Skateboards
may roll in Key Peninsula parks
By Danna Webster, KP News
Kids who live on the Key Peninsula need something they
can drop in and do, something that is not organized. A
skate park is good for kids of all ages. That is the
belief of Chuck West. Building a skate park for KP kids is
his dream.
Back in the early ’90s, the West family took a vacation
and, while traveling through Idaho, stopped at skate
parks. West’s 12 year-old-son, Zech, loved doing maneuvers
with his skateboard. He noticed the kids in Idaho were
real good skaters, thanks to all their practice at the
parks. Zech wanted to know why the peninsula didn’t have
anything like that.
If
you’d like to help
Chuck West has a rare truck to raffle
for the fund, a 1977 Leata, one of three
prototypes for the 43 Leatas eventually
built in 1978. Leata information is available
at www.Leata.com.
Sound Credit
Union in Key Center has a Zech and
Adrienne West Memorial Fund, where
donations can be made. The fund-raising
committee meetings are held on the third
Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at
the fire department in Key Center. |
When the family returned, West contacted the park board
and the board offered half of the tennis-court area for
skating. Some fund-raising efforts brought in $25,000,
which was used to build a small, wooden half-pipe for the
skaters.
With the middle school next door, there was lots of
interest. But as the kids grew older, and the wooden
half-pipe deteriorated, interest faded for most of the
kids. But not for Zech. He carried his love for the sport
with him as he entered the Navy and he drew crowds in
Italy when he rode his board.
Tragedy struck the West family last summer, when Zech
and his new bride, Adrienne, were killed in a car accident
shortly after their wedding.
Chuck West, a captain with the Key Peninsula Fire
District, watched his family and himself go through the
phases of grief and tragedy for which he was trained to
help others.
“As soon as something bad happens, I start resolving to
do something to stabilize things,” says West. “I didn’t
have any anger.”
But he was looking for some resolution. Zech’s skate
park became his focus. It was what he wanted. “After he
died, I needed to resurrect that, make that happen — make
it permanent,” West says.
“I want to do something permanent that will be here for
my lifetime and beyond, as a memorial to Zech and
Adrienne. And I want to do something for the community,
too, and the kids here. I’m tired of seeing kids playing
in the parking lots.”
West says baseball built Volunteer Park but it is time
to add more options for kids. He wants a skate park with a
concrete-only skate area, with restrooms, good parking and
a small-kid play area — where a family can come with older
and younger kids.
Last year, West began the research. He talked with the
Gig Harbor city manager and with the mayor about their
skating facilities. His was initially directed to a spot
at Volunteer Park (KP Sports Center and Fairgrounds). It
is a good location, but with the planned Department of
Natural Resources land acquisition on the north side of
the peninsula, there are two attractive locations to
consider. West says the KP Metropolitan Parks board has to
make those decisions. A metro-park survey showed high
interest in a skateboard park. West doesn’t think anyone
on the park board is strongly against it.
The new director for the KPMPD, Scott Gallacher, says
the park district has agreed to look at the idea and do
research with West. Gallacher says a skate park is a “very
complicated project with all the necessary collaboration
of many different partners.”
“It’ll take some time,” he says. “We need to plan… make
sure we’re looking for not just today and tomorrow but for
15 to 20 years.” According to Gallacher, KPMPD wants it to
work and the main questions are about location and
timeline.
West says it is time to get the community involved. “I
need kids who will use it to be involved with the design
process. I need the whole community involved to apply for
grants… Different groups to help raise money. Once the
design is in hand, we can apply for grants,” West says.
He hopes that different organizations will be liaisons
to the park district and help find resources. “I’d like to
see this progress within the year,” he says.
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