The local skate park once terrified Jane. Now it’s her happy place

Jane McRoberts is an avid skateboarder.

The 41-year-old hits the park at Al’s Skate Co in Wodonga two to three times a week, fitting in lessons around her TAFE course, where she’s training to become an education support officer.

The park is empty at midday on Monday when she arrives, but within minutes laughter fills the space.

She isn’t used to such a warm reception – born with cerebral palsy, Ms McRoberts uses a crutch to walk, and has spent much of her life being excluded or teased for her disability.

Here, she’s just affectionately known as “Janey”.

Staff and other skaters are buoyed by her humour and positivity, and it seems like she’s been coming here forever.

From paranoia to a sense of place

But Ms McRoberts wasn’t always so comfortable in the park.

She lives with bipolar disorder, which sometimes causes psychosis. 

During a psychotic episode in early 2022, before she took up skateboarding, she hallucinated that she was being watched.

Walking by the skate park, she saw CCTV cameras that reinforced the idea that the psychosis had planted in her mind – and made Al’s a central part of her hallucination.

Alan Taylor (left), owner of Al’s Skate Co and Janey are both keen skateboarders. (ABC Goulburn Murray: Sarah Krieg)

Once she’d recovered, with the support of her psychological team, Ms McRoberts began challenging the thoughts her psychosis had convinced her were facts.

“I went around to places to give myself confidence and to stabilise and say, ‘Yeah, I’m all good, I can be within the situations where I thought I was being watched,'” she said.

“I walked in [to Al’s], and I thought, ‘How do I walk into a skate park? I can’t skate.'”

Nervously, she started browsing the skate shop, and came across a T-shirt with a creatively spelled message: “Get it strait, ride krooked.”

Ms McRoberts went to buy the T-shirt as a sort of “disability pride” statement, and cracked a joke about her cerebral palsy with the employee who served her. 

A woman in a green helmet and tshirt looks out at an indoor skatepark. Her shirt reads

Ms McRoberts says the skate park is her happy place. (ABC Goulburn Murray: Sarah Krieg)

“He was wonderful, beautiful and kind — and it was my entrance into Al’s,” she said.

“It’s been a supportive place to set me free from years of depression … it made me feel worthy of life.”

How to make a skateboard accessible

From then on, Ms McRoberts was a regular at the park.

“I just kept coming along and having coffee … growing confidence that I was allowed to live and talk to people,” she said.

Her enthusiasm was infectious, and her desire to skate became clear.

“She would write these beautiful messages, commenting on social media posts and signing off as ‘non-skater Janey’,” said Alan Taylor, owner of Al’s Skate Co.

A man pushes a rectangular prism-shaped skate frame, while the woman on a skateboard inside the frame laughs

Alan Taylor (right) says the skate centre has become a happy place for locals of all ages. (ABC Goulburn Murray: Sarah Krieg)

“We kind of went, ‘How do we make Janey a skater?'”

Shannon Dale, business manager at Al’s Skate Co, said Ms McRoberts got the staff members thinking outside the box.

A blonde woman in a beanie and black hoodie has her arm around a short-haired kid in a puffer jacket

Shannon Dale (right) is a skateboarder and business manager at Al’s Skate Co. (Supplied: Al’s Skate Co)

“She’d said a few comments to a number of staff members that she hoped in her next life, she wasn’t disabled, so she could enjoy skateboarding too,” Ms Dale said.

“We just sort of decided that we needed to make that happen for her.”

Within a week, a custom-built “skate frame” was ready to go.

When the team at Al’s presented it as a surprise, McRoberts was floored — in a good way.

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“I just felt like a skater girl, I felt like part of the community,” she said.

“Growing up, I was teased, and I did feel like an outsider, and then mental health issues have been part of life, I’ve disconnected myself from friends … [As a skater,] I felt included.”

For Ms Dale, who has since moved interstate and now works for the skate park remotely, it was a special moment having a skate with Ms McRoberts and others at a farewell party.

“Going out on having a street skate with your friends is a core memory for a lot of us as adults, and being able to recreate that for these kids and for Janey and to have it all in one [was] amazing,” Ms Dale said. 

a group of girls with skateboards and helmets flank a woman in a skate frame

Ms McRoberts, Ms Dale and fellow skater girls take to the streets of Wodonga for a sunset skate. (Supplied: Al’s Skate Co)

“It’s something special for Janey, but also for the young girls that are coming in and learning to include people no matter how different, or what their background is,” she said. 

In the frame

Talking about her experiences at the skate park is emotional for the 41-year-old. 

“There can be a thing in disability where you’re removed — you’re over there in the accessible part of the park with the disability equipment,” she said.

“So to be side by side, where I’m in the frame, and the girls are skating right beside me, is something that doesn’t often happen.”

Ms McRoberts credits the support of the skate community with giving her the confidence to chase her dreams.

She sees her studies at TAFE as a way to give young people the support she never had growing up.

A woman in a green helmet and tshirt laughs as her harness is clipped to her skate frame.

Jane McRoberts prepares to hit the park in her custom-built skate frame, with the help of staff at Al’s Skate Co.(ABC Goulburn Murray: Sarah Krieg)

“It’s just this flow-on effect,” she said.

“It’s with the love and support of these guys, to feel confident, to even just start conversing and feel like I have value in the world.”

Inclusion matters

The skate frame won’t just benefit Ms McRoberts — it’s fully adjustable, so it fits other skaters too.

