Petition Update

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Tuesday, 20 May 2008

We have almost 200 signatures on the petition. However, we did not realize we needed valid mailing addresses. About half of the signatories did not provide addresses, unfortunately. We are posting a new copy of the petition which requires addresses and which does not display the names of the folks who sign the petition.

If you did not provide your mailing address on the earlier petition, please sign again.

If you choose to sign (or to sign again) we will not use your information for anything other than this dog park application. Your information will not appear on the web, either.

Become a Member of the Friends of the 16th Street Heights Parks Group!

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Tuesday, 06 May 2008

Would you like to see new playground equipment at Upshur and Hamilton Parks? More programs and classes offered by the Department of Parks and Recreation? How about new basketball courts, improved pool facilities, a dog park, and lots of trees and green space?

Then, please join us, The Friends of the 16th Street Heights Parks, as we work with the Department of Parks and Recreation to transform Upshur and Hamilton Parks into the great community assets that this neighborhood deserves. Committees are forming, and we need chairs co-chairs, and members for our committees, as well as committee members to join our Executive Board.

The Friends of the 16th Street Heights Parks is a group of community members dedicated to improving Upshur and Hamilton Parks. Over the past few years, we have:

  • Held community-wide visioning meetings to solicit input from community members about their hopes and goals for Upshur and Hamilton Parks;
  • Organized annual park clean-ups and co-sponsored events like the annual Easter egg hunt at Upshur Park;
  • Successfully lobbied for DPR programs, including children’s soccer at Hamilton Park and children’s T-Ball at Upshur Park;
  • Successfully lobbied DPR to install new soccer nets at Upshur Park; and
  • Gained official recognition by ANC4C as the official community group advocating for our neighborhood parks.

In cooperation with DPR, we are now working towards obtaining construction documents that will detail the long-term improvements envisioned for Upshur and Hamilton Parks. We will then work with DPR
to implement the plans.

We are inviting community members to join The Friends of the 16th Street Heights Parks Group and, specifically, to serve on one of our five committees:

  • Park Design, Building, and Maintenance Planning Committee
  • Dog Park Committee
  • Fundraising Committee
  • Events and Programs Committee
  • Outreach/Membership Committee

We need your skills, your experience, and your ingenuity! And, whether you have one hour or ten hours a month to give, we believe that a concerted effort from the community as a whole is the surest way to bring about the revitalization of these two parks. So, any and all assistance is encouraged and welcome.

If you are interested in chairing, co-chairing, or serving on one of our committees, or learning more about supporting the mission of The Friends of the 16th Street Heights Parks, please contact Carrie Beaudreau at carriellenc@hotmail.com or (202) 722-2925; Jean Badalamenti at jnfz@starpower.net; or Maria Barry at mariabarry@gmail.com.

We welcome you to visit our web site at www.friendsof16thstreetparks.org. Instructions for joining our Group’s list serv can be found at our web site, or a member of our Group can sign you up for our list serv if you provide us with your e-mail address.

We hope to hear from you, and look forward to working together to revitalize Upshur and Hamilton Parks.

A Few Fun Thoughts On Jonetta

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Saturday, 20 October 2007

Ah, dear dear Jonetta. It’s always good to hear from such a voice of reason.

Can you please explain the phrase “between a tree and a confirmation vote”?

Idioms aside, I didn’t think you hated dogs until you brought it up. You’ve been in politics for a long time, so I’m sure you are aware that when someone says, “For the record: I don’t hate…” they doth protest too much.

Could you please provide some support for your contention that dog owners who want dog parks are lazy? My wife and I walk our dog 1.6 miles twice a day. (I checked the numbers on Google Maps. I like to get my facts straight when I’m arguing with reasonable people.) When we take him to the dog park, it’s halfway through his walk. It’s not a substitute for his walk.

The move to establish dog parks is a responsible move by DPR. It’s the law, for one thing. In your article, you say “Acting DPR Director Clark Ray says he’s trying to implement a 2005 law passed by the D.C. Council. But…”

With your long experience in the political world, you know that “He says” is snotty political language for “and he’s a liar.” Well, the law’s on the books, Jonetta. There are no buts about Director Ray’s actions. You have a beef with the law, so argue about the law.

