"It doesn't change our goal," Eleanor Roemer said about the referendum. "It doesn't change that we believe this will be a huge benefit not only to Rogers Park and Edgewater but to all of Chicago."Eleanor Roemer, Public Trust & Policy director for Friends of the Parks, said a significant number of people with ballots didn't even vote on the referendum and that voters calling her organization said they didn't realize they were voting against park space when they cast their ballot. Roemer says the organization "take[s] seriously the expression of people's concerns" and she hopes that dialogue with the community continues as planning moves forward.
Philip Bernstein said...> "Eleanor Roemer has finally revealed the condescending, arrogant posture of her lobbying organization. She discounts the number of votes cast, implying that the results weren't meaningful. But the 30 people who came up with the crazy boondoggle of FOTP was a meaningful expression of the views of the community? FOTP you are a joke." Source.To: Erma Tranter
President, Friends of the Parks
Erma,
Over the years I personally have appreciated the outstanding efforts of "Friends Of the Parks" in challenging the City and the Park District and being the voice of citizens who want better parks, better programs and more open green space. In that stewardship role FOTP has stood as a beacon, shining a light on the legacy of Olmsted, Ward and Burnham. In particular, I have seen the role you have played in making Friends of the Parks into the credible organization that it is today and I and many others, I'm sure, recognize that effort as well.
The accomplisments of FOTP over the years in making this a better city are numerous and the opportunities to do so much more in the future are staggering. One major opportunity is the influence that FOTP can bring to bear upon the future plans for our lakefront. As we approach the centennial of the Plan of Chicago next year, a great deal of attention is being focused on what many feel is yet undone - completing the lakefront park system. So allow me to chime in on what I believe is a gross distortion and misinterpretation of what is now known as the Burnham Plan. I have a well-worn and read copy of the Plan, so I'll refer to it as I go on here.
First, let's put the entire Plan into perspective. In Chapter 1 on page 2, only 4 paragraphs into this remarkable document, Burnham had the good sense to understand that most of what was being proposed would take generations to accomplish and much would be reconsidered over those generations: "It should be understood, however, that such radical changes as are proposed herein cannot possibly be realized immediately. Indeed, the aim has been to anticipate the needs of the future as well as to provide for the necessities of the present: in short, to direct the development of the city towards an end that must seem ideal, but is practical. Therefore it is qutie possible that when particular portions of the plan shall be taken up for execution, wider knowledge, longer experience, or a change in local conditions may suggest a better solution; but, on the other hand, before any departure shall be determined upon, it should be made clear that such a change is justified."
Well, departures we certainly have seen, particularly along the lakefront. Of course the greatest, and I might suggest the most tragic, departure has been from Burnham's unequivocal recommendation that Chicago vastly increase the amount of park space: "At least half the population of Chicago to-day live more than one mile from any large park, and in the congested sections of the city there are nearly five thousand people to each acre of park space. The average for the entire city is 590 person to each acre of park. For health and good order there should be one acre of park area for each hundred people" (page 44). Burnham based his recommendation on the 1904 Report of the Special Park Commission. We are as far today from implementing that recommendation as we were then. If Burnham were alive now, he wouldn't be as concerned about the last 4 miles of "unfinished" lakefront as much as he would be devastated that after 100 years this city has the worst record of open lands of the 15 major metropolitan areas in this country AND we're about to trash a considerable amount of park acreage by building a stadium in the middle of one of Frederick Law Olmsted's incredible legacies to this city - Washington Park. FOTP's staunch opposition to this hair-brained idea is certainly well appreciated and is in the tradition of what your organization has done in the past in standing up to the short-sighted self-interests that populate the Park District as well as City Hall.
Getting back to the lakefront, however, the departures there too have been numerous. If the lakefront looked like Burnham had planned, we'd have lagoons sprinkled along the entire lakeshore to Wilmette. We'd have man-made islands along the lakeshore from Jackson Park to Wilmette. The Midway in Hyde Park would be a canal, like the those of Venice of which Burnham was looking to mimic. Lake Shore Drive would not be a major highway extending from south to north but rather a tranquil boulevard providing a scenic view of the lake with walkways alongside the road (see picture on page 92). Of course none of this happened because "longer experience or a change in local conditions suggested a better solution", not unlike the solution that many citizens in Edgewater and Rogers Park have been steadfastly recommending for the 2 miles of lakefront from Hollywood to the Evanston border - the uninterrupted wilderness beachfront that exists today.
On FOTP's site under "The Last 4 Miles" is a quote from Burnham: "“The Lakefront by right belongs to the people – not a foot of its shores should be appropriated to the exclusion of the people…” This quote is on page 50, so let me bracket it within it's broader context in the next paragraph where Burnham then says: "Wherever possible, the outer shore should be a beach on which the waves may break; and the slopes leading down to the water should be quiet stretches of green, unvexed by the small irregular piers and the various kinds of projections which to-day give it an untidy appearance." He goes on about his lagoons again, but the point is that today, in Rogers Park we ALREADY HAVE "a beach on which the waves may break and the slopes leading down to the water of quiet stretches of green". So please, refrain from including Rogers Park within the context of "completing Chicago's lakefront parks". We believe that this City and our community have what Burnham envisioned and we look forward to FOTP's support in protecting the continued existence of that natural beauty.
