Archive for the ‘Dolores Park News’ category

The Meeting is Over

September 2nd, 2010

The room was full, the discussion lively. Photo by DJ Wallstrom

Where to start…I survived. We survived.

Mission Mission does a great job of recapping the meeting. Mission Local offers a context and various perspectives on how the meeting went. Uptown Almanac provides the hipster POV. KGOs also did a bit. Robert Brust did a great job in his tv interview.

At one point in time, there were 88 people in the room, not counting the city reps on the panel. Good turn out. There were definitely people on opposite ends of the spectrum, but mostly everyone was pretty much middle of the road in their opinion.

The purpose of the meeting was to bring all the diverse groups of Dolores Park together to talk about enforcement of park policies and 19th & Dolores pedestrian safety and traffic calming, the latter of which I’ll discuss in a separate blog posting. Unfortunately, the discussion was mostly one-sided.

My Big Takeaway: Cause & Effect or Effect & Cause?

When dealing with any problem, the best practice is to tackle the cause. In this case, I think we’re asking people to tackle the effects because the cause is part of our culture in San Francisco and Dolores Park. This is definitely not the approach being taken by the police or RPD and I understand their rationale. I do, but I don’t think it strikes the balance that I think the majority of us want.

That was my big takeaway from the meeting. I’m still processing. If only there were a 3 day weekend ahead where I could ponder.

What’s Next

There is still a lot of work to do. There were many, many action items that were brought up in the meeting. Since I was facilitating, I didn’t take any notes, but my good friends at NPC did. I’ll be reviewing the notes and following up early next week with a blog posting.

What I do know is there was a lot of momentum around the Leave No Trace campaign. I’m looking for volunteers to serve on the working group, so email me if you are interested. I’ll post more info soon.

A Plea

If you were pleased that we organized this meeting, and have been pleased with the work we have done, and want us to continue to do this great work, please donate to Dolores Park Works. We need your financial support. Donate here.

A Big Thanks

Last but not least, I’d like to say a big thank you to all of you that came out and to our city staff and officials.

Our speakers. Photo by DJ Wallstrom

-  Captain Corrales, from the Mission Street Police Station
-  Supervisor Bevan Dufty
-  Eric Anderson, RPD Neighborhood Service Area Manager (replacing Bob Palacio)
- Bob Palacio, Former RPD Neighborhood Service Area Manager
- Manito Velasco, Engineer, SFMTA
- Ilaria Salvadori, SF Planning Department (Streetscape project)
- Adrian Field, RPD Park Section Supervisor for the Mission Complex
- Marcus Santiago, RPD Park Ranger
- Meredith Thomas, Executive Director, Neighborhood Parks Council
- Vickie Bell, Deputy Director, Neighborhood Parks Council

Dolores Park Wins An Award!

September 2nd, 2010

Nominated by Dolores Park Works, Dolores Park has been designated as a Leave No Trace Hot Spot. Woo Hoo! Um, what the heck does that mean? It means that we will receive $2,000 (we need to raise another $8k) plus tons of “expert consultation on solutions and program implementation, training, educational materials, visits from the Subaru/Leave No Trace Traveling Trainers, creation of locally-tailored programs to meet site-specific needs, volunteer support and overall assistance in putting the Leave No Trace program into action.”

Basically, we’re going to get some help from the experts on how to clean up this park and keep it clean, something we can all agree needs to happen.

We are looking for volunteers that represent the diversity of the park to join a LNT working group to help us develop and implement this program. It’s not going to be designed as a “war on fun” but rather creating a culture of “responsible irresponsibleness” (a mouthful isn’t it).

We need to get started soon, so please email me if you are interested. dpw @ our web address.org.

Taking the Pulse

August 31st, 2010

I love local blogs. Here is Mission Local’s “Taking the Pulse of Dolores Park from Those Who Use It.” Hear are some perspectives on the increased police presence and law enforcement issue. Meeting is tomorrow night at Mission High School cafeteria, 6:00. Learn more here.

Making Their Case: Weekend Sun=Trashed Park

August 23rd, 2010

The sun is out and I’m so happy that you had fun in dear ol’ Dolores Park. Really. But hey, how about picking up after yourselves?

Leaving a big pile of crap is making the case for the “No Alcohol/No Smoking” signs and for increased police presence.

Hope you enjoyed your gourmet meal!

Is it really to much to ask that you pick up your Bi-Rite & Whole Food bags and put them in the trash can? Apparently it is.

Here’s a lesson: The trash goes IN the trash can, not on, under, around, beside, next to, beneath, above…

If the trash can is full, then you must take your trash home or dump it in an empty trash can (preferably  one owned by the city and not a neighbors).

Trashed Trash Cans

Look, park patrons’, I’m your biggest fan. I really want you to be able to enjoy yourself any way you want to, but you’ve got leave no trace. Ya know, pack it in pack it out. Let’s try again this weekend shall we?

Also, just to throw it out there again, please come to the community meeting on Wednesday, September 1, 6-8 pm at Mission High School cafeteria. You can yell at me there all you want.

No Smoking or Drinking in Dolores Park? Bah.

August 11th, 2010

New Signs Stress Zero Tolerance of Smoking or Alcohol

Dolores Park Work’s ambitious mission is to improve and preserve Dolores Park’s beauty on behalf of her diverse, fun-loving patrons. To this end, Dolores Park Works has advocated for and succeeded in placing more in-park garbage and recycling bins, placing portable public toilets on bustling summer weekends and leading numerous volunteer park clean-ups.

That said, Dolores Park Works did not advocate for nor review these particular signs before they appeared via SF Rec and Park. As Chair of the Dolores Park Works Steering Committee, I question the sign’s efficacy as a response to the recent horrific violence that unquestionably demands an effective coordinated city gov, police and community response. Simply put, casual day-time drinking and smoking has scant correlation to violent late-night crime. Additionally, the distorted, contextless “Please help keep Dolores Park Clean” and conspicuously missing attribution and emergency contact information further discredit and undermine its marginal utility.

On the flip, the sign’s reminder that the park closes from 10pm to 6am everyday is indeed helpful with respect to stemming violent crime. Perhaps the sign’s designer should have started and ended there.

With respect to a coordinated effective response to the violence, Crystal Vann Wallstrom, Dolores Park Works Advocacy Director, is following-up with police and city government and posting factual and community-centric response editorial posts on this blog. If you haven’t, please subscribe via email (in the sidebar) or RSS and follow @dpworks on Twitter so you don’t miss an update.

What do you think of these signs? Let us know in the comments.