Becca
September 17th, 2007, 03:21 PM
Race could be driving Children's Museum fight: Daley :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Politics (http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/561334,cst-nws-children091707.article)
COPIED FROM THE NET:
Race could be driving Children's Museum fight: Daley
<!-- Article Publsih Date -->
September 17, 2007
<!-- Article By Line --> BY FRAN SPIELMAN (fspielman@suntimes.com) City Hall Reporter
<!-- Article's First Paragraph --> Opposition to a new Children's Museum in Grant Park could be racially motivated, Mayor Daley said today, demanding that the decision be made by all 50 aldermen — not just one.
"We built Millennium Park. We built museums. You mean you don't want children from the city in Grant Park? Why? Are they black? Are they white? Are they Hispanic? Are they poor? We have children in Grant Park all the time. This is the park for the entire city. What do you mean no one wants children down there? Why not? Wouldn't you want children there?" the mayor said.
Daley was asked point-blank whether he believes high-rise residents who oppose the Grant Park location are trying to keep buses filled with inner-city school children out of their neighborhood.
"Well, I hope not. Because if it is, that's wrong. We should have children. You mean someone's going to say, `We don't want poor kids in Lincoln Park. We're going to close the zoo down.' That is a disgrace. Grant Park belongs to the people of the city of Chicago," Daley said.
Currently located at Navy Pier, the Chicago Children's Museum wants to build a new, $40 million museum in Grant Park similar to the fieldhouse at Daley Bicentennial Plaza, the building the museum hopes to replace on Randolph Street just east of Michigan Avenue.
The 100,000 square-foot project would be built largely below ground and has been redesigned to lower its profile in Grant Park.
Still, residents of nearby high-rises have balked at the congestion the project would bring. They further argue that the museum would be an intrusion in Grant Park that would violate legal covenants restricting lakefront construction.
The mayor's demand that all 50 aldermen decide the volatile issue is a direct slap at newly elected downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd).
It's also a clean break from City Council tradition, which calls for the Council to follow the lead of the local alderman.
That won't happen this time if Daley has his way.
"There has to be discussion by every alderme — all 49 [other] aldermen. There has to be a discussion with all the ministers..all the schools, all of the community groups. Grant Park belongs to all of us — and not to one ward or two wards. You have to make that a strong statement. It belongs to all of us," he said.
And what about Montgomery Ward's statement about a lakefront "forever open and free?"
"It is open and free. We would never have built Millennium Park, then. They have a Park District facility. The Children's Museum is going to bring children from all over the city down there. [It's] an education program and also an opportunity to see a downtown that many of `em have never seen before," he said.
Reilly could not be reached for comment. The newly elected alderman has organized eight meetings in condominium and apartment buildings just north of Daley BiCentennial Plaza in preparation for a decision that, he thought, would be the final word.
COPIED FROM THE NET:
Race could be driving Children's Museum fight: Daley
<!-- Article Publsih Date -->
September 17, 2007
<!-- Article By Line --> BY FRAN SPIELMAN (fspielman@suntimes.com) City Hall Reporter
<!-- Article's First Paragraph --> Opposition to a new Children's Museum in Grant Park could be racially motivated, Mayor Daley said today, demanding that the decision be made by all 50 aldermen — not just one.
"We built Millennium Park. We built museums. You mean you don't want children from the city in Grant Park? Why? Are they black? Are they white? Are they Hispanic? Are they poor? We have children in Grant Park all the time. This is the park for the entire city. What do you mean no one wants children down there? Why not? Wouldn't you want children there?" the mayor said.
Daley was asked point-blank whether he believes high-rise residents who oppose the Grant Park location are trying to keep buses filled with inner-city school children out of their neighborhood.
"Well, I hope not. Because if it is, that's wrong. We should have children. You mean someone's going to say, `We don't want poor kids in Lincoln Park. We're going to close the zoo down.' That is a disgrace. Grant Park belongs to the people of the city of Chicago," Daley said.
Currently located at Navy Pier, the Chicago Children's Museum wants to build a new, $40 million museum in Grant Park similar to the fieldhouse at Daley Bicentennial Plaza, the building the museum hopes to replace on Randolph Street just east of Michigan Avenue.
The 100,000 square-foot project would be built largely below ground and has been redesigned to lower its profile in Grant Park.
Still, residents of nearby high-rises have balked at the congestion the project would bring. They further argue that the museum would be an intrusion in Grant Park that would violate legal covenants restricting lakefront construction.
The mayor's demand that all 50 aldermen decide the volatile issue is a direct slap at newly elected downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd).
It's also a clean break from City Council tradition, which calls for the Council to follow the lead of the local alderman.
That won't happen this time if Daley has his way.
"There has to be discussion by every alderme — all 49 [other] aldermen. There has to be a discussion with all the ministers..all the schools, all of the community groups. Grant Park belongs to all of us — and not to one ward or two wards. You have to make that a strong statement. It belongs to all of us," he said.
And what about Montgomery Ward's statement about a lakefront "forever open and free?"
"It is open and free. We would never have built Millennium Park, then. They have a Park District facility. The Children's Museum is going to bring children from all over the city down there. [It's] an education program and also an opportunity to see a downtown that many of `em have never seen before," he said.
Reilly could not be reached for comment. The newly elected alderman has organized eight meetings in condominium and apartment buildings just north of Daley BiCentennial Plaza in preparation for a decision that, he thought, would be the final word.