Sincerely,
Don Gordon
bcc: Rogers Park neighborhood residents
29 comments:
lake michigan belongs to us all. we elected a mayor with 70% of the vote because we appreciate his stewardship of public spaces, and the huge steps that he has taken to try to lessen the impact that this city has on a struggling planet.
i don't know what the wording of the edgewater referendum was, but if it was anything like the one in 49, i would not be surprised if people had no idea what they were really voting for.
i have a response to don's letter over at the mountain of evidence, if anyone is interested.
Good Morning Hell Hole,
This is on that hits close to heart and home.
Please lets discuss this important issue.
I am leaning against any change to the lake front.
Try to convince me other wise.
The EPA ruling left the possibility open of LSD extension and other shore modifications once the revetment wall stabilized the erosion from previous alterations.
That wall is nearing completion.
Please chime in.
Develop Everything. The lakefront from Hollywood to Evanston looks like crap and is dangerous. Has anyone tried to ride a bike in this area and not risked thier life? Every holiday during the summer, we are all packed into the smallest areas. There is never anyplace for the kids to run around.
Mo said:
"i have a response to don's letter over at the mountain of evidence, if anyone is interested."
Reply:
No, Mo. Nobody is interested.
===mountain of evidence===
It's more like a pile of shit.
===we elected a mayor with 70% of the vote because we appreciate his stewardship of public spaces, and the huge steps that he has taken to try to lessen the impact that this city has on a struggling planet.===
I guess Mo was asleep when the Children's Museum and Meggs Field debates were going on?
So Craig, how is this going to be any different?
Who's Lakefront is it?
It's everybody's. Rogers Park does not own it.
And as you are about to find out, Mayor Daley does!!
Damn, been there. Why don't you and Little Ritchie get a room? Aside from being the bestest mayor in world, now he's trying to save the struggling planet. Please. Beating the political equivalent of Mo Cahill, election after election, doesn't make him some kind of "steward." He's more like a benevolent dictator. Anyway, I'm gonna go plant a tree and throw some paint against a wall-hopefully been there stops by and gives me props.
meigs field was one of the best things that ritchie ever did, imho. everyone whines about dems having no spine, then when one shows some, they are all over him. not me. made my heart go pitter patter.
the children's museum? i do not have a strong opinion, but i think that many of the strong opinions out there have more to do with how people feel about ritchie than what they think of the plan.
i can see both sides.
I fervently hope this FOTP referendum will be thwarted with the utmost prejudice.
I appreciate Rogers Park for geographic accessibility to the lakefront.I cannot phrase it more plainly than this.
Mr. Gernhardt,
I hope that you are sincere about this situation in your accounting of,analysis on and posting about the potential advanvce of the lakefronts ruination.
Maintain the discourse.
On another pressing,albeit personal but,for me,just about as serious,issue my mother-on her deathbed(GOD:rest her soul)
requested that I fullfill her last dying wish: That I prove her to her acqauntances by becoming the gay man that she supremely lauded me as throughout the decades of my adulthood.
Even if it was behind my back.
Now sexual attraction to men is something that I've never pondered since I've found females captured my attention since age seven. Yet it was requested by MOTHER and I always do what MOTHER asks since I need to please MOTHER.
Which brings me to my request:
Mr. Gernhardt,
Would you do some pieces in Gay Chicago Magazine about coming out(albeit in consecration)in mid- life along with a primer on how to effectively convey homosexuality via lifestyle choices,uniform dress codes and hair/body fumigants or facial cosmetics for males.
I'm quite new to this and I'm just so overwhelmed-gol darn-it!
Where do I shop for clothes?
Do I have to purchase accentuating jewelry?
More than once?
Do I need to take a diction course or football lessons in order to project a certain attitude or physical disposition?
Please address this specific situation for I have scores and scores of other questions and then MOTHER(God rest her soul)will be pleased.
Extend the multi use paths and the park land....
I could even be in favor of extending LSD. (MAybe)
I would LOVE to have all that traffic that does nothing but clog up Sheridan rd. GONE
Rp could be "the coolest" place in the city if we did so.
Think BIG people. Larry is right about that. Itos NOT Rogers PArks lakefront it is everyones and lest we forget we are part of a larger place called Chicago, Illinois USA Earth.
Am I the only one who kinda likes all the traffic on Sheridan in RP? I think it makes the place seem more vibrant than it actually is. Take a stroll down the parts of Sheridan that LSD bypasses (south of Bryn Mawr) and it's pretty scary and depressing. We got enough of that already in RP.
If you voted YES for the referendum, then you voted to FORBID any development of a marina, extension of the outerdrive, infill, or expansion of the park.
60% of voters voted YES.
And if you don't know what the hell your're voting for, please decline to vote. I published the wording of the referendum on my blog and so did Edgewater Crime Blotter.
