New Skateboard Park at Billy Taylor Park in Mt. Hope Divides Neighbors

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

New Skateboard Park at Billy Taylor Park in Mt. Hope Divides Neighbors

A new skatepark at the Billy Taylor Park in Mt. Hope has divided those who want it there, and those who do not.
A new skateboard park at the Billy Taylor Park in the Mount Hope section of Providence has drawn opposition from neighbors who said they do not want the facility, and were not informed of it ahead of time.

A meeting held Monday night at the Mt. Hope Neighborhood Association that drew nearly thirty people saw heated debate from residents and relatives of the late Billy Taylor, for whom the park is named, and community leaders who spent most of the time listening to the neighbors voice their concerns. 

“I saw guys putting down stakes one days, and I said, “Oh, no,” said Helen Baskerville Dukes, who lives across from the park. “When I asked what they were doing, I thought they said, ’State Park’ - I realized they said ‘skate park.’  I said, why couldn’t this happen at Lippitt Park?  Most of the kids who board are white.  I feel that as a community, we weren’t notified.” 

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Providence City Councilman Kevin Jackson said that a $5,000 from a federal Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) was put towards building the skate park to expose more inner-city youth to skateboarding.

“This couldn’t go at Lippitt Park, there are boundaries for where you spend CDBG money,” said Jackson at the meeting on Monday. “The $5,000 was for the cement, the labor was free.”

In an interview with GoLocal, Jackson said there was support in the community for skate park — but he acknowledged that it would be difficult to get “100% buy-in” from the community. 

“This was something that came me a year ago,” said Jackson. “I want to give our children as many opportunities to do as many things as possible. We’ve got the water park, the playground. This is a $5,000 project with free labor.”

“Was the whole community involved? Were people aware of it?  There definitely were,” said Jackson. “I’m not sure how you get 100% of people on board.  It's a small piece the park.  We can get more donations - Tony Hawk and Lil' Wayne have foundations to help expose children to the sport of skateboarding. In the recent [skateboarding] World Championships, two of eight finalists were Hispanic, two were African American. So 50% were minorities.”

Questions Raised at Community Meeting 

Helen Baskerville Dukes
Dukes, who moderated the meeting on Monday, said she had concerns for the neighborhood kids who used the park, and for the condition of the park if people came in from out of the neighborhood to use it. 

“I saw a younger kid on a scooter, and I said why don’t you go over [and use the park],” said Dukes. “He told me it was being used by older kids and he couldn’t use it.”

Residents raised concerns about safety issues, such as what would happen in the winter as neighborhood youth had used the hill for sledding.

Duke said at the end of the meeting that she believed that good would come from the situation, including more community involvement in the park. 

“Two good things have come of this,” said Dukes. “For a community that’s been that’s been pushed aside, ignored, now we can come together to solve these issues.  If I have to take the time I don’t have, we’re doing to change this community.  This is more work than I have to do.  This park has come a long way.”


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