Sterling Skater Is Man on a Mission

Loudoun County's Only Skate Park Is in Leesburg. Not Cool, Some Say.

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 15, 2007; Page LZ01

With rap music thumping in the background, 18-year-old Joe Adams jumped on his skateboard and made a beeline for the highest half-pipe.

The setting was on the sterile side -- an indoor basketball court at the Sterling Community Center, outfitted with portable ramps, rails and ledges. But for the 50 or so skateboarders who showed up for the competition Saturday afternoon, it was a rare chance to enjoy their sport somewhere that was close to home and completely legal.


Steve Jefferson, 18, wants Sterling to have a skate plaza. He has met with Loudoun County parks and recreation officials to promote the idea.
Steve Jefferson, 18, wants Sterling to have a skate plaza. He has met with Loudoun County parks and recreation officials to promote the idea. (By Joel Richardson For The Washington Post)

"You don't have to worry about being caught here. There's no limits," said Adams, a Potomac Falls High School senior.

The competition included sessions for skaters of various ages and skill levels, as well as awards for the highest and farthest ollie. But the event was also about giving voice to the needs of an underserved community.

Steve Jefferson, 18, who organized Saturday's affair, is trying to draw attention to the lack of legal skateboarding spots in Eastern Loudoun. Jefferson, a Park View High School graduate studying Web design at Northern Virginia Community College, took up the sport when he was 11 and is now a sponsored skateboarder.

He said he and many other teenagers in Eastern Loudoun often must resort to skating on curbs, on park benches and in parking lots, irritating local business owners and public safety officials. The county's only skate park is in Leesburg.

"I usually street-skate around business buildings, and I always get kicked out," said Jefferson, who lives in Sterling. "I felt like something should be done, and nobody had done anything besides in Leesburg. So I decided to step it up."

Jefferson's campaign began last year with a petition circulated at local schools and businesses. The document drew more than 1,000 signatures from adults and youths supporting the construction of a skate plaza. In recent months, he has met with Loudoun County parks and recreation officials to promote the idea.

There is precedent for what he is trying to accomplish. The construction of Catoctin Skate Park in Leesburg started with a group of Leesburg teenagers who built community support and worked with local officials.

Jefferson wants not only to bring legal skateboarding to another section of the county but also to create a different kind of facility. He said that unlike Leesburg's skate park, which has ramps and boxes specially designed for the sport, the skate plaza would consist of stairs, benches and other elements found in a typical urban environment.

Loudoun County's chief parks planner, Mark Novak, is among the officials who has met with Jefferson. Novak said he recognizes the need for legal skating spots in Eastern Loudoun and has told Jefferson he is willing to explore possible sites that are county-owned. One advantage of skate plazas is that they can be converted at night into venues for concerts and trade shows, he said.

Novak said the problem with the project, as with any such undertaking, is the cost.


CONTINUED     1        >

© 2007 The Washington Post Company