“We’ve got a couple of other kids in the park who have physical disabilities … so the frame sort of came to life,” Ms Dale said.

A person stands on a skateboard inside a large frame. The skateboard is attached to the frame with elastic in four places

Skaters are strapped into the frame with a harness, and the board is attached with elastic at the base. (ABC Goulburn Murray: Sarah Krieg)

Inclusion is a cornerstone of everything the team at Al’s Skate Co set out to do, Ms Dale said.

“It doesn’t matter what your skill level is, or where you’re at, if you’ve got any physical or mental illness, it’s just about coming and being a part of the community, and everyone just getting around each other,” she said.

Almost two years on since she walked into the skate park for the first time, a lot has changed for Ms McRoberts, and she is deeply grateful.

“From one of the most awful times in my life, the most beautiful thing has happened,” she said.

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Uzbekistan needs a new economic approach that includes LGBTQ+ people

By M V Lee Badgett, Professor of economics, UMASS Amherst

Countries that have decriminalised homosexuality have 4.5 times higher rates of foreign direct investment (FDI) than countries that criminalise consensual same-sex relationships, M V Lee Badgett writes.

Spring in Samarkand returns flowering trees and vivid colour to the ancient Silk Road trading post, along with some less traditional arrivals this year – officials from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD). 

The theme of EBRD’s annual meeting in Samarkand is investing in resilience to promote economic stability and growth.

Modern bankers have new tools to use to encourage economic growth in Uzbekistan and other countries in Central Asia. 

One of the least known but potentially powerful tools is promoting the economic inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex people (LGBTI) — a strategy increasingly embraced by global financial institutions, development banks, and multinational corporations.

Barriers remain high

LGBTI people face challenges to their full participation in economies everywhere, but the barriers are particularly high in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, the last two countries in Central Asia that criminalise homosexuality. 

Others in the region dropped those legal penalties for LGBTI people after becoming independent from the Soviet Union.

In January, Singapore became the latest country to decriminalise, with the prime minister noting that gay people “contribute fully to Singapore” and acknowledging that their hopes of being respected and accepted are reasonable. 

This landmark legal change came after a 15-year compromise in which Singaporean legislators left the criminal law in place but agreed not to enforce it.

Unlike Singapore, though, Uzbekistan has been particularly aggressive in arresting, torturing, and incarcerating gay men. 

Police arrest and beat gay men because of the “sin” they are committing or for financial gain, demanding payments to hold back on releasing information to the men’s families or to the public. 

Gay men, their friends, and sometimes their families must pay bribes to be released from police custody. Social media vigilantes also target LGBTI people and allies for harassment and violence.

Violence and stigma endanger LGBTI people’s health

These examples of poor treatment help us see the connection between antigay laws and practices to the needs of Uzbekistan’s economy. 

The most immediate effect is on health, a vital aspect of what economists call human capital—the energy, skills, knowledge, and creativity that people can deploy in the economy. 

Beatings and other forms of violence can generate physical injuries as well as psychological damage, diminishing the human capital available to the economy.

In addition, human rights agencies report that Uzbek gay men have experienced forced anal examinations (considered by many to be a form of torture) and sometimes resort to suicide attempts.

HIV clinics have even reported gay men to the government and police, discouraging people from getting the testing and treatment that will prolong their lives and prevent transmission of HIV.

Even those LGBTI people who haven’t yet had such experiences would logically fear such treatment if they were more open. 

Hiding one’s sexuality or gender identity might help avoid some harms of homophobia or transphobia, but global evidence shows that staying in the closet also contributes to psychological and physical health conditions. 

Overall, the research shows that violence, stigma, and discrimination make LGBTI people sick.

Exclusion also drains the economy

These are also conditions that make it hard to conduct surveys on what happens to LGBTI people in other parts of the economy. 

As a result, we have little research on how young LGBTI people survive their schooling in Uzbekistan or on how much discrimination LGBTI people face in the workplace or other marketplaces. 

However, it is reasonable to think that LGBTI people are also vulnerable to maltreatment in those settings in Uzbekistan. 

Bullying, harassment, and discrimination also reduce the educational achievements and work productivity of LGBTI people, holding back Uzbekistan’s businesses and overall economy even more.

These forms of exclusion in education, health, and the workplace add up to a big drain on a country’s economy. 

Countries that have exclusionary LGBTI-related laws and public opinion have lower GDP per capita. Studies from other countries put the cost of anti-LGBTI treatment at 1% or more of a country’s GDP.

Meanwhile, there is a strong correlation between inclusion and growth

A recent study focusing on Uzbekistan points out that countries that have decriminalised homosexuality have 4.5 times higher rates of foreign direct investment (FDI) than countries that criminalise consensual same-sex relationships. 

That might be one reason why Uzbekistan has the lowest rate of FDI as a percentage of GDP in the Central Asia region. 

There is a strong correlation between LGBTI inclusion and both the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index and the World Bank’s Human Capital Index. 

Attracting foreign investment is one of Uzbekistan’s economic priorities, along with expanding the market for its goods and services in other countries as well as local tourism.

One way the EBRD can help Uzbekistan achieve those goals is to help bring Uzbekistan’s law and practice into alignment with human rights and with smart economic policy. 

Inclusion of LGBTI people — starting with eliminating the harmful abuse of gay men — and of other vulnerable groups is an important strategy for a resilient, thriving economy.

M V Lee Badgett, PhD is a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and the author of The Economic Case for LGBT Equality: Why Fair and Equal Treatment Benefits Us All.

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