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Staying inbounds at Porter's court Publication Date: May 30, 2003 Out of a love for basketball, David Porter transformed his
backyard.
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Technical foul City zoning board will be the referee when owner appeals
the building of a backyard basketball court that has been a slam-dunk
success with youth.
SUNDAY NEWS (LANCASTER, PA.) Publication Date: June 15,
2003 They say Dudie is the real deal.
Publication Date: July 5, 2003
Publication Date: July 6, 2003
Publication Date: July 8, 2003
Publication Date: July 8, 2003
Publication Date: July 10, 2003
Building a basketball court of their
dreams Thursday, July 10, 2003 -
Dispatch/Sunday News
Building a basketball court of their dreams McCaskey High fan
creates a facility in his back yard for Lancaster youth We need more fans
like Lancaster's David Porter.
A 1974 graduate of McCaskey High, Porter is an avid supporter of Red
Tornado boys' basketball. Ask him about the upcoming season -- which
doesn't start for another five months or so -- and he spits out the names
of Edwin Delgado, a three-point marksman, and 14-year-old Anthony "Dudie"
Hunter, whom he labels an Allen Iverson clone.
You might say he's obsessed, but he would say he's just fed up.
He's tired of McCaskey falling short of a state title. He's tired of
losing to the same teams, although he's happy the Red Tornado continues to
beat York High.
So, instead of talking or complaining about it, as most fans do, he did
something about it.
He created a basketball court in his back yard at 105 Ruby Street for
the children in the city to develop their skills.
"You have to start the kids early," said Porter. "The kids in the
suburbs, they all have courts. But the kids in the city ... I figured I'd
give the city kids a place to play."
The 47-year-old Porter, who owns a used furniture store, spent
approximately $5,000 -- all his money -- in refurbishing the court. A
chain-link fence was installed. The surface was re-done. A new backboard,
just like the ones used in high schools, college and the NBA, was brought
in.
He named it "Tornado Alley," and he watches over it from the captain's
chair in his living room. There are a couple of security monitors so he
can keep an eye on the court. He videotapes each day's action, which is
helpful in clearing up any disputes over court records such as free-throw
or three-point shooting. He also uses an intercom to communicate to the
players.
The kids have come out in droves, some honing their jump shots, like
Delgado. Some are learning the game, dribbling a basketball for the first
time. Others are simply hanging out, which isn't a crime.
But you wouldn't know that from the way the city responded. It tried to
shut down his court, saying he was in violation of several city
ordinances, including the height of a fence (six feet is allowed). A
cease-and-desist order was issued to Porter -- if the court wasn't dealt
with, i.e. taken down, in a week, he would be slapped with a $500 fine.
Porter wasn't ready to give up on his court and, more importantly, the
kids. So, he appealed, bringing 25 children, all toting basketballs, with
him to a meeting with the Lancaster Zoning Hearing Board.
It worked. The city, specifically Mayor Charlie Smithgall, said the
court was a positive for the city and the kids. It allowed Porter to
continue with the court, unimpeded.
"I thought it was a good move," said Porter. "The city's parks
superintendent said we need more people to do stuff like this. We need
private funding to help out, so we don't have to raise taxes."
He's a fan, for sure, making an sizeable statement.
Five thousand dollars, out of his own pocket.
We need more like him. The kids need more like him.
Jeffrey Martin is a sportswriter for The York Dispatch/York Sunday
News. He can be reached at ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Jmartin@yorkdispatch.com
Publication Date: July 13, 2003
Publication Date: September 7,
2003 A Positive Step for the Northwest
Neighborhood Build New
basketball Court at Crystal Park Turn Rodney Park into playground for younger' children,.
