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Public Spaces


Memorable Phrases for Parks

I'm in the bloggers' area of the Parks1 Mayoral Forum. Up on stage, Democrats Gifford Miller, Virginia Fields, Freddy Ferrer, and Republican Tom Ognibene, are telling us why they all love parks.

One of the first points of disagreement came up when a panelist asked the candidates if they would support banning cars from Central Park and Prospect Park, as Transportation Alternatives has advocated. Borough President Virginia Fields, who actually has some influence over this policy, thinks there should be a "balance," and that the limited car-free hours are adequate. The other candidates took this opportunity to distinguish themselves from Fields and her terrible position.

And the moments that garnered the most applause were the sound bites and pithy slogans. "How about a balance where the people use parks," the panelist asking the question said, "and the cars use everything else?" But when the moderator pressed by asking where the cars would go, the candidates seemed less sure of themselves. In truth, we have plenty of evidence that closing the park loop drives would not increase traffic elsewhere.

Gifford Miller knew this and said as much, but had no crisp, easy way to explain it. Later on, when discussing vandalism of park benches, he and the others had a sure footing. "In this city we've learned the broken window lesson," Miller said, "that if you don't fix one window then they break the next one." If we paint over graffiti enough, then people give up. Just having a simple name for a principle - in this case, "broken windows" - gives candidates an easy way to understand an issue and the confidence to talk about it.

Sometimes the most important attribute of an issue is, simply, its name.

Comments

Fields was terrible I thought. It seemed like she was talking to a group of Development Advocates rather than Parks Activists. At the end, she might have turned around, seen the Parks1 logo and tried to save face by signing on to the policy. She's a mess.

Ferrer has to sign the Pledge too. He has to. Must.

by Andrew on Jul 27, 2005 5:38 pm  (link)

No way. The question about vandalism and park benches was hit out of the park by Miller. He went on a tear and got ovations in the middle of his declaration that nobody sees a herd of angry kids vandalizing park benches, and that benches without wood slats most likely aren't smashed by vandals but rather rot in the rain and snow because they don't get repainted with woodsealer.

He specifically was saying that big problem isn't vandalism which needs to be enforced with cops, the big problem is the lack of maintenance. (cheers) He said, "The biggest problem with parks is that the water fountains don't work (cheers) and there's like three plumbers in the whole city"! (applause) "The biggest problem is that our bathrooms are locked and there's nobody there to open them!" (cheers) "Hillsides are littered..."

And he's right. Staff has been cut and cut and cut. Maintenance monies are cut and funding for parks is instead coming from large-scale capital investment paid for with 30-year bonds. [Result: ribbon-cutting photo-op]

The better solution is to spend money on paying salaries of more dedicated staff who maintain parks in good condition, rather than the current plan of letting parks go from good to broken and then have to rebuild them all at once.

Who wants a to wait for a retaining wall to collapse on the West Side Highway before we start taking better care of our infrastructure?!

The neatly-named issue for the people who cheered Miller in his rant wasn't a Guiliani 'broken window' lesson. It was a rallying cry of "maintenance, maintenance, maintenance!"

by Chris on Jul 27, 2005 11:04 pm  (link)

I love the layout of your blog. Who designed the template?

Thanks,

Donny

by Donovan Phillips on Jul 29, 2005 1:14 am  (link)

Donny,

The template is of my own design. Glad you like it!

by Alpie on Jul 31, 2005 10:11 pm  (link)

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