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Palm Bay's Recreation Board Is Tired of Waiting

Pickleball courts approved 21 months ago still aren't built. The master plan is on hold. And residents are asking why.

Palm Bay, FL -- The city’s Recreation Advisory Board met Tuesday evening and spent the better part of two hours navigating a familiar tension: programs that are working, projects that aren’t, and a growing frustration that approved initiatives keep stalling while the city keeps growing.

The frustration wasn’t politely implied. It was stated directly.

Pickleball: 21 Months and Counting

The city council voted in July 2024 to fund dedicated pickleball courts for Palm Bay, approving a phased implementation of eight courts each at Fred Lee Park, Veterans Park, and Nungesser Park. The project is funded by impact fees collected from new development. That was nearly two years ago. As of April 7, 2026, not one dedicated court exists in the city.

Leah Guljord, a USA Pickleball Ambassador and certified coach, showed up to the meeting to ask why. “It was voted on in July of 2024 by the city council,” she told the board. “The funds are there. The need is there. Palm Bay has not a single dedicated pickleball court for its residents.”

Guljord, who lives in West Melbourne, said Palm Bay residents are driving to her city just to play. “They’re driving all the way up there because they have nothing here.”

Parks Division Manager Josh Hudak confirmed three locations have been discussed: Fred Poppy Regional Park, Veterans Park, and Nungesser Park. Veterans Park had pickleball lines added to its tennis courts when they were resurfaced in 2023 using CDBG funds. Those are shared lines, not dedicated courts. Nungesser’s tennis courts need a full rebuild before pickleball could be added there, and that project sits in the budget request pile. Regional Park is tied to a larger master plan.

Board Chair Thomas Gaume raised a concern that the bridge entrance project at Regional Park had been bundled with the pickleball facility, creating a dependency that didn’t need to exist. Hudak clarified the bridge is a separate project. “The bridge isn’t what’s holding us up,” Hudak said, noting that meetings with Public Works on bridge funding are happening on a separate track from the regional park master plan.

A temporary fix isn’t as easy as it sounds, either. Hudak noted that even basic asphalt work requires sub-base preparation and compaction. “You can’t just temporarily make” a pickleball court, he said.

Board member Alfred Aguirre, who has served on the board for two to three years, said pickleball was already a delayed promise when he joined. “When I joined this board, pickleball. Same scenario. Voted. It’s gonna happen. And here we are.” He added that a soccer community partnership proposal had also been submitted, revised, and submitted again over the same period, with nothing to show for it. “It’s a way to discourage you,” he said. “If you say you’re gonna do something, you do it. And when you can’t, you let the parties involved say, hey, this is what happened.”

The Master Plan Is on Hold

If the board was hoping the citywide recreation master plan would finally break the logjam, that hope has been deferred.

A final draft of the Fred Poppy Regional Park master plan was presented in October 2025, with pickleball courts listed as the number one priority. Phasing called for pickleball courts first, followed by an amphitheater and event lawn, then youth practice fields. But Recreation Director Daniel Waite told the board that the city manager’s office has since put the master plan on hold. The reasoning: resources should go toward delivering projects already in the pipeline rather than layering another year of planning on top of them. “The master plan was just going to push it another year long on getting that input when we know there are some high-priority items that we can do,” Waite said.

That means the public input process that was supposed to accompany the master plan is also shelved, at least in its original form. The Recreation Division is now designing an in-house community outreach campaign instead. Surveys, HOA community room meetings, and mobile recreation programs are all in the works, with a launch planned for the end of April. Waite is working with the school board to distribute recreation program information in students’ backpacks across Palm Bay’s public and charter schools.

The board saw the irony. A priority-setting process is now operating outside the planning document that was supposed to establish priorities.

Board member Kristen Lanzana proposed addressing that directly. She asked the board to use the June meeting for an alignment session: what are each member’s goals, what is the board actually trying to accomplish, and how do they get there together. “Instead of just showing up every other month and getting a report that probably could have been emailed to us,” she said, “just to find some priorities.”

The idea got immediate, unanimous support.

The concurrency question is underneath all of this. Chair Gaume asked staff whether the city is in discussions with developers about exchanging land for impact fee credits, particularly in areas south of Malabar Road where parks don’t yet exist. Waite said he couldn’t speak to that directly, but acknowledged there have been internal discussions about land parcels for fields, event space, and playground space. Gaume summed up the underlying problem: “It’s hard to have concurrency when you don’t have a park there to begin with.”

What Is Actually Moving

The meeting wasn’t only frustration. Several programs are delivering results, and the parks department had concrete good news to open with.

