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"It's like you're a bird," said a breathless 14-year-old Wyatt Gibbs, who started speedboarding a little over a year ago and now competes nationally. "You're free, you're a seagull," he said, pointing at the sun-kissed Pacific Ocean a few blocks away. Earlier this month, Laguna Beach residents packed a city council meeting over the proposed ban. Council members agreed to prohibit skateboarding on four streets and will consider additional regulations at a meeting in March, said City Manager John Pietig. Wyatt's father, Chad Gibbs, said he supports efforts to police kids who don't wear helmets or heed traffic signals.
He doesn't let his son venture up to Laguna's so-called "black diamond" hills, and thinks parents, not the city, should decide whether they skate. "I parent my child to have him do what he loves to do within reason," Gibbs said. "Nothing is going to make him 100 percent safe, but I can at least put restrictions on what I deem safe." But many residents say they can't rely on all parents to keep their children off the most harrowing hills. In January, a 17-year-old died in Los Angeles after he fell while skateboarding down a hill without a
wearing a helmet. Police in Laguna Beach say they received more than 400 complaints about skateboarders and 11 reports of collisions in the last three years. Police department liaison Jim Beres said the faster someone is going on a skateboard, the more potentially serious the injury in a crash. "Imagine if you're skiing downhill and you hit a tree -- what kind of injuries would you sustain? Young skaters claim they can control their boards and stop them as fast, or faster, than a bicycle. Many say they want grown-ups in Laguna Beach to remember what it's like to be a kid. Those memories are what frighten many adults when they see teens whizzing through the city in search of speed. "I don't think there are better hills," said Laguna Beach Mayor Toni Iseman. "If I were a kid and I had no fear of death, I would say Laguna is heaven."
[Associated
Press;
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