A new national initiative called Freedom to Play: Protecting America’s Children for the Next 250 Years launched on July 4, 2026, to address what it describes as a child-safety crisis in the nearly 370,000 homeowner association (HOA) communities across the United States. The campaign highlights the lack of mandatory safety oversight for playgrounds in these communities, where more than 200,000 children aged 6 to 12 are seriously injured each year.
The initiative was founded in response to documented safety failures at a playground in Piney Orchard, Odenton, Maryland, operated by the Piney Orchard Community Association (POCA). According to the press release, the playground opened without meeting Maryland COMAR safety standards, without federal ASTM/CPSC compliance documentation, without a certified safety inspection, and without environmental clearance following a hazardous exposure incident involving its poured rubber surface. In October 2025, Anne Arundel County inspectors identified multiple code violations and shut the playground down, but the HOA reopened it without correcting the violations, notifying 4,000 households that it was safe. On the day of reopening, 30 to 45 children entered, and a child nearly fell from a 25-foot climbing structure, caught only by an adult’s intervention.
The medical consequences extended beyond close calls. Mrs. Dr. Z, a permanent resident with Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD), suffered bilateral pneumonia and a documented decline in lung function on March 27, 2026, following chemical exposure linked to the rubber mat installation. Her pulmonologist and emergency room physicians directly connected the exposure to her condition, according to the release.
Freedom to Play is demanding five national reforms: mandatory safety disclosure for HOA playgrounds; environmental and chemical accountability for materials like poured rubber mats; certified independent third-party inspections; protection for medically vulnerable residents through disclosure of chemical risks; and a centralized national safety registry of HOA playground compliance records. The initiative is also developing an investigative documentary to examine the regulatory gaps and real-world consequences.
“Every parent assumes the places where their children play are safe,” said Dr. Z, founder of the initiative. “What happened here proved that assumption can be catastrophically wrong, and that without mandatory oversight, families across this country have no way of knowing the difference until it is too late.”
Supporting documentation, including Anne Arundel County permit records and medical documentation, is available upon request. The initiative is nonpartisan and not affiliated with any commercial interest.
This news story relied on content distributed by 24-7 Press Release. Blockchain Registration, Verification & Enhancement provided by NewsRamp™. The source URL for this press release is New National Initiative Targets Playground Safety Gaps in 370,000 HOA Communities.