The federal hold on CDBG funding has been released. The city had $404,456 allocated in May 2025 for Liberty Park Phase I and II improvements, including new fencing, infield clay, sunshades, and restroom overhauls. An additional $156,000 was proposed in FY 2025-2026 for replacing all eight dugouts. Hudak announced the projects that will now move forward: a multi-use corridor, additional sidewalk repairs, sealing of the north and south parking lots, and a full remodel of the Driskill restrooms, inside and out. All work must be completed by June 30.

The city’s 2026 Summer Camp Financial Assistance Program went live the same day as the meeting. Eligible Palm Bay families can receive up to 50 percent off weekly camp fees per child. Applicants must submit a completed application with proof of residency, identification, income verification, and eligibility documentation such as EBT participation, free or reduced lunch status, or CDBG program qualification. Applications must be submitted in person at Ted Whitlock Community Center (370 Championship Circle NW) or Tony Rosa Community Center (1502 Port Malabar Blvd NE). The application form is available at palmbayfl.gov/daycamps. Allow three to five business days for review. Approval does not automatically enroll a child. Families must still register and pay the remaining balance. Recreation staff may assist approved families with registration before the general registration date of April 20. Contact Ted Whitlock at (321) 952-3231 or Tony Rosa at (321) 952-3443 for details.

Separately, families enrolled in EBT or the Free and Reduced Lunch program can qualify for discounted swim lessons at the Palm Bay Aquatic Center. That discount must be arranged before registering by contacting swim@pbfl.org or calling (321) 952-2833.

Aquatics programs are outpacing capacity. Spring swim lessons filled within hours of registration opening. The swim team has roughly doubled in size year-over-year, now at approximately 27 members. The city is bringing in a private partner, Aquatics in Education, to run summer swim lessons at the Aquatics Center. The instructor is certified to teach ADA and adaptive classes, and an adaptive aquatics session is planned once the schedule is finalized.

The spring fun camp drew 31 participants at Tony Rosa Community Center and 26 at Ted Whitlock, a 63 percent increase year-over-year. Breakfast with the Bunny at Ted Whitlock set an attendance record with 408 participants. The underwater egg hunt at the pool also hit capacity.

New Partnerships, New Programs

Recreation staff reported several new and expanding partnerships.

The University of Florida IFAS program in Cocoa is bringing health and wellness classes south. A Mediterranean diet class runs April 8. A sheet pan meals class is set for May 29. A Build Your Bones series runs April 10 through May 1. A chicken coop building class is also in discussion. The challenge: most IFAS instructors are based in the northern part of the county. Waite said the division is working to recruit more instructors from the south part of Brevard to extend programming into Palm Bay.

Melbourne Kayak Rentals is launching guided tours through Turkey Creek Sanctuary and Castaways Park. The operator is mobile, so no permanent infrastructure is required. The YMCA is hosting basketball clinics at Ted Whitlock in May. Toddler time returned to Ted Whitlock on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and drew 41 participants on its first day back.

The Recreation Division is also evaluating an augmented reality program called Agents of Discovery, described as similar to Pokemon Go. The concept: geo-fenced missions that could direct residents to underutilized parks while driving engagement at events. A one-year trial has been running at the playground at Fred Poppy Regional Park.

On the technology side, staff are exploring a mobile app and ticketing module through Vermont Systems, the city’s recreation software provider. Current registration requires creating an account and waiting for staff approval before anything can be done. The app would streamline that to a single household setup with push notifications for events and program openings.

Fence Repairs, Field Work

Lindbergh Park’s storm-damaged fence is being repaired. Materials arrived, and crews are finishing the first field. Once that’s done, they’ll close the second field for the same treatment. Both fields are getting new turf and new fencing. Backstops are in acceptable shape.

Outreach and What’s Next

Community outreach launches at the end of April. Alongside the surveys and HOA meetings, Waite mentioned using the mobile recreation program to bring programming to residents south of Malabar Road rather than requiring them to travel to established facilities.

Lanzana volunteered to help spearhead a youth subcommittee, where young residents could participate in event planning, program feedback, and outreach. Waite noted that a similar model worked in Miami Lakes, where a youth activities task force included non-voting youth members who showed up to meetings and helped spread the word. An earlier attempt by Councilman Kenny Johnson to establish youth involvement didn’t succeed due to difficulty filling seats.

The board will address impact fee fund allocations, KPI reporting preferences, and the alignment session at the June meeting.

The 4th of July celebration returns to Eastern Florida State College. The fireworks shell count is up approximately 30 to 40 percent over last year. Entertainment options are under contract discussion.

The meeting adjourned at 6:48 p.m.

Sources

  • Recreation Advisory Board meeting, April 7, 2026 (official meeting transcript)

  • Parks Division Manager Josh Hudak, Parks and Facilities Department

  • Recreation Director Daniel Waite, Recreation Division

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