Splash pad Q&A: journalism
Every question tagged journalism across our Q&A library.
Bank 12 (12)
- How do I pitch a splash pad story to local media?
Lead with a hook — a heat-wave, a new opening, an equity gap, an outbreak, a community win. Pitch the right reporter (city hall, parks, family beat) by name with a 3-paragraph email: news hook, why now, who you can connect them with. Include data and a quote-ready source.
- Why do splash pads keep showing up in the news?
Splash pads hit news cycles around heat waves, ribbon-cuttings, droughts, illness outbreaks, council votes, and equity reports. They are visually photogenic, kid-positive, and emotionally resonant — local TV loves them. They also surface civic-rights stories, like neighborhoods fighting for their share of cool amenities.
- How do journalists fact-check splash pad claims?
Reputable reporters cross-reference parks department records, CDC outbreak reports, manufacturer specs, NRPA data, and at least two independent sources. They request water-quality test results under public-records laws, attend council meetings, and quote named officials with titles. Beware unsourced social media stats.
- What should a splash pad op-ed include?
A strong splash pad op-ed runs 600-800 words, opens with a vivid local scene, names one specific policy ask, cites 2-3 data points (heat illness, equity gap, drought stats), shares a personal story, and ends with a call to action. Submit to local op-ed editor with a one-paragraph cover note.
- How do I find the parks department public information officer's contact?
Check the parks-and-rec section of your city's official website for a 'media contact' or 'press' link, search for the city's communications director, look at recent news stories citing parks officials, or call the parks-and-rec main line and ask. PIOs are required to respond to media within 24-48 hours in most cities.
- What are common errors in splash pad reporting?
Common errors: confusing splash pads with pools or wading pools, claiming pads are unregulated when most cities follow CDC Model Aquatic Health Code, conflating water use of flow-through vs recirculating systems, citing manufacturer marketing as fact, and missing the equity-access angle.
- Are there podcasts that interview splash pad experts?
Yes — parks-and-rec, urban-planning, public-health, and parenting podcasts regularly feature splash pad guests. Pitch shows like 'NRPA Open Space Radio,' 'Strong Towns,' 'Curbside,' 'The Family Cookbook,' and local-government podcasts. Lead with your specific expertise: operator, planner, parent advocate, researcher, or pediatrician.
- How do I file a public-records request about a splash pad?
File a written request with the city clerk or designated records officer, citing your state's public-records law (FOIA, CPRA, etc). Be specific: 'water-quality test logs for X splash pad from June 2024 to date' beats 'all records.' Most agencies respond in 5-30 days. Some charge for copies and staff time.
- How do I write a letter to the editor about splash pads?
Letters to the editor run 150-250 words, respond to a specific recent story, take a clear position, cite one fact, and ask for one action. Submit through the outlet's website, include your full name and neighborhood, and follow the publication's word limit exactly.
- How do I write a press release about a splash pad event?
A splash pad press release runs 1 page, leads with FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE and a clear headline, opens with a 2-sentence news hook, includes 2-3 supporting paragraphs with quotes, and ends with boilerplate and contact info. Send to local media at least 1 week before the event.
- How do I prepare for a TV interview about splash pads?
Prepare 3 sound-bite messages of 10-15 seconds each. Wear solid colors (avoid white and busy patterns). Stand or sit so the splash pad is in your background. Speak at the camera or interviewer, not at the floor. Smile, breathe, and bridge from the question to your message.
- What are investigative angles a journalist could pursue on splash pads?
Equity gaps in splash pad distribution, water-quality testing failures, contractor cost overruns, accessibility-code violations, broken or under-maintained pads in lower-income areas, drought-period water usage, vendor-bidding irregularities, and disability-access lawsuits all make strong investigations.