Anonymous donor brings Brent Barnes Memorial Skatepark $100,000 closer to completion

Hern: donation 'a complete game changer' that moves project 'years ahead'

ARTHUR – Councillor Lisa Hern fought back tears during the Wellington North council meeting on Sept. 13.

She had been holding onto news of a $100,000 donation toward the Brent Barnes Memorial Skatepark in Arthur for nearly two weeks and could barely wait to get the word out during Monday’s council meeting.

“It is a complete game-changer for this park, making it a reality that we likely can have it completed for 2022, if the community rallies behind us to get the rest of the money,” she told the Advertiser.

Hern is chair of a skatepark committee, with three members of the Arthur Lions Club, where the idea for the skateboard and BMX park was born.

With Arthur Lions Club fundraising events largely deferred thanks to the pandemic, the skatepark committee had earlier decided to roll out sections of the park in phases.

“Now we’re looking at the complete solution,” Hern said, adding the donation moves plans “years ahead.”

“This means we need to power forward and look at all of our options now,” Hern said, noting requests for proposals from contractors to build the park will likely go out in November.

Just under $200,000 has been raised to date, says Hern, with the hope of reaching at least $225,000 by next spring.

“We do need the community to rally behind us to try and get the rest of the money and I know that Arthur can do that,” she said.

Longtime Arthur resident Brent Barnes originally came up with the idea for the skatepark around four years ago, says local Lions Club member Al Rawlins.

After several years of failed attempts from outside organizations to raise cash for the park, Rawlins and Barnes formed a club committee to take a run at it themselves.

Wellington North council and staff members stood with Arthur Lions Club members near where the Brent Barnes Memorial Skatepark (formerly named the Arthur Lions Skateboard and BMX Park) will be situated on the Arthur Fairgrounds, fronting Eliza Street. The Arthur Lions Club began fundraising for the park in June 2019.
From left: incoming Lions President Al Rawlins, councillor Steve McCabe, Mayor Andy Lennox, Frank Cherri, Wayne Horton, councillor Lisa Hern, Glen Cheyne, recreational services manager Tom Bowden, community recreation coordinator Mandy Jones and deputy clerk Cathy Conrad. Advertiser file photo

 

“He was the driving force,” Rawlins said of Barnes, who was once club president and spent 40 years volunteering for the Lions.

Barnes suggested setting a deadline for 2022, Arthur’s 150-year anniversary.

Around eight months into the effort, on Dec. 30, 2018, Barnes died, leaving behind a lifelong legacy of community service.

Barnes’ parents had owned Barnes’ Groceteria in the village where he had lived since he was five.

A volunteer fire fighter, Barnes served as fire chief for 11 of his 35 years in the fire department. He also helped construct the modern fire station in Arthur.

In 2018, he was awarded the Melvin Jones Fellowship Award for his community service and helped raise funds for the modern Groves Memorial Community Hospital.

Some weeks ago, the skatepark committee decided to name the park after Barnes.

“He has a lot of connections to this community, he did so much work for this community; we thought it fitting to name it after him,” Rawlins said of the decision.

The skatepark committee has a plan to meet again on Sept. 21, when it will examine the scope of what’s needed for construction and costs of both the skateboard and BMX portions of the park.

Costs for the park are expected to rise given the pandemic’s influence on material and supply prices, so the club is hoping to eventually raise $250,000 or more.

The anonymous donation essentially doubles the fundraising total of a month ago and covers what could have been raised over the past 18 months of cancelled events, Rawlins pointed out.

“Every time I think about it, I just want to cry tears of joy because someone has done so much for this community,” Hern said.

The goal is to have the skatepark ready to shred come July 2022.

Reporter