100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Green light for grass grant: Yellowknife ballpark gets $60,000 from city

Yellowknife, NWT – Yellowknife’s Tommy Forrest ballpark has long been lacking an ingredient many consider vital: grass.

Now, at last, the ballpark is going green.

The city of Yellowknife has given final approval to a grant of around $60,000 which will help fastball players lay down grass next summer.

The players themselves, who drew up plans to improve the city-owned ballpark on Franklin Avenue, will contribute more than $20,000 and some manual labour.

Players hope laying down grass will solve the problem of safety in the outfield, which is a dusty and sometimes dangerous place to play at present.

But Vince Barter and Rob Johnson, two of the team behind the project to redevelop Tommy Forrest, say the plans are about more than enjoying a better, safer game.

“It’s not only the grass surface that’s going to be dealt with. We’re going to have a new infield put in as well. So it’s going to be better for all user groups, particularly the youth,” Barter told Moose FM.

“How many places do you go where you actually see a ball diamond smack-dab on the main stretch? We want it to be more community-friendly and more user-friendly.

“It’s building a complex, it’s trying to attract as many user groups as possible, as opposed to just one or two leagues.”

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/181816745″ params=”color=0066cc&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Barter, an architect, has also come up with long-term plans to install a “green monster” – a la Fenway Park – and even a working scoreboard, though he stresses those are not part of the work being funded next year.

“One of the ideas we were playing with is creating an actual scoreboard, where you could have youth, minor-ball players changing inside this thing,” explained Barter.

“It’s an old-school thing that doesn’t take any power – we don’t need lights up here, playing in summer.”

Johnson says work on the grass and infield will start in August 2015. The concern is making sure the surface is playable for June 2016, so young minor ball players don’t lose their season.

“The intent is to have the grass ready and playable for June 2016,” he said.

“We’re going to end our season early next summer, get it all done, leave it the entire winter to settle, and then see how the melt works in the spring.”

CJCD Moose FM News

Ollie Williams
Ollie Williams
Hello! I'm the one with the British accent. Thanks for supporting CJCD. To contact me, you can email me, find me on Twitter or call (867) 920-4663.

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Inuit Nunangat University to begin regional knowledge centre site selection

Following the selection of Arviat, Nunavut, as the site of Inuit Nunangat University’s main campus, the process to choose regional knowledge centres and satellite campuses across Inuit Nunangat is underway. Arviat, with a population of about 3,000, is Nunavut’s third-largest community and has one of the highest proportions of youth in the country.

Premier supports “dual use” aspects of country’s first “Defence Industrial Strategy”

The federal government announced the strategy Monday, describing it as the country’s first national defence industrial strategy. Simpson said those elements are particularly relevant to the North. He said equipment and technology systems intended for use in the Arctic should be tested in the territory’s northern climate and developed in partnership with northern governments, Indigenous rights holders and communities.

Nominee Program opens up for 2026

The Northwest Territories Nominee Program will be opening applications for the employer-driven and francophone streams starting March 9 at 9am.  

Yellowknife Fire Fighter Association campout fundraiser to be held this weekend

The Yellowknife Fire Fighter Association will be holding a campout this weekend on the roof of the Yellowknife CO-OP to raise funds and awareness for Muscular Dystrophy Canada. 

Search continues for ways to deal with 200,000 tons of arsenic dust at Giant Mine

Scientists presented projects for a more permanent solution to hundreds of thousands of tons arsenic dust from the mine. One method uses local beer to fuel a transformation of the toxic dust, while another tries to turn it into glass. Another proposed method looks at turning the dust into a highly sought commodity known as metallic arsenic. Additional proposals look whether robotic technology could allow crews to virtually pilot the extraction of the dust while “sipping coffee” from a distance.