In fact, I’m impressed with the number of political judo chops you’ve put into such a short article. You even go so far as to cite unnamed “dog walking companies” as if big corporate bad men were behind this law.

Do you think the first round of dog park laws was reasonable? Or are you, like the fellow mentioned in the previous post, just against the idea in any form? If you think they were reasonable, tell me this: are there any rats within five blocks of your house? Is there a single spot in this city where you can stand balanced on one big toe and reasonably ask for a Health Department certification that there are no rats within five blocks of where your toe hits the ground?

The original draft of the laws was designed to prevent dog parks while appearing to comply with the law establishing them. You know this. Any reasonable person can see it.

The current guidelines are parallel to dog park guidelines in other major metropolitan areas. They establish reasonable ground rules yet allow enough flexibility for reasonable neighbors to work out want they want in their neighborhood. You know, using reasonable and civil discussion. So the answer to your question about the triangle parks is this: both. We’re urban dwellers. We’re able to live together because we’re smart, flexible and reasonable.

I agree with you on at least one point: the issue is contentious. We have unreasonable people claiming that dog shit is behind DC’s rat problem and we have unreasonable people claiming Kathy Silva’s sister Madeline Albright is the reason we have a dog park law. So much unreason. So much anger. Wouldn’t it be easier if we complied with the law and established legal places for neighbors to meet and play with their dogs?

It’s hard to pick a favorite political ploy from your article. There are so many old chestnuts of the vicious innuendo school of political writing. Is it a scandal that the chair of the committee is a dog owner? My goodness. Until you told me that, I thought this whole thing was on the up and up, but now I see it’s all a conspiracy.

By the way… are you, as vocal opponent of dog parks, a non-dog owner? Not that there’s anything wrong with that. There is, however, something wrong with having a total lack of empathy for those who are different from you. It’s easy to tell when you’ve lost all empathy. When you start making generalizations about people like saying they’re “too lazy” you should sit down with a priest, a counselor or a therapist and work on your empathy.

Or perhaps you could just come hang out in the dog park for awhile. I’ve made many friends there. Since my dog park isn’t legal, I feel like we’re some sort of cool gang of criminal pals. We don’t have a secret handshake, but you can recognize us by the little poop bags we carry in our pockets.

On second thought, it’s not so hard to choose a favorite from your nasty, cynical little article. It’s the moment in the article when your total lack of self-awareness shines brightest. Standing alone, as one weighty little paragraph, is your assertion that, “It’s all politics.”

You should know, Jonetta, professional political analyst. You’ve been in the game a long time. You’ve picked up the moves and you’re not afraid to show them off.

What’s up with the dog park rules?

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Sunday, 09 September 2007

Has anyone heard anything about recent developments on the dog park front? I’ve heard little but the sound of “no dogs allowed” signs going up on parks.

Hamilton Park Goes Dog Free

Cleo | Uncategorized | Monday, 27 August 2007

The last enclosed park in walking distance from my house has replaced the signs saying ‘Cleanup After Your Dog’ for ‘No Dogs Allowed’. This happened less than a month after we met with DPR representatives at a Friends of 16th Street Heights Parks meeting.

I guess then that is true the comments about DPR’s love for dogs. They just do not want dogs to touch their properties. Soon there will be no green space in the city where we could legally take dogs.

Cleo

More Dog Park Coverage

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Tuesday, 14 August 2007

The Examiner just published an article on Dan Greenberg’s plight. I did not realize there are two laws on the books, one of which dates back to pre-Home Rule days. That law uses the criminal code to punish dog owners. I’m curious about the history of that law and why it wasn’t struck from the books along with many of the other ludicrous laws from that time.

DCist has a short piece covering the issue (and mentioning us).

Both offer readers opportunities to comment on the issue.

DC Parks: Good Services, But Not For Everyone

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Saturday, 04 August 2007

As we struggle against DC’s crackdown on dog owners and work to find safe, legal, local places to exercise our dogs, it’s worth taking a look at the services our city provides to other taxpayers. According to DPR, the city maintains:

800 acres of park land, boasting more than 300 parks and 75 playgrounds. We also have more than 150 basketball and tennis courts, numerous ball fields, and 33 swimming pools.

