Editorial
The story is a similar one from community to community: Green space is
becoming scarcer by the day, and youth and recreational sports teams find
the open fields at local neighborhood schools an inviting venue.
The fields are a perfect place for an afternoon or evening game, a
place where families can gather to cheer on their children, and the seeds
of teamwork, camaraderie, fair play and friendship are sewn.
But for the neighbors who live near those fields, well, they tell a
different story.
They see cars darting in and out of their streets and bright lights
illuminating the evening sky. They hear whistles blown by referees, and
the sounds of young children playing. And for many, it’s a situation that
seems intolerable.
Time and again, school and city officials hear the complaints from
residents who don’t want the sports teams using their neighborhood
schools and fields.
But now we, and school officials, wonder if those complaints have
reached a more insidious and dangerous pitch with the discovery that
fields used by AYSO soccer teams at the former Meadow View Elementary
School in Huntington Beach were the target of vandals.
Police are still investigating this crime, and they have no suspects,
but the cold facts and evidence remains that what was once green, grassy
fields, is now nothing more than a large patch of dead, yellow grass and
soil, poisoned by some type of weed and grass killer. Authorities are
unsure but are studying the evidence.
The teams that once played there are now being squeezed onto other
playing fields around the city.
It’s not the first act of treachery the soccer players have faced.
Since the league moved into the area, it’s been plagued with various acts
of vandalism. Broken glass and nails have been spread across the parking
areas, locks to the gates and sports equipment storage bins have been cut
off and stolen, and glue has been poured into the lock tumblers.
Even trash from bins has been dumped and spread around the school
building area.
Whoever is responsible for such acts should not only be caught and
dealt with severely by authorities, but they should be ashamed to have
sunk so low as to send a message to these children and their parents that
they are not wanted.
Don’t get us wrong, we understand the need for neighborhood
tranquillity. We urge residents and school officials to compromise and
find solutions to the neighbors’ concerns.
But we also can’t help but point out that a community that neglects
the interests and activities of its children is begging for trouble
instead.
Youth soccer, baseball, softball, football, swimming and more are all
deeply embedded in our culture. They are time-tested activities that
provide our children with lessons on how to be better adults.
Somehow, some of the residents near Meadow View have forgotten that.
They’ve forgotten that as members of this society, we all have to make
some sacrifices from time to time for the betterment of the whole.
Better to hear the sounds of children playing on soccer fields than
the sounds of gunshots. Better to engage youth in wholesome activities
than to have them learning the ins and outs of the juvenile justice
system.
It’s time to put the selfish and destructive actions of a few aside
and create a constructive and selfless community for everyone.
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