Parks, Recreation and Racial Bean Counting

Hiking-biking trail in Radford
Hiking-biking trail in Radford

bv James A. Bacon

Virginia’s recreational assets include 33,610 picnic tables, 5,740 miles of hiking trails, 2,671 basketball courts and 695 outdoor pools. Walking for pleasure is the favorite outdoor recreational activity of Virginians, followed by visiting historic sites and visiting natural areas and nature preserves.

Those are among the fascinating tidbits of information contained in the latest issue of The Virginia News Letter, “Outdoor Recreation in Virginia Today: Trends and Policies,” by Terance J. Rephann, an economist with the University of Virginia’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service.

You’ll also find in this report the facts that 29% of white people enjoy hiking and backpacking compared to only 4.8% of blacks and that almost 19% of whites like canoeing, kayaking and rowing compared to less than 1% of blacks. Rephann finds such differences in preferences to be quite distressing and, in the case of the even larger participation gap in the enjoyment of “natural areas, preserves or refuges,” a matter that needs redress by public policy.

Most Americans would agree that public parks and recreation facilities are a public good that government should provide. The need becomes all the more acute as society becomes more sedentary and the population becomes more obese. People should be encouraged to engage in more physical activity.

(Ironically, the single-most popular activity — walking for pleasure, shared by 82.2% of the population — requires no specialized recreational facilities, just walkable roads and streets.)

Rephann avoids calling for massive new spending on parks and recreation. As the population ages, there may be less demand in some localities for some categories of active recreation. “Deactivating facilities and converting them to low-maintenance open space or other private uses in declining population areas may be a painful but necessary decision for many communities.” And there is evidence, he says, that Virginia ‘s park system has significant excess capacity that can meet increased future demand resulting from population growth. 

Unfortunately, Rephann seems obsessed by seeming racial disparities in the choice of outdoor recreational activities, particularly the fact that 54.6% of white people patronize “natural areas, preserves or refuges” while only 20.5% of black people do.

It’s hard to know what to make of that 34 percentage-point chasm. A different data point in the same survey indicates only a 7% gap in “visiting natural resources.” But Rephann seems convinced that there’s a problem and that it must be addressed. He concedes that some of the difference in preferences may be attributed to socio-economic status. Golf and skiing are expensive past-times; blacks have less income overall, so they golf less and ski less. But he also sees a sinister tie to the history of segregation. “In the past, African Americans were hindered from using public parks and facilities because of segregation. … Some researchers have hypothesized that choosing not to participate in certain outdoors recreation associated with white privilege may be a form of ‘resistance and self-determination’ built up after years of being denied equal access.”

What is to be done? One possibility, Rephann concedes, is to do nothing because the disparities represent different cultural preferences. Policy should focus instead on developing programs for the recreational activities that African Americans already enjoy — an outlook that I share. But that’s not good enough. No, says Rephann, it is of fundamental importance that blacks patronize natural areas and preserves in equal measure.

Rephann focuses on the need to recruit and retain black employees to “ensure a welcoming atmosphere” for minority visitors to wilderness outdoor settings. Alas, blacks are “underrepresented” among park employees, Rephann notes, because fewer minorities pursue careers in natural resources fields; only 2.7% of the degrees in forestry, wildlife management and environmental sciences go to blacks compared to 27.4% of the degrees for physical education teaching and coaching. Rephann suggests addressing that disparity with more aggressive marketing and outreach through schools, churches and special events, introducing means-tested user fees and assigning “greater weights to facility funding for activities affected by segregation.

This, my friends, is a window into the mind of the race-fixated white liberal. How many black people worry about the low number of blacks who visit wildlife refuges? Virtually none. How many black people focus on the need to recruit more minority park rangers? Virtually none. How many black people think they have way more important things to worry about, such as, say, unemployment, low wages, poor school achievement, teen pregnancy, substance abuse and crime? One hundred percent, would be my guess.

In the scale of challenges faced by blacks in contemporary American society, the lack of interest in visiting nature preserves has got to be at the very bottom. In many ways, “Outdoor Recreation in Virginia Today” makes a useful contribution to the public policy discussion. Too bad it got side-tracked by a non-existent issue of race.


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19 responses to “Parks, Recreation and Racial Bean Counting”

  1. I too have noticed the dearth of black denizens in some of the outdoor recreation venues but I will say this – clearly – some of them get into sports big time and go on to become major sports figures in Collegiate and Pro sports, right?

    oddly though – football and basketball, not the other sports, Arther Ashe was an anachronism… soccer – a world sport is shunned by blacks… and take a look at marathons…. blacks do win but they are from …. Nigeria!

