Graffiti in parks costs taxpayers big bucks
06:19 PM CST on Tuesday, January 9, 2007
By Doug Miller / 11 News
Click to watch raw video of the cleanup | Click to watch Doug Miller's report
Sometimes skateboarding in Watonga Parkway Park in northwest Houston is a family
affair, but what happened there recently was hardly family friendly.
Vandals hit the park hard last weekend, creating what city officials described
as one of the worst graffiti messes they’ve ever seen at a Houston park.
“I just couldn’t believe it,” Houston Parks Department’s Thomas Turner said.
Parks officials had to cleanup Watonga Parkway Park after vandals tagged it over
the weekend.
Turner noticed the mess as he drove by the park.
“I said, ‘Gee, man, this never happened before out here. First time, since I
been here for a while.”
Unfortunately, someone had to clean up the graffiti, and someone had to foot the
bill -- namely, the taxpayers.
“And this is really bad. Every piece of equipment got hit in a big way—not just
one or two pieces. So this is pretty startling,” Mark Ross, who also works for
the Houston Parks Department, said.
Taxpayers in Houston paid an estimated $2,000 tab to clean up the mess left by
vandals in this park.
What’s more, Parks Department officials say they appropriate about $230,000 of
taxpayers’ money a year to paint over graffiti.
A makeshift skate park near the Watonga Park skate park illustrates the close
relationship between skating and tagging.
“Like, if it’s freshly painted, it’s like fresh meat. They’re just gonna tag it
again, until it looks the same, you know?” skater Ron Thompson said.
Thanks to Houston taxpayers’ money, the Watonga skate park is a clean slate …
but keeping parks cleaned of graffiti is a tough task.