BLYTHEWOOD – There’s no clear plan in place for new
ballfields in Blythewood, but town and community recreation leaders say there’s
a desperate need. Meanwhile, changes to county maintenance plans for the
existing fields have raised additional concerns.
According to the Richland County Recreation Commission, in
an emailed response to questions from The Voice, the county reviewed its ball
field contracts with community leagues in 2018, prompting a review of its
processes for leasing facilities, and made the following changes.
They decided on a maintenance schedule of dragging
ballfields three times a week, transferred responsibility for state inspection
of the concession stands to the leagues, and decreased the facility lease
amount from 10 percent of league registration fees to 5 percent.
“This was an intentional decrease to provide the leagues
with funds for concessions and field preparation,” according to commission
officials. “We are currently working with a couple of the leagues that have
faced issues with securing permits for concessions. We recognize that
concessions are a large revenue stream for the community leagues.”
Kevin Allen, President of the Blythewood Youth Baseball
Softball League (BYBSL), says this has created a challenging situation for the
league, which he says is not equipped to do the maintenance that used to be
handled by the county, which included more frequent dragging and lining of the
fields.
Now the league is looking for a solution. Due to current
limitations on equipment and storage, Allen said, that would require someone to
drag and line fields at both the Blythewood and North Springs Park locations several
days a week, transporting the equipment each time.
“I would’ve rather paid them double their lease fee, and
them do the work, than us have to do it as volunteers,” he said. “Every parent
would rather pay $5 extra per kid to play and know the facilities are taken
care of – and pay the county 15 or 20 percent.”
The maintenance changes, he said, aren’t the only curve ball
that was thrown to the league this season; they were originally going to play
at the Kelly Mill Sports Complex but were moved to North Springs Park at the
last minute.
According to the county recreation commission, the Kelly
Mill complex was leased to the Dentsville Baseball League because site
improvements at Polo Road Park were not complete.
Blythewood league and town officials say the big-picture
issue is the need for more ballfields. Allen said there’s a lack of information
about county plans for recreation, but – when it comes to fields for Blythewood
– perhaps the league could help.
“Maybe we’re unique as a league, but we want it to be a
partnership,” he said. “We’re willing to take on some of the work to help them.
We’re willing to fund some of the things if we need to. If I need to go out and
fundraise…to build stuff or help, we’ll do it.”
What he’d like to see is for the Town of Blythewood to
develop a plan for a ballfield complex with four or five fields – a project
that would require 40-50 acres and cost $3.5-$5 million – which he says could
help pay for itself over time with revenue from tournaments, corporate
sponsorships, and recreational league fees.
The way he sees it, a combination of town, county, and
private contributions – in the form of land and money – could help get such a
project off the ground. Fields could also be developed for other sports that
are growing in popularity, such as lacrosse and soccer.
Town officials say they have met with county officials many
times over the years about the need for ballfields. More immediate than a big
sports complex, they say, is the need for more fields to use for recreational game
play.
“Blythewood Park – that opened in the 70’s. It’s the same
baseball fields that I played on as a boy, and we’ve never done anything with
them. Never expanded them, never tried to add to them – and our population has
grown,” said Brian Franklin who pledged two years ago when he ran for council,
to do something about getting more fields. But so far, no progress has been
made.
“Blythewood has been overlooked, and our population has
grown faster than pretty much anywhere else in the county.”
Back then, he said, the town would have maybe a dozen ball
teams in a good year. Now there are more than three times that many – and teams
are practicing anywhere they can find an open lot. The program has experienced
exponential growth in the last few years, and with hundreds of new homes
planned for construction in Blythewood, the growth is expected to continue.
“When you only have three fields and you have 36 [or more]
teams and you’re trying to give each team an opportunity to practice twice a
week and play two games a week, it just becomes physically impossible to be
able to do that with that many children and only three fields,” Franklin said.
“Let Blythewood take charge of our own destiny and buy us
some property and put some fields out there to expand the capacity of what
we’re doing.”
But after years of discussion, the impasse appears to be
largely financial. County recreation officials recognize the need for
additional fields in the northeast part of the county but say they don’t have
the funding. Town officials say the county should be doing more.
Mayor J. Michael Ross put it pointedly at a recent meeting
of the Blythewood Town Council: “We feel like the stepchild of Richland
County.”
The town has floated a lot of ideas – incorporating
ballfields into a larger economic development project, building fields on a
county-owned parcel adjacent to the town, using the soon-to-be-former site of
Bethel-Hanberry Elementary School, developing two more fields on the vacant
land at Blythewood Park.
A decade ago, a volunteer drafted a site plan to add two
fields at Blythewood Park. This project – for which no one offered a current
cost estimate – would increase the total number of fields at the county-owned
park from 3 to 5.
The county recreation commission said it doesn’t have the
funding. However, according to the county’s e-mailed response, “If the Town of
Blythewood wanted to invest in the development of new fields and/or a potential
complex, the Commission would be happy to work with the town to do so.”
As it stands, the county says it’s a willing partner but
lacks the funds. Town and league officials have expressed a willingness and
ability to raise money for ballfields, but they have not coalesced around a
unified plan or goal.
Everyone seems to like the idea of more ballfields for
Blythewood, but it’s hung up in the details: Who will pay for it? Who will own
it? Who will maintain it? Who will step up and take leadership on the issue,
and transform it from talk into action? When will someone start making plans?