Build a skatepark in Richmond County, Augusta, GA

Build a skatepark in Richmond County, Augusta, GA

Recent signers:
Michael williams and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Richmond County has been without a public skatepark for over two decades. As a result, generations of local youth and adults have been left without a safe, legal, and accessible place to practice skateboarding, BMX, scootering, and inline skating. This proposal outlines the urgent need for a centrally located public skatepark, supported by personal experience, community history, and the demonstrated demand for action‑sports infrastructure in Augusta.

A modern skatepark would address long‑standing gaps in recreation, youth engagement, public safety, and community development. It would also prevent the recurring cycle of DIY skateparks being built, destroyed, and rebuilt — a cycle that wastes community resources and erodes trust between residents and local government.

 
Background & Personal Testimony
My name is Tyler Evans‑Martin, and I am a 27‑year‑old lifelong resident of Augusta, Georgia. Like many skaters in Richmond County, I grew up skating in driveways, rough streets, and curbs because there was no public skatepark available. Throughout my childhood, teenage years, and even today I am repeatedly kicked out of public spaces or threatened with police involvement for simply practicing a hobby that kept me active, focused, and out of trouble.

Augusta’s skate scene has repeatedly grown and collapsed because we have never had a central, legal place to gather. As a kid, I didn’t even know other skaters lived just blocks away — we had no hub, no meeting point, no community anchor. A public skatepark would have connected us, supported friendships, and provided a safe outlet during critical years of development.

 
Community Need & History of DIY Skateparks
In the absence of public support, local skaters have taken it upon themselves to create temporary DIY skateparks:

Downer DIY (North Augusta Near Downtown) — built by locals, fostered community, and provided a safe outlet. Local skaters were eventually banned, and freshly built obstacles were destroyed.
Vernon Forrest DIY (Telfair St. in Hillside Park community) — created on unused public land, welcomed by neighbors, parents, and kids. Also torn down, with obstacles destroyed despite being funded by community members.
These DIY parks were not acts of defiance — they were acts of necessity. They existed because Richmond County has not provided a single public skatepark in over 20 years. Their removal demonstrates a clear need for a sanctioned, permanent facility.

 
Benefits of a Public Skatepark
1. Youth Engagement & Public Safety
A skatepark provides a safe, supervised environment that keeps youth active and away from unsafe or unsanctioned areas. Cities nationwide have documented reductions in loitering, trespassing, and police interactions after building skateparks.

2. Accessibility & Equity
Unlike many sports, skateboarding and BMX require minimal equipment and no fees. A centrally located skatepark ensures access for residents who rely on walking, biking, or public transit — especially important for low‑income families.

3. Mental & Physical Health
Action sports improve cardiovascular health, balance, coordination, and resilience. They also reduce stress, anxiety, and depression, offering a positive outlet for individuals who may not thrive in traditional team sports.

4. Community Building & Economic Impact
Skateparks attract families, spectators, and visitors. They support local businesses, create opportunities for events, and strengthen community identity. Cities with modern skateparks often see increased tourism and youth engagement.

5. Athletic Development & Opportunity
With skateboarding and BMX now Olympic sports, Augusta has the opportunity to support future athletes and elevate the region’s reputation in action sports.

 
Why Richmond County Must Act Now
The continued destruction of community‑built DIY parks shows that residents want and need a skatepark — and they are willing to build one themselves when the county does not. Removing these spaces without providing an alternative leaves youth with nowhere to go and perpetuates a cycle of frustration, displacement, and wasted resources.

A public skatepark is not a luxury. It is a necessary investment in:

youth development
public safety
community health
equitable recreation
long‑term cultural growth
Richmond County has the opportunity to break a decades‑long cycle and finally provide a safe, legal, and accessible space for thousands of residents.

