Jim O'Bryan wrote:Matthew John Markling wrote:Jim O'Bryan wrote:You know this thread is nearly as troubling as the community. Since I went down there, I have been assured it was not real, it was not a real as I said, that Matt and I did this, that it is to be expected, that this is normal, that public art should be embraced, that how can anyone blame this administration, and on and on and on and on.
It is insane, how many people are willing to hold anyone accountable except the people that own, run and operate the park.
Jim,
I heard the same thing today. I guess we will need to go to the video ...

Matt
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Did you guys do this one?

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I think the point of this thread is Jim's above quote:
"It is insane, how many people are willing to hold anyone accountable except the people that own, run and operate the park."
I have had a change of heart since posting that families would be willing to go down to the park and clean it ourselves if it meant being able to keep the park for families. Not that I don't think this is true. And I think if we were all on the same page, in a city that was completely strapped, with no resources to spend on anything except police and fire, and clean streets, we could put a volunteer committee together to do this--- these are the kind of families we have here, proactive, community-minded, engaged. We are blessed with the families we have. We can take care of our community ourselves if we have to, even if it means shoveling our own streets, cleaning off graffiti, or putting together volunteer groups to occupy the parks--maybe group picnics! if any money could be allocated for picnic tables-- to let potential graffiti writers know that that's not what are parks and public property are for.
The point is that there are resources. How many hundreds of thousands have just been committed to beautify the lights? Light poles? on Detroit, so they match Clifton's? I can't remember the details. To find out details, read Chris Bindel's last article regarding City Council in the Lakewood Observer, or read the one where we committed 15 thousand to build a gazebo in Lakewood Park. Instead of fixing some of the equipment that has fallen into disrepair for our kids.
We can beautify our lights, build gazebos, and spend God knows how much on Spooky Pooch-- profits of which don't go to families or kids, and not much to animals, to print and hang banners, pay to have streets closed, so we can parade with our dressed up animals for the Guinness Book of World Records, and to profit vaguely Lakewood Alive? DownToWn Lakewood? This is what Lakewood families would choose to do? What Lakewood taxpayers would choose to do? Who made this choice to allocate our resources in this way? Isn't this frivolous in the face of what we really need our funds for? Does this attract people to Lakewood? Is it worth it, versus what visitors see when they go to our parks and there is nasty childish graffit all over our chidren's equipment? Some people may be completely put off by the idea of parading animals in human clothes, for 15 dollars a dog. It's fun! But it is worth it? No-one would be put off by a shiny clean family park.
We can pay for this but we can't get someone to come to the park, and clean up the graffiti? We DO have resources. As one frequent Deck poster pointed out to me, "Our FAMILIES should be planning things like scavenger hunts in the park, or Greyhound Days, or the idea someone had to have a skating rink in Lakewood Park, with hot chocolate, this winter. They shouldn't be headed out with scrubbers and steel wool when they pay taxes for that." And they pay taxes for a better job than terrible scratched up equipment and big smeary globs of gray dried ink left all over everything that looks worse than the original graffiti in the sense that it makes everything look so run-down. Why does the City seem intent on allowing some parts of Lakewood to look like slums?
We have a beautiful city and an amazing population. Resources are tight but used correctly, we could truly be the cool, walkable, distinctive place that others think they see--- until they go to the park across from the library.
The way to fix this would have to be appealing to our Council members and mayor. They are the ones who decide how are tax dollars are used, and they are elected by us to represent us.
Betsy Voinovich