Recently I had the great good fortune to get the OK from the City
Zoning folks to allow the neighborhood children to continue using the
basketball half-court that is installed behind my house on Ruby Street. We
call it "Tornado Alley". So far it has been a smashing success, far beyond
my original expectations. This small half-court is so popular with so many
children that they literally have to wait in line to get a chance to
play. This success points up one thing very clearly. There is a crying need
for a full-scale, fenced-in basketball court in this Northwest area of the
City. Others and myself have looked over many possibilities to solve the
problem of so many youngsters, boys and girls in their early to late teens
having nowhere to really play a good game of basketball. The best of all
possible locations is Crystal Park. It’s my suggestion, to the Mayor and
the Crystal Park area residents, that a new court be constructed at
Crystal Park for the teens and that Rodney Park, just a few blocks away,
be set-up for the younger children and toddlers. Crystal Park is
landscaped in such a way that the construction of a quality court would be
an easy job; it’s flat unlike the sloped areas of Rodney Park. I have heard that some neighbors see the reasoning behind this idea and
yet others are afraid that it might be an attractant for drug users and
troublemakers. From my Tornado Alley experience, nothing could be farther
from the truth. Some have complained of drug use at Crystal Park, glass
strewn everywhere, muggings, threats from kids hanging-out in the area and
even talk of "gang" activity. This last ‘problem’ relates to a small group
of very young children (eight, nine and ten-year-olds) who have given
themselves a no-doubt TV inspired name, "The Young Assassins". From what I
have been able to learn, the groups’ most dangerous act has been to spray
paint their gang name in a couple of places. My information comes from
boys and girls that know them and who play at Tornado Alley. They are
little kids with a scary name. If Crystal Park had a well constructed, fenced and locked basketball
court operated under the supervision of caring adults and/or City workers,
there would be no more drug use there, no more delinquency, no more
fighting. All the bad things that the neighbors fear would be replaced
with a positive, neighborhood-value enhancing physical activity center
that the kids would love and respect. Leave Crystal Park as it is, leave
Rodney Park as it is and we will all see a downward spiral of juvenile
delinquency in our neighborhood with the attendant property damage, petty
thefts, muggings, drug use, illicit sexual activity, loud obscene
language, little ‘tough guys’ trying to make a name for themselves by
harassing the older folks. It will not get better. It will certainly get
worse. Interject a well-planned project that takes the small children’s
equipment to Rodney Park and adds some sandboxes along with some creative,
up-to-date playthings while transforming Crystal Park into a real
basketball playground with at least one full-court and perhaps a couple of
practice backboards requiring far less space and the neighborhood will
begin to be livable again. Exactly what some neighbors don’t want is precisely what will do them
and the entire area the most good. My daily experience at Tornado Alley
has been a personal blessing for me and it’s beyond a big hit with the
children. I have watched, many times, as older teens (being respectful of
each other) have shown the youngsters how to behave and give up on
confrontation as the preferred method of interacting. There is true
mentoring happening in my backyard as a regulated sports activity is
bringing out the best in the participants. I would hope that through the Weed & Seed Program, a Corporate or
anonymous donor or the Mayor’s petty cash, this idea can become a reality
and that the neighbors take a bit wider view of things to realize that
this type of project won’t bring problems, it will bring the solution to
the present and future problems. We may not save the whole City, but
together we can do a great good for the youngsters in our immediate area
who presently have no other outlets for their good energy. Please be on
the side of the children. Try to remember when you were 12 or 16 and when
you were 7 and 8 too. Tornado
alley Mr. David Porter 105 Ruby Street (rear) Lancaster, PA 17603 Website: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Overview: Start-up and Continuing Operation
7/04/2004 Beginning "Tornado Alley" was an idea that had been brewing for some
time. For years, Mr. Porter had a rollout basketball backboard that he
kept in his back yard for his own use. On occasion he would park his
pick-up on Ruby Street, roll the backboard into the parking pad and
practice his own shooting. He is a member of the ‘over forty’ league at
the "Y" and an avid follower of McCaskey High School’s Red Tornados
basketball team. He has attended every McCaskey home and away game for
years. While practicing, neighborhood children would invariably come by
and ask if they could shoot a few with him. They always showed
disappointment when he put the backboard away for the evening. In early
2003, with Rodney Park no longer available for basketball, Mr. Porter
decided to install a permanent, first class half-court facility using his
parking pad and part of his back yard. There was nowhere for the
neighborhood children to shoot hoops and area crime and delinquency
problems were on the rise. Construction Spending $3,500.00, Mr. Porter had a full scale professional
half-court installed at the rear of his house. He used the best of
materials including acrylic coated macadam, professional line painting and an NBA regulation 72" tempered glass
backboard. With his neighbors’ blessings, he installed 12’ high fencing on
3 sides so that errant balls wouldn’t destroy any flowers or break any
windows. He added colorful team banners and bench for those waiting to
play. He also set-up three monitored and taped surveillance cameras (one
with night vision) to check-on and record all activities on the court. On
April 1, 2003 "Tornado Alley" was born and the children (from ages 7 to
20) came in a continuing stream. Mr. Porter opens the court from 4 to 9
p.m. each weekday and longer on weekends. Zoning Difficulties With the court in full operation for a short while, Mr. Porter
was notified that his 12’ fences didn’t meet the zoning codes. He’d either
have to pay $200.00 to file an appeal or take down the fences that were of
such importance to the orderly operation of the court. Neighbors and
friends from throughout the City signed petitions on Mr. Porter’s behalf.
