. No press box or PA system or flagpole in center field for the National Anthem. Yet a “home” of sorts to W-L Girls Softball.
The girls have done their part. In the last for two years, they raised nearly $10,000 to build new batting new cages. This spring they painted the rusted backstop. They forego practices routinely to remove standing water and sweep mud from the infield after it rains.
OK, so what’s the problem? Well, a lot of it has to do with the fact that nobody “owns” softball at Quincy Park. The County maintains the field but has invested little in its improvement and has little stake in supporting a high school softball program.
The Schools want good relations with the County, don’t really seem engaged in issues associated with using a public park for high school sports, and show few signs they are interested in improving the situation.
And what’s become of the softball team? Well, they were told they must continue to share an old softball field behind the Central Library at Quincy Park. And share they have - not only with adult and co-ed softball teams, but with vagrants who use the dugouts for shelter and electricity, drug users who frequent the port a john and leave used needles in the batting cage, dog walkers who often fail to pick up their pets’ excrement, and anyone who wishes to do anything on the field. Concerns about security, emergency preparedness, and public health at a site remote from the high school? Don’t worry about that. It’s fine for the girls to cart their equipment from the W-L High School down Quincy Street, across busy Washington Boulevard, and to a distant field behind the Central Library. Out of sight, out of mind.
By far the worst high school softball field in Northern Virginia, the aging field at Quincy Park never was designed for youth softball, and it shows its years. Rusted-encased backstop. Rotting dugout boxes. Rock-hard infield lacking any sort of drainage and built on years of backfill when the site was used as a dump. Rutted outfield that is a hazard to any athlete. No press box or PA system or flagpole in center field for the National Anthem. Yet a “home” of sorts to W-L Girls Softball.
The girls have done their part. In the last for two years, they raised nearly $10,000 to build new batting new cages. This spring they painted the rusted backstop. They forego practices routinely to remove standing water and sweep mud from the infield after it rains.
OK, so what’s the problem? Well, a lot of it has to do with the fact that nobody “owns” softball at Quincy Park. The County maintains the field but has invested little in its improvement and has little stake in supporting a high school softball program.
The Schools want good relations with the County, don’t really seem engaged in issues associated with using a public park for high school sports, and show few signs they are interested in improving the situation.
So who suffers? The W-L softball program. The purpose of this blog is to raise awareness about this problem and to facilitate a dialogue on ways to improve the situation. It’s truly a matter of equal treatment and fairness. If we can afford a new synthetic field and football stadium for the boys at W-L, why can’t we give girls’ softball a good home? Yorktown has a beautiful, secure new baseball-softball complex at Greenbriar Park. Wakefield will have a new complex in 2012. Bishop O'Connell, a private school, is asking Board approval for a “refreshment” to improve its field. Only Washington-Lee remains the forgotten high school when it come both to baseball and softball. Let’s change that - no longer out of sight, out of mind.
Why is Quincy Treated Differently!
At other high school stadiums the fields are designated for youth sports requiring a permit to play on them. As evidenced by this photo of Greenbrier Softball complex at Yorktown High School.
Quincy Park, though home Washington-Lee High School Baseball and Softball as well as youth baseball and softball is not affored the same equal provisions. Instead of field monitors, the dugouts are used by homeless as shelter.
When Arlington County Parks and Recreation who managed the facility were asked to comment, the response was 'they must keep the park open to all!' When will the programs at W-L be afforded the same accomodations as their sibling schools?
Quincy Park, though home Washington-Lee High School Baseball and Softball as well as youth baseball and softball is not affored the same equal provisions. Instead of field monitors, the dugouts are used by homeless as shelter.
When Arlington County Parks and Recreation who managed the facility were asked to comment, the response was 'they must keep the park open to all!' When will the programs at W-L be afforded the same accomodations as their sibling schools?
New Batting Cages Constructed
Here you see the recently completed batting cage, built by funds raised by Washington-Lee Girls Sofball through various fund raising activities and donations from organizations, such as the SW Arlington Lions Club, Good Foods Inc, the Arlington Girls Softball Association and the Vienna Stars Travel Softball program as well a number of individuals who believe in providing for youth sports in Arlington. More photos can be found at the home of Washington-Lee Softball, http://www.generalssoftball.net/
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