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Rugby Borough Council - parks and grounds

What we've learnt over the last year of coronavirus restrictions and how we're planning to reopen from the third national lockdown.

25th March 2021

Name of project / organisation

Rugby Borough Council - parks and grounds

Sport / activity

Multi-sport

The next step in the easing of coronavirus (Covid-19) restrictions will kick in on Monday 29 March. As part of our build up, we've spoken to a number of clubs and organisations about their experiences during lockdown and what they've learnt over the last year that'll help them to reopen. 

Here, we talk to Chris Worman, the parks and grounds manager at Rugby Borough Council.

A social distancing message painted on the floor in a Rugby Borough Council park

A muddy path in a park in Rugby. Picture credit: Rugby Borough Council.

  • Have parks encountered any specific problems that other sports/activities may not have encounter? If so, how have you worked to solve these problems?

    Unlike sports and other activities, parks have remained the only public facility open throughout the pandemic. Therefore the sheer number of people using parks has led to a lot of grassland and footpaths being turned into mud baths. This damage could take years and a significant financial investment to rectify.

  • What does the future look like for parks?

    Very uncertain. Even before the pandemic, parks had were suffering from years of cuts and underinvestment. We are therefore not only at a critical moment for our nation’s parks and green spaces. But we are at a critical moment in how we will respond to a public health crisis. Let’s not forget history, as it was in response to a public health crisis that parks where originally created.

    We need to stop referring to parks as a non-statutory service. These very words imply it’s not important when, in reality, our parks and green spaces are an essential part of all of communities so should be treated as such. They provide so much, and we all take it for granted. I would go as far as to say they are essential infrastructure and should receive the same priority as our roads and railways.

    We owe it to the tens of thousands of people that have sadly died and the many thousands more in the NHS and key services that have pulled us through this to bring a legacy of change and improvement as part of a proper green recovery.

    A legacy whereby our parks and green spaces are part of integrated thinking around sustainable inclusive communities, providing equal access to quality parks and green spaces in every neighbourhood, delivering on health and wellbeing, biodiversity, climate change and community cohesion.

    Read less about What does the future look like for parks?

Pictures courtesy of Rugby Borough Council.

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