New MODoT Director to Discuss Area Transportation Issues

January 6, 2005 Environment 1 Comment

I typically don’t just pass along meeting notices but this seemed like a worthy one:

Pete K. Rahn, new director of the Missouri Department of Transportation, will respond to some of the transportation issues facing the St. Louis area at an event sponsored by the League of Women Voters of St. Louis at their Brentwood office at 8706 Manchester Road, beginning at 10 AM, Saturday January 22, 2005.

Some experts are suggesting that the transportation system is broken and in need of fundamental reform; that
spending billions of dollars without reform will do little to lessen transportation problems. Attend and hear how
Rahn plans to address transportation issues in the state of Missouri and what reforms would help produce
more transportation value from MODot’s $1.8 billion agency.

The public is welcome to this free event. For information or directions, call the League of Women Voters office at 314/961-7195 or via e-mail.  For LWVMO positions click here.

I checked out a few of the positions – I generally agree. Of particular interest is the Land Use and Growth Management section.

Mark your calendars for the 22nd and bring your questions for Rahn!

– Steve

 

St. Louis Archbishop Burke is aborting St. Louis’ Neighborhoods

I am royally pissed off. Burke is a big bully on a power trip – threatening his followers into submission. No wonder the church is riddled with pedophiles – the Archbishop teaches power and control through his actions. If Burke were the CEO of a corporation the Board of Directors would have sent him packing already.

So where are all the Catholics in our region – rallying to save St. Stanislaus from being fleeced by the Archbishop and numerous parishes from being closed? They are kneeling in submission like the obedient slaves they are. Like the best controlling masters, he is pitting his slaves against each other in a survival of the fittest competition. The slaves of parishes remaining open and in the outlying areas of the Archdiocese see the closures as giving them strength – adding to their numbers. Never mind that a century of history will be lost all over the city as numerous parishes are closed.

So these good obedient Catholics remain silent. They are unwilling or too afraid to speak out against their master wielding his interdict whip. But, we’ve seen this silence before – during the Holocaust and recently with the whole pedophile priest scandal. Catholics – ask yourself how well that worked out? What good does your silence bring? You are the Enron employee that knows what is going on but says nothing until it blows up in your face. Speak up dammit.

So why am I so upset?

I am not Catholic.

It is not my church or heritage being destroyed, you say.

True enough.

However, I have a financial commitment to the City of St. Louis. My life is here. I care about what happens in our region. So much so, I cannot sit by and watch this power hungry man destroy decades of history and the future so many of us are building.

I earn my living as a REALTOR® and buyers get concerned when you’ve got boarded up churches down the street – it doesn’t exactly send a positive message. The proposed closures all over south City and in North County should be of concern to everyone in the region. The closures of churches on the North side in the last few decades were damaging to that part of the city. Those closings did not strengthen the remaining churches on the North side – it weakened their entire base. While I think the South side is in a stronger position going into these closings than the North side was it will still be a major setback to those neighborhoods. You weaken enough neighborhoods and you weaken the entire city. A weak city at the core creates a weak and non-competitive region.
… Continue Reading

 

Save St. Stanislaus Kostka Church from the greedy Archbishop!

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I am neither Polish or Catholic but I know the value of maintaining the rich history that is St. Stanislaus Kostka Church in North St. Louis. While the St. Louis Archdiocese has for decades closed city parishes the lay board governing St. Stanislaus has managed to maintain its own buildings, grounds and saved for a rainy day.

If anything, the St. Stanislaus lay board should run all the affairs of all the St. Louis parishes!


The parishioners of St. Stanislaus Kostka church have put together a very informative website which will get you past the rhetoric that diocesan spokesperson Jamie Allmman is spewing.

From the St. Stanislaus Kostka website:

St. Stanislaus Kostka Chuch was built by Polish immigrants in the 1880’s. It is currently the only Polish parish remaining in St. Louis. St. Stanislaus Kostka Church is presently maintained and run as a not-for-profit corporation by the church parishioners and is recognized as such under the laws of the State of Missouri. Under a land deed signed by Cardinal Kenrick in 1891, the parish property was assigned to a parishioner-run corporation in perpetuity. Since that time, the parishioners of St. Stanislaus have grown the parish to include the eight (8) acres of land immediately surrounding the Church. The parishioners recently raised money for the construction of a $2.5 million dollar state of the art Polish Heritage Center. The total value of St. Stanislaus Church the land, buildings and financial assets – is estimated at approximately $9.5 million dollars.

Cha-ching!!! Archbishop Burke can’t be happy when a parish does well – who needs the church structure if parishes can make it on their own? As many of you know, the Archbishop is pressuring the lay board to turn over control of the church to the archdiocese. You can help them stay independent – go to the site, read what they have to say, sign up for their email list and call archdiocese and tell them what you think of their greedy tactics (the phone number is on the site).

Click here to Save St. Stanislaus Kostka Church

Click here to read my previous post on this subject from 12/8/04.

Thank you for helping Save St. Stanislaus Kostka Church!

– Steve

 

Proposed River Bridge to finish decimating Near North Side

January 3, 2005 Planning & Design 4 Comments

Road happy Missouri Department of Transportation (MODOT) and the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) have for ten years been designing a New River Bridge to cross the Mississippi at downtown. More correctly, the approach on the Missouri side will manage to destroy some great warehouses on North Broadway and sever any possible connection between Old North St. Louis and the downtown loft district. But why?

The future of cities depends on quality transportation. Statistics show the transportation network at the core of the St. Louis/Metro East-Illinois urban area will be at the point of failure within 20 years.

The Poplar Street Bridge, a focal point of interstate traffic movement through downtown St. Louis since the 1960’s, is severely over-burdened, and the forecast shows congestion on the entire core highway network will only get worse.

Of course, the forecasts predict traffic will get worse because state “transportation” (read: highway) agencies depend entirely upon traffic getting worse. How would it look if they predicted a drop in auto traffic? So, they continue promoting suburban sprawl by building highways through corn fields and then tell us we need to build yet more highways to handle the traffic. Self serving bastards.
… Continue Reading

 

DO YOU THINK YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD IS SAFE?

January 3, 2005 Featured 2 Comments

Michael Allen & Claire Nowak-Boyd of the Ecology of Absence website are doing a piece on neighborhood safety and they need your feedback:

We want to know what you think about where you live. Please tell us, in
as many or as few words as you think are necessary, if you think your
neighborhood is safe and why (or why not). We aren’t looking for any
specific type of answer; we just want you to be honest.

Please send in answers by May 1, 2005. We will publish your response (As
long as we can read your handwriting!) and all the others in a zine. If
you include your contact information, we’ll send you a copy of the zine
when it’s finished.

Send responses to: email, or (if you prefer analog) to
Neighborhood Safety Zine, c/o Claire Nowak-Boyd and Michael Allen, 1310
N. Artesian #2R, Chicago, IL 60622, USA. If you know anyone else who’d
be interested in responding to this, please let them know about it.

Thank you for your time,
Ecology of Absence

Please let them know what you think of your neighborhood and what you consider “safe.”

– Steve

 

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