Archive for the ‘Voices’ Category

Leddy Park is a New North End Jewel

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

As a former chair of the Burlington Community Gardens, I have helped promote good use of public land in Burlington. together with Jim Flint and many volunteers, we developed the Starr Farm Community Garden, a jewel in the New North End. Together with the Ethan Allen Park and the Homestead/Intervale areas, Leddy Park is another “Jewel” for all Burlington citizens. Over the past 20 years, many areas in the new north end have been built up with houses and rental properties. Several meetings have taken place to hear proposals on massive construction near the Sunset – Starr Farm area. I hope the city council will see the wisdom in a concentration of housing where housing is most needed; downtown. Leddy Park should remain as is. The wooded areas are precious and actually hold some wonderful plants which would be destroyed by any further development of the land. The trees have been thinned recently and the soccer fields have been upgraded. No other development should be done. The idea of disc golf in Leddy Park is absurd as has been the process involved last summer and fall.Leddy Park is for all citizens, not just an elite group who wants many areas to be cleared for disc golf.

Larry Solt

Being green, saving energy and cutting down your carbon footprint?

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Disc golf proponents cite a number of benefits that the City of Burlington will derive from a disc golf course proposed for construction within Leddy Park.  One of these benefits is the claim that a local course in Burlington will cut down on fossil fuel consumption and pollution since a local course will save disc golfers from having to drive cars in order to get in a round of play at the Waterbury, Vermont course.  Another benfit the City will receive from developing a disc golf course in Leddy will be overall increase in tourism and tourist spending in Burlington.  These claims seem contradictory in that, given the current popularity of disc golf and the appeal of playing disc golf (including tournaments) in a setting of natural beauty like the Champlain Valley it would seem that a course at Leddy Park would instigate more travel fuel, consumption and pollution that it would offset in terms of decreased travel to Waterbury.  Certainly Btowndisc is promoting the aspect of increased tourism to potential course sponsors. (see http://btowndisc.com/ for details on their fund raising and sponsorship plans)

Lincoln Mead

Protecting Urban Wild Burlington Parks

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Reprinted from Crescent Woods Neighborhood Forum No.  237

PROTECTING URBAN WILD BURLINGTON PARKS
By Nancy Powers, Wildwood Drive, noodlepower@yahoo.com
Mon, 03 November 2008

As a friend of Burlington Parks I would like to support the Penny for the Parks. BUT, I think it is important consider all the facts like how, money is distributed and how financial and development decisions are made in the Parks Dept.  There is a lot of stress on the parks and the raising costs of  maintenance because of natural and human environmental impact. I think that people look to our parks more in times of financial strain because the parks are very accessible and low or no cost to use these great parks. Please take time to look at the Management Plan of this tax increase on the http://www.enjoyburlington.com. I think it is very important to keep in mind all the areas of the park.  The management of the Urban Wilds and Natural Areas of the Burlington Parks are just as important as all the facilities and sports fields. I did not see any information in the Management Plan related to Preservation of Urban Wilds. I also did not see Disk Golf on the any lists, as if it is not a potential project for future spending in Leddy Park.

There is no better time to plan the future development of Disk Golf for Burlington 2-3 years from now, after a master plan is worked on and all Burlington Parks have been accessed for growing development around these parks. When our parks are already over burden with projects to maintain and up keep we really need to protect the wild spaces. Burlington is only going to get more and more crowded. Keeping Urban Wilds spaces is a healthy and inexpensive choice.

-Nancy

Parks Dept Initiative, Disc Golf

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Reprinted from Crescent Woods Neighborhood Forum No. 234

By Wayne & Nancy Duerinch

Saturday morning. North end of Leddy Park. Ungraveled path. Largely undisturbed. Quiet. Trees block the Avenue noise. Skating rink filling up. Both co-existing without complaint. I thought about the Park Dept. How they make the citizens walk down a long sidewalk to park and get to the front door instead of moving the front door. I thought about their plan to alter the park for “golf” and about their bid for a penny. Just like it is wrong to award money to banks that have demonstrated mismanaged responsibilities, it’s wrong to give dollars to any Dept. that does the same.

What is the reason this jewel of a park should be thoroughly “sub-divided”? So the players can be closer to home! ? Tell me there aren’t 100 meadows in Chittenden county that would serve well. Course it would have to be purchased. Could be donated. Better we give away the park’s land to the Club? A warden of our park tells us we have enough treed parks. Which one of them is next to a lake AND has sandy beaches?

I thought. This is the furtive Dept that without full citizen input, proceeded. Later they offered inclusion but excluded likely opponents. The reason everybody knows what “ramrod” means is because it’s always going on. It often happens when a Dept has little oversight and acquires many buddies over the years. Then the “golf” forum is scheduled for the night of the local state governor candidates debate. Was all this done because it can?