They do not provide detailed statistics outside of that blurb, but think of your own neighborhood. What parks and recreational facilities does the city provide within a reasonable walk of your house? I can walk to two tennis courts, four basketball courts, two swimming pools, many general use parks, and a somewhat run-down horseshoe pitch. If I’m feeling sprightly, I can walk a little further and break an ankle in a skateboard park.

Washington CityPaper writer Dave McKenna wrote a biased and shit-obsessed article casting dog owners versus baseball players. His disdain for dog owners was clear in the article, but we also corresponded with him and got further details. He was surprised that dog park owners feel the city should provide dog parks. He viewed that as an excessive, incomprehensible view. He did not give a second thought to why citizens who like baseball should be entitled to numerous baseball fields within walking distance of their homes, but he found the notion that citizens who like dogs should have parks to be absurd.

He also told us he wrote the article mainly so he could use the word “poop” over and over again, which puts his juvenile rantings somewhat in perspective. But his attitude is shared by many who have covered this issue. Listen to Janetta on Kojo Naamdi’s show for a fine example.

Opponents of dog parks throw around words like “extreme” and “entitled” as if dog owners are lobbying for gold-plated pissing posts, but our real desires are reasonable. We are no more entitled to city services than are baseball, basketball and soccer players, folks who like to swim, play horseshoes or skate on little ramps. But we are also no less entitled than those fellow citizens. We want safe, legal places near our homes where we can exercise our dogs.

Sign the Petition

Ziggy | Uncategorized | Saturday, 14 July 2007

Please take the time to sign this petition.

To:  DC Department of Parks and Recreation

We, the undersigned, as concerned tax-paying DC residents—dog owners and non-dog owners—want a reasonable set of rules to allow for the establishment of Dog Exercise Areas (DEAs) in our neighborhoods. The Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) has developed proposed regulations that will preclude the development of DEAs in most neighborhoods throughout the District.

We do not believe that dogs are more important than people, but we do believe that dog owners are equal to other park patrons and should be treated equitably. We believe that the Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) and its partner agencies must provide the same privileges, status, and rights to proponents of DEAs as they do to other park patrons (e.g., playgrounds, tennis courts, athletic fields, swimming pools, and community gardens). We believe that DPR should apply equitable rules and standards to all park patrons and that dog owners and DEAs should not be held to a higher standard for park use.

Are other park patrons:

· Restricted to a minimum or maximum square footage—e.g.10, 000 sq.
feet– no more than 25\% of total park, and no steeper than 5\% slope?

· Required to provide contact information for use of park; and are
they required to obtain such information on all residents within a
specified block radius?

· Required to certify a rat-free zone within a 5-block radius?

· Required to be separated by 200 feet from all other park
patrons, businesses, and residential housing?

· Required to be within 50 feet from water source and sewage lines?

· Required to obtain consent of the community to establish their form
of recreation?

· Required to be sponsored by a 501 (c) 3 group to establish desired
recreation facility?

· Required to pay for the desired facility?

We formally request that the regulations be rewritten to facilitate the development of DEAs throughout the city and in accordance with the intent and the spirit of the law passed by DC Council in November 2005. We request that revised regulations incorporate suggestions made in DCDOG’s Comprehensive Response that reflect common practices in other urban areas nationwide.

We also request that representatives from DCDOG, animal organizations (e.g. Washington Humane Society and WARL), veterinarians, and other interested stakeholders be involved in a task force to assist with the process of analyzing public comments and working on revised regulations–facilitating a negotiated rulemaking process

Because the current regulations need major revisions, we believe DPR should offer the public another opportunity to comment on the revised proposed regulations before they are published in their final form. We believe the revised proposed regulations should be published for public comment no later than September 1, 2007 with an effective date no later than December 31, 2007.

Kathy Silva on behalf of DCDOG: a community action group working for the development of legal, fenced-in, OFF LEASH, dog exercise areas in DC.

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