I did not stay for the segment on "pocket parks" at the public workshop on Tuesday but I am in total agreement with Commissioner Mulvehill in protecting and preserving these public lands for the citizens of
The political battle is that those living on the
I was talking to a citizen this morning that called me and stated that Commissioner Mulvehill was wrong. He equated it to the same thing as negotiating for decal parking spaces at our beach after taking County money. I do not see the correlation here and therefore do not understand the argument as only City money will be used toward the parking for residents with permits, not the County's. It is OUR beach.
The beach, as do the "pocket parks," belongs to the taxpayers of
The caller reminded me that it was they who live in these areas who pay the majority of the taxes, a reason I guess for not allowing public access. I really was stunned by this argument. Because someone can afford an expensive home, lives better than most people in the
All dead end rights of way were designated in 1982 as mini-parks. These are public rights of way that belong to ALL the citizens of
Candidate for Mayor, Bill Coakley says, "If it's public property, it's public property. We can't restrict some public property and not others. We need to have a consensus from the greater public and let them listen to the neighborhood concerns. The Democracy Project on my web site is a perfect tool."
Laurence McNamara, candidate for Mayor says, "Any waterfront access that is now public needs to remain public."
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