I thought. This is the Dept that is so strapped for funds that it declines to maintain a 50-by-50 foot community garden but is eager to eventually take on the care of 18 golf lanes and equipment throughout the park currently requiring zero maintenance. Is it because it wants to?

I thought. This is the Dept that sifts the Leddy summer beach sand most days so you can’t run or barely walk on it. After the beach compacts and protects itself, it’s broken up again. Then exposed trash is left on the surface as the driver leaves behind loose sand primed to wash out to bay. Is it because the driver likes to take the machine in the water and he can?

I thought. This is the Dept that decries dumping in the park but that, until recently, dumped and plowed and bulldozed debris down the south bank of the brook at the rink’s North end. Or somebody snuck in with a dozer at night?

I  thought. This is the Dept that each winter allows snow and ice to be rammed into the closed galvanized truck gate at the north entrance to Leddy at Dale Road, snapping the hinges, bending the piping; so that both gates now hang from loose chains into the road over any child playing there. The open pedestrian gate to the left offers access to the park and rink but only after climbing Everest. The driver then adds 6 feet of snow to the parking lot side of the same path and then goes down to block access to the often thawed and clear roadway that runs all the way to the beach itself. Because it can?

I thought. This is the Dept that draws up plans for a park gate thus demonstrating access to a foodstore, pays for the gateposts and hinge installation and then runs the fencing uninterrupted over the gate. Then that other Dept yearly paints a crosswalk to the gate with no access. Because they can?

I thought. These Depts decry graffiti but allow five seven inch diameter red circles across the road, saying they will wash off, which they should in a few months but don’t. Six inch circles are invisible? Then it allows cement or macadam knocked off shovels to set and stay on the curbs. That winter the new curb is scoured with a rusty plowblade that takes off a chunk the next because drivers can drive fast at night. Because they can?

I thought. This other Dept has the sweeper that breaks up dilapidated pavement into chunks the driver knows weren’t there before his first pass who then ignores them on the second. They have to do this to get the weeds. Chunks in the road are not a safety issue. But it exclaims bare sidewalks in the spring must be plowed for safety issues, leaving boulders of safe hard snow in each taxpayer’s drive. Because it can?

I thought. This other Dept this other winter had had citizen’s cars towed from a private exclusive drive and insisted it could do what it wanted. Call the car pound. That time the Dept got caught. Because it couldn’t. It became public.

I wish Mayor Kiss would walk faster, or at least change direction, and smile less. A school roof that fails in four years is not funny. We are told education dollars are precious but what experienced well-paid unrelated school representative showed up unannounced to observe during the work? Do we need more supervisors or supervisors on site with a camera while and after the contractor’s have gone home? Bring them in late and keep them late. For this they get more pay than their wards. How about if a snowplow driver damaged citizen property, he had to report it and any damage to the plow? And if a complaint was made, and the supervisor hadn’t already heard about it, wanted to know why? Should poor performance have consequences? What is the cost of damaged equipment per year?

Consider objecting to golf in that park. Consider voting NO on the penny simply on the grounds that the Depts are demonstrably unsupervised.

However someone should get credit for cleverness. To request a wee penny after the School Dept’s ludicrous effort, was pure genius. Unfortunately, cleverness doesn’t enhance my wife’s or my contribution to our city’s property base. Nor does it ensure proper management of more funds. When the Dept’s have demonstrated responsibility and efficiency and courtesy, double the incentive and give them two cents.

As for Leddy, is it disappointing jewels can be taken for granted and be unnoticed when they’re gone?

-Wayne C. Duerinck

Disc Golf Process Comments

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

Reprinted from Crescent Woods Neighborhood Forum No. 229

By Michael Crane, NPA Steering Committee Member – Ward 4, Ivy Ln, mcpaddles@gmail.com
Tue, 14 October 2008

This is to answer Carolyn Swiatek’s questions about the disk golf status:    The P&R Commission voted on September 23rd to (according to their web site) establish a “Disk Golf Working group to study the various issues that have been raised by the public and to make a recommendation to the Commission as to whether or not the project should continue as planned, be modified in some way or be canceled. The Commission decided that the composition of the group would be two representatives of the BTown Disc Golf Club, two residents of Ward 4, two residents of Ward 7, and two other residents from other parts of Burlington”

The Commission and the Director asked the Ward 4 and 7 Neighborhood Planning Assembly (NPA) to submit “up to 5 names” for them to consider to represent this neighborhood. The NPA Steering Committee met on October 2nd to select names from those who answered our invitations posted in this FPF .  The Steering Committee asked each person to submit a brief description of themselves and what they have to offer. They then selected names based on the persons ability to offer expertise on the topic.

