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From:tam@mcgehee.info <br />To:Pat Trudgeon;Lonnie Brokke;*RVCouncil <br />Subject:Tammy McGehee sent you an a article from startribune.com <br />Date:Tuesday, September 25, 2018 9:57:11 AM <br />Tammy McGehee wrote these comments: Please share this with the Parks and Recreation <br />Commission, too. This is the type of "accessible" playground I tried to have us consider during <br />the renewal. I feel it is a very important piece of any inclusion and wellness program. Please <br />consider this going forward. I had been informed that our playgrounds are "ADA" compliant. <br />This is something very different. Thanks for your consideration. <br />This article from StarTribune.com has been sent to you by Tammy McGehee. <br />*Please note, the sender's identity has not been verified. <br />The full article, with any associated images and links can be viewed here. <br />Lake Elmo Elementary adds inclusive playground <br />Mara Klecker, Star Tribune <br />As the sun set over Lake Elmo Elementary School recently, 12-year-old Donovan Rosckes <br />joined his 9-year-old sister Anella, who uses a wheelchair, on the school’s new playground. <br />“We couldn’t have done this before,” Donovan said about ascending the equipment side-by- <br />side with Anella. “This is way better than the old playground.” <br />When the Lake Elmo PTA found out that a summer city sewer project would require removal <br />of the school’s playground, members posed a question: Instead of reinstalling it, could the <br />school replace it with more accessible equipment? <br />A group of parents and staff researched the options, eventually settling on a blue and green <br />playground with swings, slides, climbing elements and a merry-go-round surrounded with a <br />flat, cushioned surface. It was installed this summer, and gone are the curbs and wood chips <br />that limited access for students who use wheelchairs and walkers. <br />“We wanted it to be fun for kids of all abilities, and I think we accomplished that,” said <br />Danielle Costello, a member of the volunteer committee and the mother of a fifth-grader who <br />uses a wheelchair. “All kids deserve that experience of being atop a playground.” <br />The district covered two-thirds of the $300,000 cost, and the PTA has collected donations for <br />the rest. <br />Lake Elmo Elementary is the cluster site for medically complex students in the district, but <br />previous efforts to get an accessible playground never gained much traction. <br /> Minnesota has about 20 accessible playgrounds. Many of <br />According to an online directory, <br /> to reach <br />the Lake Elmo Elementary families had to drive to Woodbury’s Madison’s Place <br />one. <br />“This is phenomenal for this school and this community,” said Erin Mathaus, a <br />paraprofessional at the school. “There are no words for seeing all of our students get to play <br />together.” <br />At the first recess of the year, Mathaus saw evidence that the students agreed. She sent <br />several photos and videos of Anella on the disk-shaped swings to the girl’s mother, Christie <br />Rosckes. <br /> <br />