Ice Chalet to close
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Parents are fighting to keep open the Ice Chalet Skating
Rink, which announced it will close in 16 days after 28 years as a
community treasure and a training ground for a number of Olympic ice
skaters.
“The rink is really an asset to the city and, if it closes, it will be
a real loss,” said Claudia Gardner of Costa Mesa. “This place doesn’t
look very nice, and they say if they had more money they could modernize
it and attract more skaters and hockey players. Providing an ice rink is
an important thing for the city because it helps keep kids off the
streets and gives them something to do. And the skaters at this rink get
the city a lot of recognition.”
Gardner is one of a group of parents who signed a petition urging the
city and C.J. Segerstrom & Sons -- the property owner -- to save the
skating rink.
Ice Chalet officials declined to comment and would not confirm the
closure is a result of financial problems. But parents speculated that
they could try to rally business for the rink.
An Irvine skating arena closed over the summer, and skaters who
previously used that rink have begun to skate at the Ice Chalet, Gardner
said.
“Maybe they would make more money if they waited it out,” she said.
Robert Pesqueira, a Fountain Valley resident whose granddaughter,
Alyse, 13, has been skating at Ice Chalet for seven years, also signed
the petition.
“It will have a pretty devastating effect on us if it closes,”
Pesqueira said. “My granddaughter used to play soccer and skate, but then
decided to give up soccer to devote her time to skating. She skates three
or four times a week because she loves skating. She feels comfortable
here, and she has all her friends here.”
Ice Chalet owns the building at 2701 Harbor Blvd. but leases the land
from C.J. Segerstrom & Sons. Segerstrom officials said the rink just
isn’t making enough money to stay afloat.
“They came to us wanting to get out of the lease early, and we
accommodated them,” Segerstrom spokesman Paul Freeman said. “We hadn’t
raised their rent and weren’t looking to ease them out. Evidently, the
ice rink business isn’t doing all that well. I’m not sure what our plans
are. Obviously, we recently renovated much of the center, so what our
plans would be for any future renovation is not clear yet.”
Parents and skaters agree the rink, which doesn’t have bleachers or
many other amenities, is rundown. But they said they love the rink
anyway.
“I am so sad,” said Stacy Garcia, 13, of Fountain Valley. “I don’t
want to leave. I have friends here, and because it’s a small rink --
other places are more scattered out. . . . This is the first place I ever
skated, and I started when I was 5, so I have a lot of memories here.”
Stacy’s friend Jennifer Bui, also 13, said she doubts she will find
coaches as good as the ones at Ice Chalet at another rink, and she will
miss the coaches and her friends.
Some Ice Chalet patrons said they may not be able to afford ice
skating if the Costa Mesa rink closes its doors.
Michelle Moon of Fountain Valley said she spends more than $800 a
month for her 6-year-old daughter, April, to skate at Ice Chalet..
“I’m not sure if I will be able to drive so much farther away, and
other places are also more expensive,” Moon said. “I think we are going
to lose skating. And she has come so far in the last year.”
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