The Commission met on October 9th and completely ignored the NPA’s recommendations.  In addition, they changed their process mid-stream without telling anyone ahead of time.  They said that everyone whose property abuts the park was anti-disk golf so they shouldn’t be considered.  However, they never told the NPA this when we were selecting names.  They also went counter to what they voted on at their Sept 23rd meeting.  They removed the BTown Golf Club from the committee but gave them 2 special seats to provide “technical input.” However, they didn’t provide any other group, like ecologists, or traffic engineers, with a special technical seat at the table.  So now we have a 6 member working group most of whom have stated their support for the course, and two more from the Disk Golf Club.  All of them are middle aged men representing 80% of the disk golf demographic.  This is far from a balanced group. The Chair of the Commission e-mailed me yesterday and said “Our goal was to maintain objectivity / impartiality to the degree possible, …”

However, when they selected the names on October 9th, it was obvious that they had very little information about these people.  In fact, the Chair couldn’t even correctly pronounce the last name of one person representing Ward 4!  Their knowledge of whether someone was impartial on not was clearly lame.  One commissioner stated that the City is in favor of this course by a margin of 10 to 1 so the Working Group should reflect that ratio.  Another Commissioner stated that “we were rich with parks” implying that it would have little impact on our overall park wealth and we should just suck it up  (or some thing to that effect).  Yet another Commissioner looked at me and told me what my opinions were toward the disk golf course when I have never written them down or told anyone.  Neither my fellow NPA Steering Committee members, (nor my wife!), knows where I stand on this, but this Commissioner somehow has the ability to read minds, I guess.  For the record, I am undecided, like many people,  What I am opposed to is a Parks and Recreation Commission shoving through a development that would alter 5 to 10 acres of woodlands without the wisdom to do an objective environmental impact assessment or the respect to inform the neighbors.

The Parks and Recreation Commission is clearly stacking the deck to get this project through.  When they asked the NPA to limit our list to 5 names they implied that they would select two from our list.  If they didn’t intend to use our list as an initial cut then we could have submitted as many names as we wanted – like the BTown Disk Golf Club did as well as the rest of the City.  The NPA was the only organization that was asked to limit their list.  And the NPA is the organization recognized by the City as representing this neighborhood.  They then further categorically eliminated about half of our list when they decided to not include property owners who border the park without telling us before hand.  These actions in concert display an effort to manipulate the process for a preconceived outcome.

They changed the rules and the process in mid stream without telling us, they went against their own approved motion from last week, they claim to know the opinions of people without asking them simply by knowing the location of their home, and in the middle of all of this they are asking to raise our taxes.  I urge you to vote no on their ballot measure; they haven’t shown enough responsibility to have the right to tax us.  If you want to try and correct this process, write to the mayor and your City Councilors and request that the Parks and Recreation Commission select all of Wards 4 and 7 representatives from the list of names that the NPA sent in.
Michael Crane
NPA Steering Committee

More Leddy Disc Golf Questions

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

reprinted from protectleddypark.blogspot.com

MORE LEDDY DISC GOLF QUESTIONS
By Deborah Blom, Leonard St.
Wed, 17 September 2008

I have a few more questions to add re. the disc golf course.

Can BTown Disc Golf Club control who is playing on the course? If not, should we perhaps not accept their claims from authority (“we would never do something like that!”)? Should we not question the relevancy of BTown Disc Golf Club’s president’s assertions such as (paraphrased) “We don’t really ever drink while we golf or –we are lawyers and doctors– but go somewhere else after the game.” or “we all care about the environment”? I am not particularly concerned about drinking in the park and only give this as an example, but a glance at videos of disc golf on sites like YouTube or MySpace certainly show several people drinking while golfing (as does at least one of the articles below). This would indicate that those considering this course, need to get more generalized data rather than listening to what a small group of golfers, those who are motivated enough to frequently drive to Waterbury to play, have to say.

