ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Parents are worried about their kids safety after vandals robbed and left some alarming trash at a local high school ball field.
Rio Grande High School parents are frustrated according to local sources. One parent with two kids on the team, Jerry Lopez, helps clean-up and repair the baseball field.
“The week before tryouts, that’s when I came out here to start cleaning the field,” Lopez said. A hypodermic needle and a bottle of Fireball whiskey was discovered in an area where the players practice.
“Let’s say a ball rolls and a kid goes and picks up a ball next to the needle. It was uncapped, the needle was exposed,” Lopez stated, worried about the students' safety.
With a fence no longer fully enclosing the batting cages and equipment, thieves and vandals have been attracted to prey on the field. “The first thing that we had stolen was our water jug stolen, $100 water jug. It was brand new,” said Lopez.
The thieves have stolen two water jugs, two trash cans and have destroyed safety netting. “We found the entire batting cages, both sides were down on the ground and all the holes that you see where I patched,” Lopez said.
Although Lopez and his son spent eight hours on a Saturday repairing the net around their batting cages, someone keeps putting holes in it.
“It’s frustrating. It makes me angry that we’re not getting any help,” Lopez said. After reaching out to the administration he still has received no word.
The Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority, or AMAFCA, has a large flood reduction project that meets the field that they have been working on, and the Executive Engineer said Albuquerque Public Schools complied with their request to remove some fencing for the project.
“One of the reasons APS wanted to remove all the fencing is because they wanted to keep it for their use,” Lovato said. However, Lovato said AMAFCA’s work shouldn’t have been affected by the fence that surrounds the baseball team’s field and practice area.
“I’m not sure why that section of fence was removed,” he said. APS said the fence was removed a couple years ago, but as for when or if it will go back up, a spokesperson only said the school will schedule a meeting for Tuesday morning to discuss the future plan there.
Parents said they have been pitching in to help repair the old, damaged equipment in an attempt to avoid using fundraising money that students collected to fund necessary equipment and gear like uniforms.
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