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Community Commentary:

Tell commission kids deserve room to play soccer

February 29, 2008|By Jeff Braun and Phillip Greenberg

An essential component of a city’s obligation to serve its taxpaying constituents is to ensure that adequate parks and other recreational facilities are readily available to meet the needs of the community.

In Newport Beach, the ever-expanding participation of the city’s youngsters in organized youth soccer leagues is vastly outpacing the city’s ability to provide adequate fields on which our kids can play the game they love.

The good news is that a new active-use sports park is coming to Newport Beach soon. The Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission will review a concept plan for Sunset Ridge Park Tuesday. Located on the northwest corner of Superior Avenue and West Coast Highway, the initial design for the park includes two soccer fields and a baseball field.

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While Soccer Families 4 Newport Fields — a coalition of concerned parents who represent the more than 4,000 Newport Beach youth who play soccer ( www.soccerfamilies4fields.com) — is thankful for the leadership of Councilman Steve Rosansky for placing the park’s development on track, we’re concerned the concept plan for the park doesn’t fully address the enormous needs of our soccer-playing youth. Specifically, the inclusion of a baseball diamond in the park will limit the use of the park by our city’s youth soccer players to the fall only.

Within our respective youth soccer organizations — AYSO Regions 97 and 57 — nearly 4,000 kids from younger than 5 to nearly 19 participate in our fall and spring soccer seasons. But we face a crisis. Newport Beach simply does not have enough soccer fields to accommodate the kids who participate in organized leagues. This is particularly true during the spring, when the city’s youth baseball organizations play on baseball fields that overlap the soccer fields. Our spring soccer seasons are enormously important to our girl participants, who represent approximately 70% of our spring registrants. Absent other choices, spring soccer is vital to their remaining active.

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