 
Call to Action
On behalf of the residents of Augusta and Richmond County, I respectfully urge local government officials to:

Acknowledge the demonstrated need for a public skatepark.
Identify centrally located land suitable for a modern skatepark.
Engage with professional skatepark builders to develop a safe, durable, community‑driven design.
Collaborate with residents, parents, and local skaters to ensure the park reflects community needs.
Commit to funding or co‑funding the construction of a public skatepark as part of Augusta’s recreational development.
This proposal represents not just a request, but a long‑overdue opportunity to invest in the youth, culture, and future of Richmond County.

 
Conclusion
For over 20 years, skaters in Augusta have been pushed aside, displaced, and left without a safe place to practice their sport. A public skatepark would transform this reality. It would provide a lasting legacy of community empowerment, health, and opportunity for generations to come.

I urge Richmond County leadership to take this proposal seriously and work with us to make a public skatepark a reality.

Respectfully submitted, Tyler Evans‑Martin Resident of Richmond County.

723

Let’s get to 1000 signatures!
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Recent signers:
Michael williams and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Richmond County has been without a public skatepark for over two decades. As a result, generations of local youth and adults have been left without a safe, legal, and accessible place to practice skateboarding, BMX, scootering, and inline skating. This proposal outlines the urgent need for a centrally located public skatepark, supported by personal experience, community history, and the demonstrated demand for action‑sports infrastructure in Augusta.

A modern skatepark would address long‑standing gaps in recreation, youth engagement, public safety, and community development. It would also prevent the recurring cycle of DIY skateparks being built, destroyed, and rebuilt — a cycle that wastes community resources and erodes trust between residents and local government.

 
Background & Personal Testimony
My name is Tyler Evans‑Martin, and I am a 27‑year‑old lifelong resident of Augusta, Georgia. Like many skaters in Richmond County, I grew up skating in driveways, rough streets, and curbs because there was no public skatepark available. Throughout my childhood, teenage years, and even today I am repeatedly kicked out of public spaces or threatened with police involvement for simply practicing a hobby that kept me active, focused, and out of trouble.

Augusta’s skate scene has repeatedly grown and collapsed because we have never had a central, legal place to gather. As a kid, I didn’t even know other skaters lived just blocks away — we had no hub, no meeting point, no community anchor. A public skatepark would have connected us, supported friendships, and provided a safe outlet during critical years of development.

 
Community Need & History of DIY Skateparks
In the absence of public support, local skaters have taken it upon themselves to create temporary DIY skateparks:

Downer DIY (North Augusta Near Downtown) — built by locals, fostered community, and provided a safe outlet. Local skaters were eventually banned, and freshly built obstacles were destroyed.
Vernon Forrest DIY (Telfair St. in Hillside Park community) — created on unused public land, welcomed by neighbors, parents, and kids. Also torn down, with obstacles destroyed despite being funded by community members.
These DIY parks were not acts of defiance — they were acts of necessity. They existed because Richmond County has not provided a single public skatepark in over 20 years. Their removal demonstrates a clear need for a sanctioned, permanent facility.

 
Benefits of a Public Skatepark
1. Youth Engagement & Public Safety
A skatepark provides a safe, supervised environment that keeps youth active and away from unsafe or unsanctioned areas. Cities nationwide have documented reductions in loitering, trespassing, and police interactions after building skateparks.

2. Accessibility & Equity
Unlike many sports, skateboarding and BMX require minimal equipment and no fees. A centrally located skatepark ensures access for residents who rely on walking, biking, or public transit — especially important for low‑income families.

3. Mental & Physical Health
Action sports improve cardiovascular health, balance, coordination, and resilience. They also reduce stress, anxiety, and depression, offering a positive outlet for individuals who may not thrive in traditional team sports.

4. Community Building & Economic Impact
Skateparks attract families, spectators, and visitors. They support local businesses, create opportunities for events, and strengthen community identity. Cities with modern skateparks often see increased tourism and youth engagement.

