The Goleta Skateboarding Movement is preparing to notch an appreciable but modest victory as the Goleta City Council prepares to move forward with a design of a multi-use park on Hollister and Kellogg Avenues that includes a small skateboarding plaza. Despite this step toward broader skating opportunities in the city — as well as the prospect of a $5,000 grant from the Tony Hawk Foundation — Goleta’s foremost skating organization says it still has a ways to go before its sport is given its due.
Though Goleta has a rich skateboarding history, making significant leeway in expanding skateboarding infrastructure has required persistent engagement with the community and local government; according to Goleta Skateboarding Movement (GSM) co-president George Nagai, the organization has been attending virtually all of the city council and recreational activity meetings of late.
But at around 5,000 square feet, says Nagai, the planned skate plaza is small enough to only be safely used by around five skaters at a time. Skater’s Point in Santa Barbara — the area’s most prominent choice of skate park — is nearly three times as large.