    Battlefield National Parks commemorating the civil war? Not a favorite destination of blacks…

    so I’ll posit this – are we building parks and recreational outdoor venues that are culturally aligned with whites and not blacks?

    what would our recreational outdoor world look like if it catered to blacks?

    😉

    1. 1stworlder Avatar

      basketball, soccer, lacrosse and hockey are all basically the same game but as short distance running becomes less important that upper body strength the whiter the sport gets. Compare winning Olympic sprinters to swimming& strength events.

  2. “Are we building parks and recreational outdoor venues that are culturally aligned with whites and not blacks?”

    Very good question. I would add a socio-economic spin to it.

    Are we building venues that are culturally aligned with middle- and professional-class whites as opposed to poor and working-class whites.

    We have a system where white elites decide to fund recreational assets that appeal to them, and then worry when they aren’t patronized in proportionate numbers by the lower and working classes… well, make that lower and working class blacks. White elites aren’t terribly concerned about the preferences of poor/working class whites.

    1. 1stworlder Avatar

      What about the distinctive lack of blacks partaking of symphonies, public libraries, museums, and art gallerias? Given that many of the activities parks offer involve water, does the fact blacks are not seen on swimming & upper body strength Olympic events but are the majority of short distance run events matter? It turns out that Basketball, soccer, lacrosse, and hockey are all basically the same game, in that if you understand one someone can explain another translating one games terms to another. But as the importance of short distance runs gives way to importance of upper body strength, the whiter the sport gets.

  3. Peter Galuszka Avatar
    Peter Galuszka

    The problem with the study and this post is that it assumes that black people like to do what white people do — canoe, backpack, etc. It’s also suspect to start teasing out and laying down sociological trends based on limited starting point data, as Jim has a tendency to do. Larry is right — African-Americans certainly do well in athletics — maybe not just the sports that Jim notes in this post.

    Here’s an excerpt from Style Weekly’s Tina Griego and her excellent and tragic story about an inner city young man:

    “The first time Derrick Johnson lay eyes on Garrick, the coach is driving through Highland Park. Garrick is dribbling his basketball in the middle of the street. “And he won’t move. After the second week of him and me battling it out, I say, ‘Can you play?’ He says, ‘I can play.’” He was 8 years old.

    “He was an exceptional ballplayer,” Johnson says. “His skill level, his basketball intelligence, exceeded everyone at his age. I coached him in AAU [Amateur Athletic Union] from the time he was 8 to the time he was 18, and we set six consecutive Division 1 titles with the Richmond Phenom.”

    A constellation of coaches looked over Garrick. Coach C.T. Coach Mario. Coach Anthony. Coach Warren at Thomas Jefferson High School. Former NBA star Ben Wallace. None was closer than Coach Johnson, a mental health counselor and former Virginia Union University basketball star, who played 12 years of professional basketball overseas.

    “I could motivate some kids, and Garrick was one, because they saw basketball as their way out,” Johnson says. “I would tell them, ‘I can’t tell you basketball will buy you a big house, but it can get you out of your neighborhood and it can get you to college for free.’ And Garrick would say, ‘The first thing I’m gonna do when I get out of college is buy my mama a big house.’”‘”

    1. reed fawell III Avatar
      reed fawell III

      Peter

      I too read that marvelous article.

      Here is another one. It tells the story of a current UVa. law school graduate who as a teacher used lacrosse as a profoundly effective teaching tool in Harlem.

      See http://www.wickedlocal.com/concord/sports/x450319314/Learning-life-lessons-through-lacrosse

  4. I think we all agree. The study assumes that black people like to do what white people do. If whites and blacks aren’t doing the same things recreationally, it doesn’t mean there’s something wrong, it means that they have different preferences based upon their distinctive cultures and histories.

  5. re: ” “I would tell them, ‘I can’t tell you basketball will buy you a big house, but it can get you out of your neighborhood and it can get you to college for free.’ ”

    yup

    and increasingly so since WWII – the armed forces – offer blacks a way out of a dead end life.

    but this is not “recreation”… and perhaps – just like the great depression forever changed the life-view of those who experienced it – the life view of blacks is still rooted in their American heritage and it will take a few more generations before they value “recreation” the way that white folks do – or as Jim as suggested – the difference in classes…

    When one looks at these early 1900 photographs of the folks who were visiting the places that were destined to become our national parks – almost none were black ( or for that matter, Asian or Hispanic). The folks who valued Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Shenandoah were not black.

  6. reed fawell III Avatar
    reed fawell III

    This fellow Terance J. Rephann, Ph.D. is the very same scholar at the Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service who authored the Study on the Economic Impact in Virginia of Public Higher Education. Therein, I recall that he assured us taxpayers that every dollar we invested in Virginia’s higher public education would generate $17s dollar in return.

