Anonymous wrote:Of course, because NIMBY.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, talk about an entitled pool supporter. Wants tax money to build her a "public" pool, even if it means taking a public park, fields, courts, trees. But put the pool next near a homeless shelter and it's like no way! Not at my pool!
Anonymous wrote:PP mentions the Ward 3 homeless shelter and suggestes an interesting idea: DC should co-locate the Ward 3 pool at the proposed site of the homeless shelter. The parking lot to be used is already paved, so the tree huggers can relax. No park facilities like fields or tennis courts would be lost. The pool would be in the same geographic location (3 blocks away) and just as convenient to the bus lines. The pool also would be a nice amenity for the shelter as well as the broader community. And there's street and off-street parking (in the nearby Cathedral Commons garage). And if DC builds them together, there are probably some cost savings. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:
PP mentions the Ward 3 homeless shelter and suggestes an interesting idea: DC should co-locate the Ward 3 pool at the proposed site of the homeless shelter. The parking lot to be used is already paved, so the tree huggers can relax. No park facilities like fields or tennis courts would be lost. The pool would be in the same geographic location (3 blocks away) and just as convenient to the bus lines. The pool also would be a nice amenity for the shelter as well as the broader community. And there's street and off-street parking (in the nearby Cathedral Commons garage). And if DC builds them together, there are probably some cost savings. Win-win.
This is the right way to go. Many of us thinking of coming out in support of the homeless shelter/pool combination as a workable compromise. Pool or no pool, I still support the homeless shelter as proposed. I don't believe it is something we need in our neighborhood but it would be inconsistent with my values to oppose it. People need homes al lot more than they need pools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And a lot of folks want a pool. So there.
Didn't the Casey Trees Foundation 2015 annual report card state that DC needs to take aggressive steps to preserve District-owned park green space and park tree canopy as a top environmental/conservation priority?
"We ask Mayor Bowser to:
Adopt a 50 percent canopy goal for all Department of Parks and Recreation managed properties.
--Initiate a planning process to create designs for neighborhood parks that incorporate more trees and better growing spaces, make parks safer and increase use.
--Prepare and execute an Open Space Plan that increases residential connections to city greenspace as called for by the Sustainable DC Plan.
--Place conservation easements on city-owned greenspaces to ensure they remain green for the continued benefit of future generations of Washingtonians."
Paving over two acres of Hearst Park for a pool (and the likely loss of mature oaks) would run contrary to this goal.
Casey Trees is not without an agenda of its own.
E
Absolutely. They advocate restoring the city,s tree canopy to improve air quality, save energy, manage storm water runoff and enhance natural habitat, especially for birds. Improving the tree canopy
Are you the same person who was in charge of coming up with arguments to stop the homeless shelter? You sound annoyingly similar and unpersuasive with your unrelenting hyperbole. Your chicken little act is not doing the anti pool people any favors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And a lot of folks want a pool. So there.
Didn't the Casey Trees Foundation 2015 annual report card state that DC needs to take aggressive steps to preserve District-owned park green space and park tree canopy as a top environmental/conservation priority?
"We ask Mayor Bowser to:
Adopt a 50 percent canopy goal for all Department of Parks and Recreation managed properties.
--Initiate a planning process to create designs for neighborhood parks that incorporate more trees and better growing spaces, make parks safer and increase use.
--Prepare and execute an Open Space Plan that increases residential connections to city greenspace as called for by the Sustainable DC Plan.
--Place conservation easements on city-owned greenspaces to ensure they remain green for the continued benefit of future generations of Washingtonians."
Paving over two acres of Hearst Park for a pool (and the likely loss of mature oaks) would run contrary to this goal.
Casey Trees is not without an agenda of its own.
E
Absolutely. They advocate restoring the city,s tree canopy to improve air quality, save energy, manage storm water runoff and enhance natural habitat, especially for birds. Improving the tree canopy
Are you the same person who was in charge of coming up with arguments to stop the homeless shelter? You sound annoyingly similar and unpersuasive with your unrelenting hyperbole. Your chicken little act is not doing the anti pool people any favors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And a lot of folks want a pool. So there.
Didn't the Casey Trees Foundation 2015 annual report card state that DC needs to take aggressive steps to preserve District-owned park green space and park tree canopy as a top environmental/conservation priority?
"We ask Mayor Bowser to:
Adopt a 50 percent canopy goal for all Department of Parks and Recreation managed properties.
--Initiate a planning process to create designs for neighborhood parks that incorporate more trees and better growing spaces, make parks safer and increase use.
--Prepare and execute an Open Space Plan that increases residential connections to city greenspace as called for by the Sustainable DC Plan.
--Place conservation easements on city-owned greenspaces to ensure they remain green for the continued benefit of future generations of Washingtonians."
Paving over two acres of Hearst Park for a pool (and the likely loss of mature oaks) would run contrary to this goal.
Casey Trees is not without an agenda of its own.
E
Absolutely. They advocate restoring the city,s tree canopy to improve air quality, save energy, manage storm water runoff and enhance natural habitat, especially for birds. Improving the tree canopy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And a lot of folks want a pool. So there.
Didn't the Casey Trees Foundation 2015 annual report card state that DC needs to take aggressive steps to preserve District-owned park green space and park tree canopy as a top environmental/conservation priority?
"We ask Mayor Bowser to:
Adopt a 50 percent canopy goal for all Department of Parks and Recreation managed properties.
--Initiate a planning process to create designs for neighborhood parks that incorporate more trees and better growing spaces, make parks safer and increase use.
--Prepare and execute an Open Space Plan that increases residential connections to city greenspace as called for by the Sustainable DC Plan.
--Place conservation easements on city-owned greenspaces to ensure they remain green for the continued benefit of future generations of Washingtonians."
Paving over two acres of Hearst Park for a pool (and the likely loss of mature oaks) would run contrary to this goal.
Casey Trees is not without an agenda of its own.
E
Absolutely. They advocate restoring the city,s tree canopy to improve air quality, save energy, manage storm water runoff and enhance natural habitat, especially for birds. Improving the tree canopy