VOLUME 17 ISSUE 12
NOVEMBER 29 — DECEMBER 20 , 2019
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From dirt to dropping in Sun Peaks Skate Park Foundation gains momentum
JEAN STRONG
SNOW CRUNCHES UNDER PETER WILSON’S FEET AS HE WALKS OVER A SITE HE’S VISUALIZED FOR YEARS. FOR NOW IT’S FILLED WITH EQUIPMENT USED BY THE PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT, A BARREL OF MANGLED SKI POLES AND A SMALL PLOW. His goal is that by 2021 the dirt will be transformed into a 4,000 square foot skate park with a medium size street course and quarter pipe. The project is something Wilson has been a part of since 2015 when he took over as acting director of the Sun Peaks Skate Park Foundation (SPSPF) from founder Adam Earle. Since then he’s focused on building support from the ground up, slowly infiltrating many areas of the community with grassroots initiatives. Things like partial profits from beer sold at 5-Forty or Morrisey’s Public House helped the group slowly build interest and grow their bank account. But this year has been full steam ahead for Wilson and his team as
PETER WILSON AND SPSPF ARE WORKING TO SHIFT THE CULTURE IN SUN PEAKS. Photo SPIN
they move ahead with plans to complete engineering, design, geotechnical surveys, and finalize a site in the East Village at a cost of around $30,000. With the help of Jim Barnum from New Line Skateparks, SPSPF has created a three phase planning and design timeline and a four phase construction timeline that aims for completion in 2021, alongside what should become a permanent school and recreation area in Sun Peaks. “We’ve been biding our time and playing the patience game
knowing that it would have to be in sync with the school. Knowing we’d have to be in sync with growth in the community,” Wilson said. The planning and design phase is estimated to take seven months to complete alongside a significant fundraising effort, taking them from the $13,000 raised by Oct. 30 to the $500,000 plus needed to finish the project. This fall those lofty goals have been helped by the Ullr Party fundraiser which brought in over $10,000 and the annual Firefighter’s Society Gala, for which SPSPF was
selected as one of two beneficiaries for this year. Wilson said being selected as a gala charity and a recent presentation to council served to further legitimize the cause. “We’ve been really trying to get to the gala, it’s a turning point...the ball is rolling, we have traction. The timing couldn’t be better for the gala. I really feel traction is happening from all kinds of levels.” Wilson’s daughter, Olivia Martin, spoke on behalf of SPSPF at the event and described growing up in Sun Peaks and missing the
accessible community centrepiece a skate park becomes. It’s one of the reasons that drives Wilson to work on the project. “Directly, it would be for my fiveyear-old boy Jack River and his buds. After that it’s for visitors and people who live here.” But he has personal reasons to be passionate about the project too. When his mother, Nancy Wilson, died it gave him a community.
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VOL 17 ISSUE 12 NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 20
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