Youth Outreach


Friends and Neighbors,

We have narrowed our playground design to three options. We’d like to get some thoughts on which design you would like us to use. Unfortunately, we will not be able to modify these designs; we can only choose one of the three.

You can see all three options on the www.irishchannel.org website. Please take a look at all three options and send your comments to webmaster@irishchannel.org. We will be accepting your comments until Noon, Monday July 19th.

We’ll take all the comments we receive and we will make a final decision Monday evening. We’ll announce the decision on the website.

Thank You for your help!

Design #1

Design #2

Design #3

Dear Neighbors,

The Irish Channel is poised to take our next step in providing quality recreational opportunities for our neighborhood youth, and we hope you will join us in this exciting opportunity.

Over the past two years, the Irish Channel has focused on improving recreational opportunities for our children. This has led to several positive steps forward such as the creation of a Booster Club for Lyons Center & Burke Park and NORD’s re-introduction of athletic programs at these parks. These efforts have brought several neighborhood groups together, building increased momentum for improved neighborhood recreational opportunities.

Neighborhood park enhancement is a cornerstone of this growing effort. Kicking off the enhancement of Burke Park/Clay Square, The Chris Paul Foundation, the Hornets, and Helm Paint partnered to repaint the Basketball Courts. The Lyons-Burke Boosters worked with the City of New Orleans to repair the basketball court lights so we can now play basketball into the evening. Our next step in upgrading Burke Park/Clay Square is the installation of new, high-quality playground equipment, and we need your help to make this step a success

A community partnership spearheaded by the Irish Channel Neighborhood Association has been awarded a playground makeover by national playground non-profit KABOOM!. With generous corporate sponsorship by the J. Willard Marriott and Alice S. Marriott Foundation, we are scheduled to build a state of the art play area at Burke Park/Clay Playground on Friday, August 27, 2010.

While the corporate sponsor covers the costs of the play equipment, we neighborhood partners are asked to contribute volunteers, tools, and other supplies. Additionally, our community partnership must contribute $7,500 by July 27th. These funds will cover our portion of the costs for the playground.

Please support our efforts by donating toward this community fund. You can click to donate via Paypal on the main page.  We also welcome raffle items for our upcoming fundraiser and/or Build Day volunteer appreciation raffle.  If you would like more details please do not hesitate to contact us.

Quality recreational opportunities are a benefit to the entire neighborhood, improving the overall quality of life for all of us. We hope we can count on you to help us move our neighborhood forward. Your gifts and/or donations to the Burke/Clay Playground are tax deductible. The Irish Channel Neighborhood Association is the fiduciary sponsor and the tax ID number is: 72-1333677. But more importantly, your contribution will go directly toward providing a tangible improvement to our neighborhood that will enhance our community pride for years to come.

We look forward to hearing from you soon and hope that you join us in making Burke Park/Clay Square a true gem in the Irish Channel.

Respectfully,

Irish Channel Neighborhood Association                                               Lyons Burke Boosters
Irish Channel Christian Fellowship                                                            Rachel Sims Baptist Mission

Trick or Treat

To encourage families to Trick-or-Treat in the Irish Channel, we are compiling a list of participating homes. Please take a moment and follow the link below to register your house as a designated Trick-or-Treat participant. Your home will be listed as a place families know they can stop. The final list will be sent out to our membership email list.

Click here to sign up!

Halloween-supplies


Help support the neighborhood kids? Join the LBB!

The Lyon & Burke Boosters will be launched on November 17th. While ICNA supports the efforts of this new non-profit it will be a separate entity from the neighborhood association.

To stay up on the latest news and for information on how you can help, join the LBB email list below. You can also check out the LBB group page .

 

Subscribe to Lyon & Burke Boosters
Email:

 

NORD_ANKLE_BITERSSince our ICNA Athletics basketball league last Spring NORD has taken a renewed interest in the Burke Park and Lyon’s Center.  Here are some pictures of recent activities sponsored by NORD.  They currently have 3 different football teams, separated by age groups, practicing in the two parks.  In the years since Katrina kids from the neighborhood had to travel to Taylor park to play organized sports.  Our goal is to provide many more options over the next few years contingent upon Lyon’s Center reopening. 