5. Athletic Development & Opportunity
With skateboarding and BMX now Olympic sports, Augusta has the opportunity to support future athletes and elevate the region’s reputation in action sports.

 
Why Richmond County Must Act Now
The continued destruction of community‑built DIY parks shows that residents want and need a skatepark — and they are willing to build one themselves when the county does not. Removing these spaces without providing an alternative leaves youth with nowhere to go and perpetuates a cycle of frustration, displacement, and wasted resources.

A public skatepark is not a luxury. It is a necessary investment in:

youth development
public safety
community health
equitable recreation
long‑term cultural growth
Richmond County has the opportunity to break a decades‑long cycle and finally provide a safe, legal, and accessible space for thousands of residents.

 
Call to Action
On behalf of the residents of Augusta and Richmond County, I respectfully urge local government officials to:

Acknowledge the demonstrated need for a public skatepark.
Identify centrally located land suitable for a modern skatepark.
Engage with professional skatepark builders to develop a safe, durable, community‑driven design.
Collaborate with residents, parents, and local skaters to ensure the park reflects community needs.
Commit to funding or co‑funding the construction of a public skatepark as part of Augusta’s recreational development.
This proposal represents not just a request, but a long‑overdue opportunity to invest in the youth, culture, and future of Richmond County.

 
Conclusion
For over 20 years, skaters in Augusta have been pushed aside, displaced, and left without a safe place to practice their sport. A public skatepark would transform this reality. It would provide a lasting legacy of community empowerment, health, and opportunity for generations to come.

I urge Richmond County leadership to take this proposal seriously and work with us to make a public skatepark a reality.

Respectfully submitted, Tyler Evans‑Martin Resident of Richmond County.

The Decision Makers

Augusta-Richmond County Commission
4 Members
2 Responded
Lonnie Wimberly
Augusta-Richmond County Commission - District 4
Thank you for your inquiry on behalf of the petitioners requesting a public skatepark in Richmond County, Augusta, Georgia. I appreciate hearing from residents who are interested in expanding recreational opportunities in our community. My response is not a pushback against the idea of a skatepark. However, before I can carefully consider or advocate for this request, there must be more information and justification beyond the 478 signatures, especially in a district with more than 25,000 constituents and a community of over 200,000. To begin a meaningful dialogue, please provide any available information regarding the proposed skatepark, including a concept design, proposed location, estimated cost, funding source, and projected completion timeline. Once that information is received, I can present the matter to constituents for discussion and input at our monthly 2nd Saturday Community Breakfast Meeting. Feedback from the broader community, along with in-person input from petition signers, would be helpful in determining whether there is sufficient support to bring this idea forward for consideration by the governing body. Thank you again for reaching out and for encouraging civic engagement on this issue. Sincerely, Lonnie C. Wimberly, RCSM, MBA, M.Ed Commissioner District 4 [Note: The Change.org Civic Engagement Team reaches out to decision makers to let them know about petitions in their community and to help facilitate engagement with supporters. The above was an email response we received regarding this petition.]
Jordan Johnson
Augusta-Richmond County Commission - District 1
I fully support the effort to build a skate park in Augusta and believe it would be a tremendous asset for our community. A skate park would provide a safe, positive, and inclusive space for young people and skating enthusiasts to gather, stay active, develop their skills, and build community. I am committed to working alongside the skating community, advocates, residents, and community partners to help make this vision a reality. Meaningful projects like this happen when people come together around a shared goal, and I am eager to be part of those conversations and efforts. The advocates for this project can always count on me to stand with them, listen to their ideas, and support efforts that create more opportunities for recreation, engagement, and quality of life in Augusta. I look forward to continuing the conversation and exploring the best path forward together. Commissioner Jordan Johnson
Stacy Pulliam
Augusta-Richmond County Commission - District 2
Garnett Johnson
Augusta-Richmond County Mayor
Sean Frantom
Sean Frantom
Augusta-Richmond County Commision - District 7

Supporter Voices

Petition Updates