Newspaper articles and letters to the editors all spoke in praise of his
efforts for the children. At the crowded zoning hearing, even the Mayor of
Lancaster spoke in behalf of Mr. Porter’s efforts to gain a variance. A
great number of City residents also took the floor and to a person all
commended Mr. Porter for what he had done and urged the Hearing Officers
to find in his favor. They did and "Tornado Alley" continues to
serve. Operational Highlights "Tornado Alley" is a daily buzz of happy, healthy childhood
basketball activity. Mr. Porter constantly encourages the youngsters to
work hard so that they might someday play for McCaskey or whatever school
they attend. Frequent 3-point shot contests are held. One-on-one competitions bring the best out of all the
kids. Foul shooting contests are a regular activity. Winners can go home with a Trophy, a "Tornado Alley" T-Shirt or
a new basketball. Winners photos are displayed on the playing fence and on the
tornadoalleyhoops.com website. Many neighbors frequently contribute cases of soda and similar
treats for the players. Local high school star players stop by and give the kids tips
and plenty of encouragement. They also show the children how it’s down by
slam dunking and making difficult shots with ease. Well-known college players have also stopped by and provided
mini-tutorials for the up-and-coming stars. The local Pizza Hut provides discount pizzas for Pizza Sunday,
a regular event. The players take pride in keeping "Tornado Alley" clean and
neat. Neighbors have come by to help out and many have remarked that
local delinquency problems have all but vanished. Many mother and fathers have come by to praise the court
activities and share that the rules and regulations of "Tornado Alley"
have helped with their children’s behavior overall and provided much
needed safe activity. The Future "Tornado Alley" has helped to more fully expose a major problem
in Southwest Lancaster. There just are no good places for children to play
a full game of basketball or do much of anything else that’s rewarding and
fun. Without "Tornado Alley" there would continue to be a downward spiral
of delinquency locally. Mr. Porter sees and hopes the City and perhaps
Weed and Seed will see that one solution would be by a better use of
Crystal Park. Mr. Porter proposes that Rodney Park be fixed-up for the
very young children and that the landscape of Crystal Park would lend
perfectly to a full-court, fenced-in basketball facility. "Tornado Alley"
will continue but it can only serve a few of those in need of lots of
physical activity. Crystal Park is a natural for such a facility that’s
very badly needed. Sincerely, Dave Porter His hoop
dreams still scoring for kids LANCASTER NEW ERA (LANCASTER,
PA.) Publication Date: Dec 27, 2003, Section: U.S./WORLD By BERNARD HARRIS New Era Staff
Writer
Dave Porter plans to begin the new year the same way
he began this one. The community's
MVP SUNDAY NEWS (LANCASTER, PA.)
Publication Date: March 14,
2004 Dave
Porter was bitten by the basketball bug 40 years ago when his parents took
him to see the Harlem Globetrotters in Hershey. Angels are Among Us
Ten years ago, David Porter was painting angels. Now, many
Lancastrians consider Porter to be an angel, thanks to the time and
personal resources he devotes to the city’s children. By Sue Long Photography by Allan Holm and courtesy of David Porter
The passage of a decade has seen the boyish-looking Porter
develop a few gray hairs and fine lines around his eyes. Otherwise he
retains his unabashed enthusiasm for life and the things he feels
passionate about. Basketball remains at the top of that list, as it’s been
a lifelong interest. He also continues to harbor an interest in and a
talent for artistic pursuits. The plight of children figures in to his
list of priorities, as well. Somehow, Porter has always managed to merge
his interests and turn them into projects that foster peaceful
co-existence. Thanks to a project Porter calls Tornado Alley, he can
share his love of basketball with younger generations who dream of being
the next MJ, Shaq, or AI. For many children, Tornado Alley is a place
where they can dream, escape the boredom of having nothing to do, or enjoy
the camaraderie that comes with "belonging" to something that matters.