 NORD also held a Health and Recreation Fair on Saturday, September 26th at Burke Park.  There were many booths there including the Booster Club we are forming with other neighborhood associations for both Lyon’s Center and Burke Park. 

 

NORD Table at the Fair

NORD Table at the Fair

Face Painting

Face Painting

Terran Young (left) and Cleveland Holmes stand by a basketball goal as Coach Beau Haynes watches Donnie Diket try to keep Terry Kendrick Jr. from making a goal.

Terran Young (left) and Cleveland Holmes stand by a basketball goal as Coach Beau Haynes watches Donnie Diket try to keep Terry Kendrick Jr. from making a goal.

Safety Net
How a community basketball LEAGUE in the Irish Channel has paid off for the players, the residents and the neighborhood

BY ALEJANDRO DE LOS RIOS, sports writer, Gambit Weekly

On May 23, dozens of kids and their parents — along with a handful of city and state representatives — gathered at Burke Park in the Irish Channel to watch a community basketball league’s championship game. It was a crowning achievement ­— not because of which team won or because any young b-ball prodigy emerged, but because of how far the park, and the community, has come since Hurricane Katrina.

For years, Burke Park has been a hub for children in the Irish Channel. Located within walking distance of a number of schools, the park often teemed with kids on the basketball court and baseball field every afternoon. Ronald Harness, a lifelong resident of the Irish Channel, says the lack of supervision was a problem.

“There was a lot of drug activities and fights in the park and kids just doing nothing,” he says. “Older kids were in there, not doing the right thing, and [the New Orleans Recreation Department] (NORD) wasn’t putting anyone in the park to supervise.”

Harness isn’t the only person who noticed the kids in Burke Park could use some supervision and guidance. Earlier this year, Jason Nix and wife Ashlee Robinson, Irish Channel residents for the past six years, began talking about starting a community basketball league run entirely by volunteers from the Irish Channel.

“There’s a need in this neighborhood for activities for these kids,” Nix said. “When I was a kid, I started playing school ball when I was 11 or 12 and they don’t do that here.”

Nix and Robinson bought basketball equipment and put up flyers advertising the league. With the blessing of Irish Channel Neighborhood Association President Ed McGinnis and several other residents, Nix set a date for tryouts and the Irish Channel Basketball League was formed.

“We saw a way to jump in here and get this started without going through a bunch of red tape,” Nix says. “The gates weren’t locked, so we jumped in here and started this up.”

After two Saturdays, more than 50 kids showed up to try out for the newly formed league; Nix estimates that around 35 to 40 are still playing. The league has been so successful that Nix would like to do it again in a couple of weeks; he’s toying with the idea of expanding to other sports and neighborhoods.

Terry Kendrick Jr., a 13-year-old Irish Channel resident and basketball league member says that before Nix and the other volunteers arrived, he and his friends would mostly just play street ball without paying much attention to rules or how the game should be played. Kendrick says that as soon as he saw the flyers advertising the league, he knew he wanted to join.

“I was excited because I’ve never really played for a team,” he says. “It’s fun meeting people and starting new friendships. It’s hard because it’s not a one-man game; you have to pass the ball and learn the rules.”

The league has also united the community in other ways. Take, for instance, a practice on May 21: Led by volunteer coach Beau Haynes, a dozen kids lined up on the baseline to run wind sprints after organized drills. For a white man to earn enough respect from inner-city black kids that they voluntarily do wind sprints after just a few weeks seems extraordinary. But Haynes, who was born in New Orleans but raised in Indiana, says it was all a matter of showing the children that he and his fellow coaches were committed to the league.

“After the tryouts, it was a matter of building a rapport with the kids and a kind of trust level and show that you’re here to help them,” he said. “That was the biggest obstacle.”

Harness, who volunteers regularly as a coach, says the basketball league “shows whites and blacks can work together.” He points out the diversity of people that show up on Saturday mornings to cheer on the kids and volunteer their time to keep score, run the game clock and provide snacks. More importantly, Harness says, the community atmosphere has driven criminal activity away from the park and surrounding neighborhood.

“The older kids, they respect the league and what they’re doing,” he said. “They’re not peddling drugs in the park anymore.”

Maj. Robert Bardy, the Sixth District commander for the New Orleans Police Department, says patrolling the Irish Channel has long been “a major challenge” due to criminal activity that seems to pass from generation to generation. But ever since his department started emphasizing community policing with cops walking the beat and getting to know their neighborhoods, crime has started to decline. As proof, Bardy cites the number of murders in the Sixth District, which dropped from 101 in 1996 to 21 in 2008.