    For the outlandish findings of that study see article and comments at:

    https://www.baconsrebellion.com/2013/09/university-coalition-bereft-of-new-thinking.html#comments

    Now I wonder if, given Dr. Rephann latest study, we should stop funding 87.4% of all inter-city basketball courts? Our population comprises only 12.4% blacks, yet they are getting a disproportionate share of those assets.

    So let’s defund 87.4% of those intercity basketball courts now used by “too many” black folks, and lets rebuild those intercity spaces for justice and diversity. Like here’s the plan: 20% for putting greens for upper middle class whites, 20% for badminton, croquet and cricket for Anglo Saxon’s and Asian Indians and others from the old English Commonwealth, 30% for archery for red neck bow hunters, 4% for lacrosse fields for Native Born Americans, 5% for chess or Jews, the Polish and others of eastern Europeans, and other intellectuals), and hold the rest for darts and dogs.

    Instead of these patently ridiculous and obvious false studies, why does not the Weldon Center do something useful? Why not study real problems and find real solutions based on real facts?

    Like why not find ways that help get minority kids out of the city during the summer to enjoy our national and state parks?

    Why not, for example, find ways to enlist private schools with strong outdoor programs for their students during the school year? How can we get them to donate their assets and instructors, and find sponsors to pay for costs like gas and meals and gear for kids, to give freedom of the hills experience to these intercity kids? Why not do work in the real world based on need, instead of the illusions in some paying client or scholars head?

    Shouldn’t donors and taxpayers funding UVA demand no less?

  7. I am appalled at the thought that black people are less likely to enjoy the wilderness experience if park rangers and tour guides are white. Gosh, what if I had that mindset when I went on a Tanganyika safari? Or a Himalayan mountain climbing expedition? Too many of those swarthy fellows — I feel unwelcome here! Heck, I never would have taken up Tae Kwon Do — too many Asians!

    I can’t imagine that many black people actually feel that way. If they did, how would they ever join mainstream society?

  8. re: “I can’t imagine that many black people actually feel that way. If they did, how would they ever join mainstream society?”

    I’m not sure what “mainstream” really means in this context though it sort of sounds like “your ” mainstream society” !!!

    😉

    still not sure I understand Reeds point either…

    1. I’m referring to the “mainstream society” that white liberals are always worried that African-Americans are excluded from.

  9. oh you mean when they try to join mainstream society and are told ” we don’t like your kind here”?

    😉

    1. 1stworlder Avatar

      Blacks are safer going to a KKK rally than to the corner store in a black majority neighborhood. From when George Zimmerman was attacked till a jury set him free 11,106 black were killed by blacks, but the left wont care till there is Voter ID.
      http://www.alipac.us/f9/513-days-trayvon-shooting-zimmerman-verdict-11-106-blacks-murdered-blacks-283502/

  10. Isn’t outdoor recreation a lot like libraries? We should have facilities that meet the needs of users. Over the 25 plus years I’ve lived in Fairfax County, the offerings of the Library System has changed to meet the changing demographics. At the same time, I suspect a lot of immigrant family users take greater advantage of English resources the longer they live here also.

    1. 1stworlder Avatar

      Outdoor recreation is something fathers take their families to. I think I figured out the problem.

  11. Interestingly it seems that all of the posters here agree – both the white liberals and the white conservatives as Bacon would categorize us – that Professor Rephann’s premise (as described by Bacon) is ridiculous. In half-hearted defense of UVa, one function of the University professoriat is to tweak the establishment view, and Professor Rephann seems to have succeeded with his study/screed in getting a rise out of Bacon – good for you Professor!

    1. reed fawell III Avatar
      reed fawell III

      Actually, I think it’s quite the reverse. The work of the good professor and his ilk represent the establishment view. Not only is it tiresome. Its boring and parochial in the extreme. It brings no benefit or truth, or insight, or solution (practical or otherwise), that I can divine.

  12. DJRippert Avatar

    Lots of people playing soccer on weekends in NoVa parks. Since they speak almost exclusively Spanish while they play I will hazard a guess that they are Hispanic. Wives and girlfriends tend to come watch the games with food for grills. There can be 40 – 50 people playing on a single field for an entire afternoon. Now, in 54 years here in NoVa I have never played a game of soccer. I can’t even tell you how many players are on each team.

    Meanwhile, hiking the trails in River Bend Park turns up quite a few people too. Mostly white but always a decent number of African Americans too.

    Meanwhile, the professor is fixated on the “black – white” gap. However, the biggest user of outdoor areas are “other” by a fairly wide margin.

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