The expansion of the outerdrive will deprive us of our beaches and will be obsolete and unnecessary withing 10 years, as automobile ownership will decline steeply in the face of increasingly unaffordable fuel and car ownership costs.
We have too many screaming needs, including the urgently deteriorated condition of our existing road, water, and sewer infrastructure to justify the cost of another limited access high speed road-mostly to accomodate north suburban motorists who take their cars to work downtown.
And we cannot afford to maintain what we have, as it is. The U.S. is already the most overpaved country on planet Earth, and we cannot justify one more high spped road, anywhere.
There is another point to consider.
Aside from the debate of whether we should extend the bike path, add islands, extend LSD, etc., I believe we have to consider economic conditions and priorities.
It has been estimated that extending the bike path alone could cost upward of $400 million.
Given our failed city budget, current market conditions, the lousy upkeep of our existing parks and dozens of other urgent needs this city faces, I just can't consider two miles of very expensive bike path to be among our priority.
Our street-end beaches are unique in Chicago. Our intimate relationship with the shoreline cannot be matched anywhere in the city. You have to go to Indiana or Michigan to find the experience we have here.
The majority of voters in Rogers Park and Edgewater have made their opinion known -- we don't want Rogers Park to look like Lincoln Park.
There are many factions in Rogers Park which frequently snipe at each other. However, we must unite to protect our precious lakefront.
Newgarder said...> "Please address this specific situation for I have scores and scores of other questions"
Dear Newgarder, please seek professional help. Try Dr. Phil.
To: The broken heart of Mr. Gernhardt,
Thanx for your Dr. Phil suggestion,yet he's a little too butch for me.
BTW: Did I use that'Butch'term properly?
In the self-interest of not being considered too ignorant (and with all of the attendant and increasingly confusing back & forth concerning the FOTP referendum) I have to revise my opinion for clearer integrity:
I fervently hope that the referendum to stop the landfill shall succeed and any organization opposing this shall be thwarted with the utmost prejudice.
"..the huge steps that he has taken to try to lessen the impact that this city has on a struggling planet."
Yes, great recycling program we have here in Chicago. It's been in place for years. We are a leader in recycling. NOT!
Mayor Daley has been great for city beautification, but we still haven't got a decent recycling program in this world class city.
Not to be overly negative, but it is shameful how behind the curve we are with that.
"Given our failed city budget, current market conditions, the lousy upkeep of our existing parks and dozens of other urgent needs this city faces, I just can't consider two miles of very expensive bike path to be among our priority."
Thanks Rogersparking for the common sense on priorities. You got my vote.
Table the idea for another 100 years.
It is a want, not a need.
On one hand the idea of a bike path that extends all the way through is a great idea. But then, I used to live by North Avenue beach and you risked your life walking with the crazy bikers, roller bladers, etc. I know I don't want that! I love the few blocks of peace the beach up here gives us. I certainly don't want LSD running next to it! After reading everything I am still confused - what exactly is it that "they" want to do?
Let's look at the future, shall we. We need to focus on the 800 pound gorilla i the room. Look where the story came from. That's right. Loyola. I've watched Loyola close both Winthrop and Kenmore north of Devon/Sheridan to traffic. These once were city streets. Now there gone. I see the same for Sheridan Road to Broadway closed in the not to distant future. Read this.
Where do you think the traffic will go when this campus becomes total ped-friendly? I'm guessing some 1/4 mile east.
Loyola is completely stealing the neighborhood from taxpaying residents and homeowners, and they're doing it with our tax money.
Not only is Loyola tax exempt, but the beneficiary of the Loyola TIF, which is mis-directing appx. $45 million to building out Loyola, at the expense of our city services and amenities.
And what has the TIF done? Well, I see a very attractive and overpriced rental apt. building rising on Sheridan Road. That's nice, it's a good-looking building no one could complain about, but there is no market for $1400 a month studio apts in this area, or in this era of mass foreclosures and falling incomes. Watch, it will end up being a back-door gift to Loyola just like the Granada apt building was, for it will fail commercially and end up being sold to Loyola at a third it's cost. All on our dime.
We must stop the TIF juaggernaut if we want to get control of our neighborhoods and keep the the city solvent.
I'm guessing some 1/4 mile east.
Let's make it 3/4 of a mile and any exits are barrier islands.
Better yet lets burry it under the lake.
Whose Lakefront is it? Give me a break! Have you been over there lately? The lakefront belongs to the bums, drunks, prostitutes, retards, crazys, dog owners, scumbags, druggies, dope peddlers, and their filthy friends and associates. If they could all be buried permanently in a landfill, I would be quite supportive!
chip bagg - I don't know what lake you are walking around but I am there almost every day with my dogs. There are definitely too many crazies hanging around in the summer but now it's mostly people walking, people with kids and strollers, and dogs. I think most of the wackos are hiding inside for the cold weather. (Now - for the record - my dogs are kept on a leash - I'm not sure who you are referring to as the crazy dog owners. please explain)
Craig - I didn't see anything about closing Sheridan - you were just reading between the lines there?
no, he is listening to the voices in his head.
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