But apromising as the statistics are, Bardy says communities themselves and the people that inhabit them are the major factor in fighting and preventing crime. So when McGinnis approached Bardy about placing a squad car at Burke Park for security during games and practices, the commander was more than willing to lend a hand.

“Any time you offer a kid an alternative to a criminal lifestyle, that’s a positive thing,” he says. “It shows the positive interaction between the Irish Channel folks in the community.”

This proactive approach to neighborhood crime and neglect comes from the frustration felt by residents like Nix and Harness. For years, Harness had been loading kids in the back of his pickup truck so they could play in parks in the Uptown and Carrollton neighborhoods because there were no such opportunities in the Irish Channel.

It’s no secret that one of the areas of recovery with which New Orleans still struggles is its parks and recreation centers. Many parks are in disrepair and others only have been restored thanks to private donations or nonprofit groups. City Council Vice President Arnie Fielkow says NORD, which monitors 30 recreation facilities in the Uptown area alone, has been “significantly challenged post-Katrina” — including Burke Park. Its basketball courts were nearly unplayable until Hornets star Chris Paul refurbished them through his CP3 Foundation earlier this year. But even with crisp new blacktops and shiny CP3-marked backboards and hoops, it was up to the residents of the Irish Channel to make positive use of the facilities without government help.

“It is frustrating at times to see how small city government works,” Fielkow says. “This is just another example of a community saying, ‘We’re going to do it on our own.’”

For the Irish Channel, frustration with city officials is ongoing. With the basketball season wrapped up and the next one still being organized, residents were hoping for NORD to open the Lyons Center pool. McGinnis said he got a verbal commitment from NORD’s deputy director Keith Wright on May 14 that the pool would be open June 1st. Soon that date was pushed back to mid-June and then May 26, NORD sent out a press release stating the pool would not be open again until the end of the summer. McGinnis, though, said he is undeterred.

Irish Channel Neighborhood Assoc Basketball League

Thanks to everybody who came out on Saturday morning!

The kids played hard and had lots of fun; everyone’s looking forward to next weekend already. If you can, come meet your neighbors and root for the neighborhood kids on Saturday.

Irish Channel Neighborhood Assoc Basketball League

A special thank you goes out to the 6th District NOPD who came out to watch and even join in!

Irish Channel Neighborhood Assoc Basketball League

To see more of the kids in action, click here, or even better, come join us in the park!

Come out to Burke (Clay) Park Saturday, April 18th, 2009 at 9 AM to cheer on your favorite ICNA League team: the Young Stars, Uptown Hurricanes, Hot Shots or Uptown Rockets. Games will be on Saturdays at 9 and 10 each week. Bring a cup of coffee, say ‘hi’ to your neighbors and support the youth in our neighborhood.

Practice

Practice

This Saturday, March 29 we’re going to finish the KaBOOM! playground at Soraparu Park — corner of Soraparu and Rousseau Streets.  Come meet us between 9:30 and 10 a.m. at the park.  We’ll work for about two hours installing an iron bench and trash can as well as digging holes, mixing and pouring concrete and installing bollards (steel posts for those, like me, who have no idea what a bollard is).  The chain to be hung between the bollards will be installed at a later time.  Lunch will be served after our work!

Mr. Timmons, an executive with the Ritz-Carlton (which is part of the Marriott group — which was the major and very generous sponsor of our Soraparu KaBOOM! build) is coming in from Phoenix with his family to help us finish up this park!

If it is raining, the Hill School has some indoor work with which they could use our help.

Other exciting news:  KaBOOM! has encouraged us to apply for another playground!  We are in the process of writing an application for the park at Tchoupitoulas and Pleasant Streets.  More to come!

Hope to see you on Saturday!

Live Oak School is building a new playground on 2/29/08 (first Saturday after Mardi Gras).  Come join your neighbors and volunteer school psychologists, in NOLA for a convention, to help build a fantastic new playground for Live Oak!  Thanks THRICE AGAIN to KaBOOM!  This is our neighborhood’s third KaBOOM! playground and our children are reaping the benefits from having safe and creative places for healthy play within walking distance of their homes.

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