NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (AP) — Country singer Kip Moore's style is more surfboards and
skateboards than cowboy boots, so when he wanted to help children from
low-income areas, he found inspiration in his
own passions.Last
month in Annapolis, Maryland, Moore opened the first of four skate
parks he is helping to fund with the Comeback Kid Skatepark Project, an
initiative of his donor-advised charitable fund, Kip's Kids Fund.
Another park opened in San Marcos, Texas, and two more will be opened in
Nashville, Tennessee, and Boston.Moore,
along with the city of Annapolis and local community donors, helped
refurbish a skate park that had fallen into disrepair by resurfacing the
pavement and adding ramps, rails, corner pockets and flip banks. Moore
said he wanted to give kids a safe place to practice and create bonds
with other skaters."Skating
is such a brotherhood community," the 35-year-old singer-songwriter
said in an interview with The Associated Press during his first look at
the new park in Annapolis. "In a lot of these areas, these kids are
dealing with all kinds of different problems. This is a safe place for
them to go. And it's a place where they can be turned on to a new sport
that might give them some hope, something to be proud of. I am in a
position now to make some things happen and that's what I want to do in
these communities."Moore
named the project after the song "Comeback Kid" on his new album, "Wild
Ones," which debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 chart last month."I
see it hopefully being a nationwide thing," Moore said of his
charitable fund. "Hopefully we can expand this thing and turn it into a
million different projects, not just skating, but all kinds of things in
the inner cities."Brad
Siedlecki, president of Pillar Design Studios, the company that helped
build and design the park, said he was already working with the city to
refurbish the park when Moore reached out."With
Kip's money, that really brought the whole park together and the kids
got a brand-new skate park out of it," Siedlecki said.Chris Opilla, an Annapolis skateboarder, said the improvements have already started drawing skaters back to the park."The
gift from Kip Moore and everybody was a godsend," Opilla said. "I've
seen a 20-fold increase in the amount of kids. Kids would come here and
get tired of the old wooden ramps that were broken down. But now on a
weekend you can easily see 20 kids here at any given time."Even
Annapolis Mayor Mike Pantelides felt inspired to test out the ramps
during the opening, even after he fell off the board a few times.__Associated Press videographer Rick Gentilo in Annapolis contributed to this story.
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