Additionally, several sites on the internet talk about how to safely design disc golf courses (see below) (e.g., don’t place holes adjacent to or crossing trails). Has anyone contacted these folks for advice, especially regarding courses where injuries to non-players have apparently occurred (like Lenore Park)? Have you considered hiring a consultant as suggested by the Disc Golf Association (it should be noted that I have no idea what the qualifications are of the person who did design the course; perhaps he does have training)?

http://barryarnson.com/2008/05/09/more-gwinnett-county-disc-golf/

http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A262849

http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20080812/NEWS/808120305

http://www.west-point.org/users/usma1987/43899/teaching.html

http://www.discgolfassoc.com/discgolf-course-design/course-design-standards.html

http://www.pdga.com/cd_start.php

Finally, I understand the desire to add to the park’s offerings. However, am I right in assuming that we don’t want the current offerings to be compromised by the course? Is this being considered? For example, in addition to the safety concerns that have been brought up, folks walking the trails to the south of the tennis courts are usually looking for a sense of solitude and for a short respite from city life. The cutting that has occurred so far makes the homes surrounding the part much more visible and the additional cutting/trampling that will occur will increase this problem. Additional cutting on the other side of the trail, will make the traffic visible and allow more sound to penetrate. Add that to the presence of people talking/celebrating while playing golf and the chance of flying discs entering the path, and the solitude is lost. This is one of the few paths that I know of in the area that is relatively safe but secluded, and it would be a shame to lose it (N.B. to those who say that there are plenty of paths in Burlington: whether you are right or not, I ask you to remember that many folks in the New North End may not have cars or the means or time to ride the bus frequently for recreation).

I ask that you please add these to the list of questions/concerns.

Sincerely,

Deborah Blom

Ecological, Natural Community Perspective

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

reprinted from protectleddypark.blogspot.com

Ecological, Natural community Perspective

I am in total agreement with the posting by Sue Brooks
to FPF on Sept 12 against the proposed 18-hole disc golf course at Leddy Park. On Sept 4th, Angele Court (Lakewood Estates) wrote a letter in opposition to the disc golf course as well. A neighbor of mine has recommended that they completely move holes (#13-15) running east-west in the woods abutting both Lakewood Estates and Leonard Street neighborhoods. I personally think they should move holes
(#11-15) out of that forested-area.

I am total opposition to this 18-hole disc course, and will do what I can to stop further development of this course in the woods of Leddy Park. I would like to see them move out of Leddy Park completely and go to some more open agricultural area in the city of Burlington where they wont have so much
detrimental impact upon the forested natural community of the park.

I am a natural historian and ecologist by profession and have a great knowledge base in regards to birds, herbaceous plants, understory trees, forested communities, wildlife habitat and so forth. I will be doing my part from an ecological, natural community perspective to halt further cutting of holes in the woods of Leddy Park
unkown author

Competing Uses

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

reprinted from   protectleddypark.blogspot.com

Competing Uses

I used the link to the Btown Disc Golf Club site. A friend sent me an aerial photo with the 18 holes superimposed on nearly every corner of the wooded areas of Leddy Park. I generally am more pro-development than most Vermonters. However here we are talking about dedicated parkland and wooded areas that serve to provide an escape from our urban life as well as refreshing breezes and the cooling canopy that wooded areas provide in the summer season. I will admit I use the wooded areas nearer my home more but if I were to live close to Leddy Park and enjoy walks in the woods there, I would be strongly opposed to this development. I do bicycle through the wooded areas at Leddy Park on my way to the shopping center, weather permitting. Chuck Niles’ photos of wooded areas in Leddy Park on the Btown Disc Golf web site convince me that this forested acreage should be preserved for more passive activities – hiking, dog walking, even running – which do not require tree clearance.
Thus, I would like to register my opposition to this project, in support of the neighbors close by who use it regularly, and of the future senior citizens housing, as I would want their support if the wooded areas near to my home at Northshore were treatened with partial tree clearing. I believe that disc golf will be a trend for a while and then fade out of popularity. To accommodate it by clearing golf links lanes will forever change the character of Leddy Park.

Toilets, Alchohol, Butts

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

reprinted from protectleddypark.blogspot.com

Toilets, Alchohol, Butts
By Bob Hill, Oakcrest Dr,
Tue, 16 September 2008

1. Toilets: Even if the toilets at Leddy are left open, will people walk the distance while in the middle of their round to access them? There playing partners will wait? Doubt it.

2. Will alcohol and other substances be used during play? yes.

Leddy has not been supervised all summer. Free parking and no supervision has led to increased litter etc. on the beach. The beach has been gross all summer for lack of a better term. I would not bring my kids there. Disc golf will increase usage greatly. There will be more litter, more dog droppings left, public urination, substance use, cigarette butts, etc. This is a bad idea that has not been thought through.

How does this fit in with the big picture?

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

reprinted from protectleddypark.blogspot.com

How does this fit in with the big picture?

I just walked the whole park to see the clearing that is been done. It is interesting. My perspective will be different then some. I know a lot about clearing woods to make healthy trees. I have worked with the county foresters in Addison County on my personal land. Some/most of the disc holes still have a full canopy. I definitely think giving the disc golf members a chance to present is a good thing. The process and the master plan for the park is what I am concerned about. How does this fit in with the big picture?

unknown author