Verdun adds community toy boxes to public parks as part of summer-long pilot project - Action News
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Verdun adds community toy boxes to public parks as part of summer-long pilot project

Verduns test run of a community toy box program is already a hit among kids and parents alike, as they no longer have to cart a bunch of toys down to their local park each time they visit.

Take-a-toy, leave-a-toy initiative aimed at encouraging family park attendance

Five-year-old Julia Lysenko plays alongside her brother, Victor, 2, in Verdun's Queen Elizabeth Park, taking advantage of the new community toy box. ( Kate McKenna/CBC)

Verdun's test run of a community toy box program is already a hit among some kids and parents, as they no longer have to cart a bunch of toys down to their local park each time they visit.

"I like it a lot," said five-year-old Julia Lysenkoas she played alongside her brother, Victor.

"The box is my favourite colour. I love black, and the toys are so cool."

Thepilot projectis aimed at encouragingmore kids and families to head to the parks this summer. The borough stocks the boxes with some toys initially, and parents can leaveunwanted toys of their own in the boxes, sharing them with the community.

The projectgot underway in mid-June and is slated to run until September with the possibility of expanding the toy-sharing project in the future.

Boxes are available in parks such asQueen Elizabeth,Ore-du-FleuveandQuai-de-La-Tortue. One was removed temporarily from Poirier Park due to vandalism. The toysavailable range from plasticsand pails to tiny tractors and cars.

The boxes cost the borough about $800 each. Only safe toys, without any fabric or other materials that could becomegrimy with use, are accepted.

Project is 'great success,' councillor says

"It's been a great success so far," says Coun. Sterling Downey, whose four-month-old son Graeson has been out enjoying the toys in Queen Elizabeth Park, where the program first developed as a parent-led initiative.

It has since been turned into a borough program and, said Downey, it's fun to see his son playing with the toys in the very park he played in as a child.

"I have lived in the same house my whole life and now my son gets to grow up and play in the same park," he said. Nowhis son will get to enjoy "even more things like the community toy boxes."

Coun. Sterling Downey (right) is enjoying one of Verdun's new community toy boxes in Queen Elizabeth Park with his wife, Melissa Proietti, and their five-month-old son, Graeson Downey. (With files from Kate McKenna)

"It's been a great success so far," Downey told CBC.

Some toys have been broken, said Downey, but "obviously that happens when kids play with them."

There have also been some cases of vandalism, he said, but the borough is checking on the boxes regularly to ensure they are properly maintained.

Downey said Verdun parentswho wanta toy-sharing box in their neighbourhoodpark should get in touch with the borough.

With files from CBC reporter Kate McKenna