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Fire, Police and |
![]() Alderman Smith Supports Children's Museum MoveDear Neighbors,
Many people have asked me why I choose to vote in favor of allowing the Chicago Children's Museum to move to Grant Park. I firmly believe I made the right decision, although I know some of you disagree. I read your e-mails, listened to your voice mails and gave careful thought to my decision. Now I want you to understand the arguments that, in the final analysis, swayed my decided my vote.
I believe that spin, passion and distortion overwhelmed the discussion. I do not believe the argument was about the facts of the museum proposal or even about Grant Park itself. I believe it was about who will control the downtown parks - the City as a whole or the immediate residents. The opponents of this proposal did a tremendous job presenting their case. But that skill at manipulation cannot change the facts, even if the facts are obscured, ignored or dismissed. And those facts are the facts I acted on. Greenspace and usable public space will be lost. Structures don't belong in Grant Park. Use of downtown park space for a museum sets a bad precedent. Good uses for parks, particularly parks downtown, are those that draw us in and provide access and activities for all. This section of Grant Park was originally lake, then a dump for debris. It was filled in to accommodate railroad yards and later an enormous open-air parking lot was built on the site. Because of the height elevations of the surrounding streets, having this section of Grant Park at grade (matching the height of the surrounding roadways rather than sunk below them) means that we must either have a structure below the park surface or use massive amounts of backfill. Without raising or building on this land, the park element is gone. The only real question is, "How should the space below the surface be used?" I believe a not-for-profit, first-class facility that draws families into our front yard is an ideal use. Finally, putting the museum here not only connects kids into our downtown, for many it will open their eyes to a different world and myriad potential. It will do this in a healthy, quality environment that emphasizes the value that we place in them, enhances their relationship to our common communal space and removes their experience from the relentless commercialism that pervades so much else in their lives. Sincerely, Mary Ann Smith |