"Basketball means everything to these kids," Porter explains. "They just
want to play basketball." While most passersby see a bunch of kids playing b-ball,
Porter sees something else transpiring. "Kids like nothing better than to
belong to something," he observes. "It pumps up their self-esteem, makes
them proud of themselves." Social skills also emerge. "They learn to pat
each other on the back and encourage one another to keep improving their
skills," Porter has discovered. "Older kids like the fact that the younger
ones admire and respect them, which is a big boost to their egos."
Self-discipline is another learned trait the kids develop, which leads
Porter to point out that his charges are "too busy playing basketball to
get into any fights with one another." Why does he devote his time, energy and personal resources
to kids and basketball? In his estimation, the country’s future is at
stake, pointing out that idle kids spell disaster. "They’re our
weapons of mass destruction," he says, but quickly adds that in his
opinion, peace can be achieved through the game of basketball. "Who would
have ever thought that 1.3 billion people in China would be glued to their
televisions to watch Yao Ming and the Houston Rockets play the Los Angeles
Lakers?" he asks. Porter’s philosophy of achieving world peace hasn’t
changed much in the last 10 years. In an article written by Mary Alice
Bitts for this magazine in 1994, Porter had the following to say: "No one
has a memory of world peace because it has never existed. But if we plant
the message in kids’ minds [that] this is possible, they can make it
real." Ten years ago, Porter proposed that art could be used as a tool to
achieve peace in the world, with children serving as the canvas. He
proposed that through art, "children could learn to visualize all people
as part of a harmonious, global community." Porter produced what he called peace paintings and took
them into local schools, where assemblies started with Porter playing the
Star Spangled Banner Hendrix style, i.e. on an electric guitar. His
message started with a question – Which country is the most powerful? The
answer, of course, was always the same – the United States. Porter
proposed to his audiences that military might had little to do with our
strength. Instead, he argued that the country’s willingness to help the
world’s downtrodden was empowering. "Helping people makes you strong," he
told his audiences. Porter had ambitious plans for his peace paintings – a
world tour, a flight into space and posters in every classroom (around the
world). Politicians, businesses, media and the man on the street
encouraged this "cosmic artist" (WITF’s description of Porter) to pursue
his dream. Porter’s dream of world peace and a lifelong interest in
all things mystical led him to develop a series of paintings that held
spiritual significance. (Porter studied the Cabala long before Madonna
made it hip.) The resulting paintings featured angels and other celestial
beings that were the subject of a month-long exhibit at Mulberry Art
Studios in December 1994. Like many great experiments, reality eventually infringes
on idealistic pursuits. In Porter’s case, raising the necessary funding
proved to be a problem. Plus, the big monkey wrench -- earning a living –
proved to be an obstacle Porter had to contend with. He put his paint
brushes away and joined the family business – John L. Porter’s used
Furniture -- on a full-time basis. The business is located on Columbia
Avenue, just a few blocks from the Ruby Street address where Dave grew up
and still lives. While we oftentimes have to change our directions in life,
some of us adapt and travel parallel paths. Both avenues apply to David
Porter. He still dabbles in paint, saying one of these days he just might
unveil a new series of paintings done in the tradition of artist Leroy
Neiman, whose sports-inspired paintings provide a visual image for such
events as the Olympic Games. And, he’s still concerned with the plight of children,
which brings us to Tornado Alley. Back in March 2003, after his beloved
McCaskey Red Tornados lost to Lancaster Catholic in the Lancaster-Lebanon
League championship game, Porter decided he would try to influence the
future of McCaskey basketball by encouraging younger generations of city
b-ball players to hone their skills at an early age. Where and how was the
question that needed to be answered before he could proceed. In the section of the city where Porter grew up,
basketball courts in Rodney and Crystal parks had been eliminated. Then an
idea materialized. The kids loved to shoot hoops in the alley behind
Porter’s home, where a basket and macademed pad had existed since the
early 70s. A vision of a top-flight basketball court popped into his head
and Porter set about remodeling the area. Borrowing the catch phrase – if
you build it they will come -- from Kevin Costner’s paean to baseball,
Field of Dreams, Porter set about installing a basketball court
that would make any kid proud. Porter erected an in-ground pole that is
topped by a 72-inch, tempered-glass backboard. An acrylic-coated
half-court stretches outward from the pole and basket. The court, which
exhibits a blue and rust color scheme, challenges dreamers and talented
players alike, as white lines demarcate three-point and foul-shooting
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