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Kids exiled from playground, $140k volunteer effort wasted as authorities deem park unsafe

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  My first kid adored visiting the local playground so intensely that I leaped at the chance to purchase a rundown triplex about 25 yards from a pair of playgrounds in 1998.  
  I was daily visitor with my kids for about 12 years and still hear joyous "Whee!""Ahhh!" as I sit in my office. It's sonic sunshine usual urban din of disc brakes and industrial hums.
   But a playground comes with perils. My then four-year-old son spent a summer in a clunky cast after breaking a wing attempting to climb the underside of a set of steps (I was compensated $300 by after noting the inadequate layer of wood chips below the structure.)
   I once moved a kid away from a rocking horse swinging back perilously close to his temple. However only once have I seen emergency staff at the playground, and that was to dislodge an oversized kid from a baby swing.
Jessie Maxwell Park 2007
   But the value the playground has provided is inestimable. For families playgrounds are an urban Costner cornfield.
   Family bonding accompanies the play. One of my favourite memories: my youngest daughter displayed incredible perseverance as a toddler making it all the way to the end of the monkey bars.
    However no parent and child can relive that same magic moment: those monkey bars have since been removed, surely for safety purposes. (She went on to become a champion gymnast until forced into childhood retirement by the closure of the Snowdon Theatre, yet another unfortunately local political decision)
   So where to draw the line for safety in playgrounds?
   Logically we should eradicate all potential health perils, but with that logic motorists would wear helmets and our clothes made of kevlar and bubble wrap.
   This all brings me to the bizarre case of Jessie Maxwell Park which was rebuilt with a donation of $140,000 and some great work by a couple of hundreds of volunteers in September 2012. After the fix, organized by a U.S.-based park charity group called KaBoom and Foresters International, inner city kids could suddenly once again play in the abandoned park just west of Guy and St. Antoine.
Jessie Maxwell Park 2014
   But hold the phone: the borough - which presumably oversaw and gave permits for the volunteer work - then came in and ordered all of the work redone for safety reasons.
   The playground? Closed for two years.
   The volunteer effort? Wasted.
   The cash? Down the drain.
   To their credit the borough distracted reporters from this story by turning it into a feelgood tale of renaming a park for a popular local figure. Fine PR spinning, I admit.
   I will repeat: the second playground remake forced the playground closed for 22 months.
   And who suffered? The small children who enjoy running about and playing in playgrounds.
   I'd love to help you son, but you're too young to vote.
   Why would a borough greenlight a playground rebuild only to order it unsafe?
  My attempts to get the report detailing the supposed safety violations have yet to bear fruit but hopefully I'll get to the bottom of this.

The Playground / Michael Rosen


In the playground

At the back of our house

There have been some changes.

They said the climbing frame was

NOT SAFE

So they drained it dry.

They said the paddling pool was

NOT SAFE

So they drained it dry.

They said the see-saw was

NOT SAFE

So they took it away.

They said the sandpit was

NOT SAFE

So they fenced it in.

They said the playground was

NOT SAFE

So they locked it up.

Sawn down

Drained dry

Taken away

Locked up

How do you feel?

Safe?

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