Yes, there's another meeting scheduled tomorrow morning (Saturday February 27) 
from 10 am until noon at People's Baptist Church, 5039 Baltimore Avenue.

 

The meeting this past Wednesday (Feb. 24) was very well attended. Somewhere in 
excess of 50 people came out, and represented a cross section of the 
neighborhood in terms of age, race and gender. Attendees worked in small groups 
with the Community Design Collaborative, which was commissioned by CPN to 
faxcilitate the process and to report back with its findings. 

 

The groups focused on the question of what one would like to see on that 
portion of Baltimore Avenue in terms of types of businesses, housing, social 
services, recreation, density and the like. At the close of the discussions, 
each group reported to the whole as to that group's preferences. The 
information will be included in the Design Collaborative's final report. 

 

 





Date: Fri, 26 Feb 2010 14:51:21 -0500
From: glen...@earthlink.net
To: naomif...@verizon.net; UnivCity@list.purple.com
Subject: Re: [UC] Rescheduled Meeting - BALTIMORE AVE btwn 49th & 52nd Sts













Hi Naomi,

 

I haven't been able to attend the meetings to date.  I think I saw a meeting 
scheduled for tomorrow? Is that still on?  Thanks.

 

 

I'd like to thank all of you at Cedar Park Neighbors for making the appropriate 
efforts at notifying the public about your intended planning for 49th-52nd on 
Baltimore! 

 

 I live in Spruce Hill and our civic associations refuse to appropriately 
announce their secret plans, which betrays the entire community. (And it always 
ruins any good possibilities for good community projects, which might be widely 
supported.)

 

 

CPN is doing the volunteer work of community organization the right way!  You 
published an announcement to introduce your project in the local paper and used 
this public list!  Most civic associations that claim geographic boundaries 
present a written "Purpose" in their by-laws, which suggests that thier most 
important purpose is community notification. Civic associations aren't expected 
to volunteer to do all the work yourselves; but these associations are expected 
to notify and involve the community.  Well done.

 

 

The attempts to grab and concentrate power, like we suffer in Spruce Hill, 
always end with many problems and an unpopular plan.  Conversely, when leaders 
use the appropriate steps to engage a community, the community will always wind 
up with the best plan which is also widely supported.  It's important to 
remember that reasonable people, who are unhappy with portions of a community 
change can still support a plan that was born from a fair process and a fair 
hearing of their concerns!  But, no matter how technically sound any plan is, 
it will not be supported if the stakeholders are excluded and feel helpless or 
without a voice.

 

I've talked to people, who would like to see a local civic association stand 
out as a model to the others in the area.  Some of us tried several years ago 
at the Friends of Clark Park but we failed!  I hope CPN leads our community 
with a model for other civic associations to follow!

 

 

A few tips to offer CPN from experience.  You should continue to expend maximum 
notification efforts and invitations with the most local people to the plan.  
Think of concentric circles around the blocks earmarked for changes and the 
stakeholders on those blocks.  Dropping a note of meeting times, dates, and 
locations at the closest houses and businesses really completes your work at 
appropriate notification and invitation to participate.  (Your newspaper notice 
is the appropriate notice for the larger community.  The main volunteers for 
direct leafletting need to come from the original proponents of the project.)  
In Spruce Hill, civic association leaders will complain about too much work for 
"core volunteers."  If they can't do the legwork for the most important steps 
for engaging the community in their project, then they can't do the project!  
This false argument can't justify failing to do the most important part of any 
"community" project.

 

Secondly, never close the planning committee to important stakeholders 
throughout the process.  If someone is missed initially, they must always be 
welcomed in the subsequent planning discussions.  Never insist that any 
deliberations be closed to spectators.  The right to know must be passed down 
at all levels of deliberation.  This keeps power blocks from forming and 
forcing their agenda, rather than offering convincing arguments in support of 
their agenda.  If a neighbor is not on the planning committee, he or she must 
still be allowed access to the full planning committee, and given some 
opportunity to state his or her comments or concerns orally and/or in writing 
to the entire committee.  The process must not allow any individuals to have 
the power to completely silence or exclude others.

 

Thirdly, All information about the developing plans must be offered openly to 
all and proponents must be open to questions.  Powerful special interests often 
push projects over a community.  If other organizations are behind any of your 
plans, they must be held accountable to both CPN members and the entire 
community, by your leaders.  It is incumbent upon the leadership of your 
organization to immediately reject and call out any bogus surveys or dishonest 
marketing, etc., which attempts to ignore appropriate public scrutiny.  It is 
again incumbent upon the volunteers facilitating the project to insist that 
only honest information and fair processes are tolerated.  Civic associations 
which are respectable are those which serve their community, not powerful 
special interests with secret agendas. 

 

Again, I am hoping for CPN to model a community engagement process that will 
put pressure on the other local civic associations to follow.  Good luck, 
you're off to a good start!  And you're on track to craft a good plan!

 

Sincerely,

Glenn         




-----Original Message----- 
From: Naomi Fiordimondo 
Sent: Feb 17, 2010 11:29 AM 
To: "UnivCity@list.purple.com" 
Subject: [UC] Rescheduled Meeting - BALTIMORE AVE btwn 49th & 52nd Sts 

The Informational Meeting on the Baltimore Ave neighborhood conversation was 
snowed out last week. The rescheduled meeting is TONIGHT:

Information Meeting about Baltimore Conversation 
Wed, Feb 17, 7:00 pm
People’s Baptist Church, 5039 Baltimore Avenue

-------------------------

What would you like to see on Baltimore Ave. between 49th – 52nd Streets?

Cedar Park Neighbors (CPN) is hosting a conversation about Baltimore Avenue and 
we hope you will participate.  We have been working hard with others on 
neighborhood improvements. However, the portion of Baltimore Ave., 49th St. – 
52nd St., once a thriving business district, has fallen on hard times.  What 
improvements do you imagine for this area of our community?  We are seeking 
input through this questionnaire and a series of community workshops.   CPN is 
pleased to be working with the Community Design Collaborative, a volunteer 
based community design center, on this listening process with community 
residents, businesses and organizations.  Let us know your thoughts. 

On the CPN website (http://www.cedarparkneighbors.org ), there is a 
questionnaire soliciting your input into this community discussion. You can 
drop it off by Feb 15 or bring it with you to:

For more information visit:
http://tinyurl.com/CPN-Balt-Ave ---- You are receiving this because you are 
subscribed to the list named "UnivCity." To unsubscribe or for archive 
information, see .                                     

Reply via email to