Skate park set to open in northern Manitoba First Nation this summer - Action News
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Manitoba

Skate park set to open in northern Manitoba First Nation this summer

Heston Parisien, 16, travelled just over an hour to Thompson's skatepark to try tricks on his skateboard and bike. Now that his community is getting one of its own, he said he's excited to have a skate park where he lives.

Construction expected to begin in June and completed in August, says assistant director of education

A student holds a painted skateboard. It reads: You be the change you wish to see in the world.
High school student Heston Parisien holds the skateboard he made in art class. (Submitted by Angela Levasseur)

Youth inNisichawayasihk Cree Nation will have another reason to get outside this summer.Construction of an approximately 7,000-square-footskate parkis expected to be finished bythe beginning of August.

Heston Parisien, 16, travelled just over an hour to Thompson's skate park to try tricks on his skateboard and bike. Now that his community is getting one of its own, he said he's excited to have a skate park where he lives.

"Now that I found out a new one's coming, it made me feel better," he said.

Assistant director of education Nicholas Campbell said he and his colleagueswanted to give youth an alternative form of recreationand came up with the idea last August.He said fundingto build the outdoor skate parkwas approved last week through Indigenous Services Canada and Jordan's Principleand the northern First Nation isin the process of finalizing where in the community itwill be built.

"There's a lot of youth who want to be engaged in something. We kind of thought ... a skate park speaks to a lot of different youth," Campbell said.

Nisichawayasihk already has ahockey arena and 3 gymnasiums, but Campbell said not everyone was interested in using them. He said a skate parkwould cover many other interests in the community of around 3,400 along with skateboards, people can use their rollerblades, bicycles and scooters.

"We started showing kids the blueprints ... everyone was really receptive," Campbell said.

A man stands in a classroom holding two skateboards.
Assistant director of education Nicholas Campbell said people can use skateboards, rollerblades, bicycles and scooters in the skate park. (Submitted by Nicholas Campbell)

Samantha Pike, principal of NisichawayasihkNeyo Ohtinwak Collegiate, saidthere's a project at the school where students build and paint their own skateboards. With the news of the skate park opening, she saidthey're excited to be able to put them to use.

"Having those skateboards as projects that they can now use in the skate park ... some of them are really excited for that," she said.

"They actually have something that they're making the board for now, as opposed to just making it for themselves as an art project."

Pike saidthe skate park will be another way for the community to come together, but especially youth. She said being able to use the park for more than skateboarding will make it an inclusive space.

"It's really important to have inclusive spaces for everybody, especially for youth to come together," she said.

Pike said she's most looking forward to seeing the Cree nation's youthenjoy the new park, and hopes they feel empowered as they use it.

"The youth deserve so much in this community. They are awesome. I think just seeing them being able to go there to utilize that space and to make the most of it for themselves, I'm really excited for them," said Pike.

Digital rendering of a skate park.
The skate park, built by Drop In Skateparks, is expected to be finished by August. (Submitted by Nicholas Campbell)

Parisien, who built his skateboard at school and also builds bikes in his spare time, said the process of creating his own board was a boost to his self-esteem. He said the process of shaping the board was the most interesting.

"When I first started I felt like I couldn't. But I just kept going and managed to do it, because you can do whatever you put your mind to," he said.

Parisien said he's most excited to be able to learn how to do tricks on his skateboard and bike, and pass on his knowledge to his siblings and other youth.

"I just wanna be able to do tricks and teach other kids how to do them ... I'm going to be teaching myself," he said.

The skate park, built by Drop In Skateparks, is expected to be finished by August 10. Campbell said surveys are being done in 3 potential locations, which the First Nation will vote on next week.