Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mary Cheh is horrible, unresponsive and arrogant. I saw her at the Palisades Parade and it almost ruined my morning.
I appreciate that Mary Cheh listened to her constituents and has obtained the resources necessary to get an outdoor public pool into the neighborhood.
It will be a glorified kiddie pool at the bottom of two steep slopes and perpetually in the shade. The only way to make it bigger in this suboptimal location would be to take all of the tennis courts and part of the field.
Anonymous wrote:Does everyone know if they are going to have bright lights on the pool complex? Let’s hope not. Nothing would be worse than lighting up the concrete all night with ultra-bright flood lights. The last thing anyone wants is a year-round light polluter illuminated like a prison site in SE. if security is needed, surely a fence and motion sensors will do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't DPR promise that none of the mature oak trees would be cut for a swimming pool? Yet this week, workers have cut down at least one healthy willow oak. DC's tree canopy is shrinking. Is this just DC government ineptitude or dissembling?
The tree that was taken down was diseased. Please don't spread false information.
But that's what obstructionists do. I'll bet $100 the poster hates Trump (again, for good reason). And, yet, here we see him/her making up authoritative sounding statistics like the tree canopy decreasing by 2% in the last four years and complaining about a tree being cut down as part of a grand conspiracy on pool pushers.
I think that you have your potential political alignments off. It's Trump who doesn't give a damn about trees or land conservation. In DC, it's the so-called "smart growth" development lobby that has de-prioritized green space protection. Indeed, one of the smart growth lobby's social media consultants is a partner in the firm that advised Trump on media and polling in 2016.
Anonymous wrote:Mary cheh is a corrupt incumbent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im a neighbor in the immediate vicinity. I'd prefer they don'tI build a pool but not sure it's that big a deal based on the current plan. I don't support taking down a single additional tree for the pool. If the tree was diseased, the tree was diseased. But don't cut it down for the pool.
It makes me crazy that some people think its a good idea to destroy an urban green space by pouring cement on it. I don't want a pool for two reasons. First, it will be an eyesore for nine months a year. Second. DC is flush now, but we all know what that building and facility will look like in five or ten years.
Isn't DC planning to build an elevator shaft structure to take people down the slope to the bowl where the pool will sit? Anyone who observes the condition of Metro elevators (that at least are inspected and maintained year round) can predict how that will turn out -- a porta-potty on cables.
Metro isn't DC Government. Nice try, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mary Cheh is horrible, unresponsive and arrogant. I saw her at the Palisades Parade and it almost ruined my morning.
I appreciate that Mary Cheh listened to her constituents and has obtained the resources necessary to get an outdoor public pool into the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Mary Cheh is horrible, unresponsive and arrogant. I saw her at the Palisades Parade and it almost ruined my morning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im a neighbor in the immediate vicinity. I'd prefer they don'tI build a pool but not sure it's that big a deal based on the current plan. I don't support taking down a single additional tree for the pool. If the tree was diseased, the tree was diseased. But don't cut it down for the pool.
It makes me crazy that some people think its a good idea to destroy an urban green space by pouring cement on it. I don't want a pool for two reasons. First, it will be an eyesore for nine months a year. Second. DC is flush now, but we all know what that building and facility will look like in five or ten years.
Isn't DC planning to build an elevator shaft structure to take people down the slope to the bowl where the pool will sit? Anyone who observes the condition of Metro elevators (that at least are inspected and maintained year round) can predict how that will turn out -- a porta-potty on cables.
Anonymous wrote:Im a neighbor in the immediate vicinity. I'd prefer they don'tI build a pool but not sure it's that big a deal based on the current plan. I don't support taking down a single additional tree for the pool. If the tree was diseased, the tree was diseased. But don't cut it down for the pool.
It makes me crazy that some people think its a good idea to destroy an urban green space by pouring cement on it. I don't want a pool for two reasons. First, it will be an eyesore for nine months a year. Second. DC is flush now, but we all know what that building and facility will look like in five or ten years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A pool would have been nice during the recent heat wave.
They need to take down a number of trees for the pool. Construction will necessarily destabilize some, especially on the slopes. And who wants a pool that is perpetually in shade?!
Anonymous wrote:Im a neighbor in the immediate vicinity. I'd prefer they don'tI build a pool but not sure it's that big a deal based on the current plan. I don't support taking down a single additional tree for the pool. If the tree was diseased, the tree was diseased. But don't cut it down for the pool.
It makes me crazy that some people think its a good idea to destroy an urban green space by pouring cement on it. I don't want a pool for two reasons. First, it will be an eyesore for nine months a year. Second. DC is flush now, but we all know what that building and facility will look like in five or ten years.