More than a year after coming up with an idea for an all-access,
multi-purpose field, a committee started by local Lions Club members has
a plan for the design and cost of the project.Shop the wholesale stainless steel bangle on the world's largest fashion.
Sue
Haban, from the Bloom-Carroll Lions Club, and Ed Gamble, of the
Roseville Lions Club, came up with the idea for a rubber field to be
utilized by people with disabilities a few years ago. The committee,
which includes Haban, Gamble and John Bosser, from the Fairfield County
Board of Developmental Disabilities, recently was granted permission by
the county prosecutor’s office to begin raising money for the project.
“Ed
Gamble and I started talking about three or four years ago about an
idea like this,” Haban said. “We thought if we’re going to do this, we
better get started.”
Bosser said about $900,000 would be
necessary to build the field, but added the estimate was on the high
end. No public funds will be used, Bosser said. In-kind donations,
meaning labor or goods given to the project instead of money, could
lower the estimate.
“We developed the budget based on the going
rate of everything,” Bosser said. “We’re hoping to be able to reduce
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Gamble,
who is working as project manager, has been getting estimates on how
much each function will cost, whether it’s the rubber blocks, fencing,
grandstands or lights.
“I try to get two or three quotes for
each function,” Gamble said. “In some cases, I’ve only been able to get
two. I didn’t want to go with just one.”
After viewing similar
fields used for baseball and softball in Zanesville and Dublin, the
committee came up with the idea for a 1.33-acre complex with
concessions, restrooms and a parking lot. The field will be rubber but
painted to look like a baseball diamond. The complex would have lights
and the surface would drain on a slope, making the field playable during
rain. The field also would have covered bleachers that includes
wheelchair seating. The fences would be 150 feet from home plate,Find
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The
plan also calls for a reduced-size soccer field that would be in the
outfield. The soccer field was not in the initial plan but was added
after some discussion.
“As we got further along into the design,
we thought if we’re going to do it, we should do it right,” Bosser
said. “We wanted to come up with the cost to do everything right the
first time.”
The field could play host to games and league of
varying levels of competitiveness and inclusiveness. Some might be
unified leagues, in which people with and without disabilities play
together. Others might have the ball being hit off a tee. The planning
committee has worked with the Fairfield County Youth Baseball
Association and Lancaster Youth Baseball Association during the process.
The LYBA operates a Challenger League for people with disabilities in
Lancaster, and that’s another option for the all-access field.
The soccer field could play host to leagues for people with disabilities, which Bosser said do not currently exist.
“We
want to give options for families,” Bosser said. “We could have
(people) of medium-type ability (who) want to play a more competitive
game even up to coach pitch or kid pitch.”
The group will have
donation information on display at The Lancaster Festival Fair Day,
Haban said. The committee also applied for a grant from the Fairfield
County Foundation. The fundraising process is in the early stages, but
the group hopes to draw community support.
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