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We hope PRU readers take the time to read and critically consider the offerings in today's Park Ridge Herald-Advocate.
The PRU Crew is again planning to enjoy a long weekend.
Enjoy!
Letter to the Editor:
I wrote this to let your readers know how I will vote regarding Special Use for PADS at St. Paul, and to render my reasoning for that vote. I will vote "yes" to require special use. The primary reason is that the bulk of the constituents (at this point about 70% of more than 300 people) I have spoken with support special use.
I must say that I don't believe myself that government should be involved in this, that essentially it should be decided by the parish at St. Paul and the nearby neighbors of St. Paul. I am troubled by the fact that the city seems to be at odds with itself over this. Since I am an engineer by trade, and not a legal expert, I can only render my opinion of what is or is not constitutional or legal based on my own research and conversations with attorneys, including the city attorney.
With that in mind, there is some basis in law to support the Special Use requirement. If you read the Wikipedia article about the Establishment Clause in the First Amendment, you will see that the exact phrasing of the clause is, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion...or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"). The most commonly held interpretation of the clause is the Jeffersonian interpretation which defines the clause as "a wall of separation of church and state".
The city is not part of Congress. Since the clause is directed specifically at Congress, it may not apply. We are not legislating to prevent the free exercise of religion. We have codified the Special Use process for the safety of our citizens, including the occupants of the PADS shelter. Under this interpretation, what we are asking is perfectly legal and constitutional.
Also, several state and federal court judges have ruled favoring municipalities and state governments in cases like this, as you can see in the Wikipedia article referenced. Fire safety, food safety and other risks associated with overnight stays are, according to the opinions I have read, "compelling reasons for a municipality to request special use". We, as the citizens of Park Ridge are liable if some one is injured there and we have not enforced our local safety codes as preventative measures to that injury.
Also to be considered is that statement in several of these opinions that "a homeless shelter is not directly connected to the free exercise of worship". In other words, these judges have ruled that requiring special use does no interfere with the church's worship or mission in any way.Finally, I would say what I have said to several of the ministers in the PRMA. Going through Special Use is an advantage, not a hindrance, to the shelter and the PRMA. It shows that the churches are good neighbors and do not consider themselves to be above the law, and that they are not only concerned about the safety of their PADS clients and St. Paul's neighborhood, but are aware of the liabilities that the city and they themselves face by noncompliance with the city's codes and process.
I ask the ministers to consider also that if the church were to go through the process and meet all of the requirements that according to the opinion of several municipal attorneys I have spoken with, there would be no basis in our own local law that would provide an avenue to deny the permit. As a matter of my profession, I have been denied Special Use by several cities here in this region for placement of cellular transmitters. The denials were based on things that were exclusive of their Special Use permissions and governed by federal or state law. In every one of these cases, lawsuits that were filed were ruled on or settled quite expeditiously in our favor.I ask for you all to encourage your minister to comply with our request for Special Use, should the council vote that way. I am voting the way my constituents have asked me to, in spite of the fact that I personally disagree with them. This is not the first time that has happened, and I doubt that it will be the last, but that is what I promised to do.
Donald Bach, 3rd Ward Alderman, Park Ridge
Here's another example of what I'm assuming is Frimark and Friends. The following is a letter to the editor I'm sending out today. Please feel free to investigate yourself, or start a new conversation. Thanks for the great site.
Dear Editors:
I was floored to discover that the City of Park Ridge was negotiating with a bank (CenTrust) to build on the empty Napleton parking lot on the corner of Northwest Highway and Meacham, across from the Napleton Cadillac building. The plans include cutting new curb access on Northwest highway and drive-thru lanes. Anyone who has driven in the area and is familiar with traffic patterns knows this will effectively turn the residential streets of Meacham, Cedar, and Elm into drive-thru lanes too.
Not only is this an ill-thought-out plan, it is also completely contrary to what the citizens expect and what the City Council and (former) Mayor adopted for the area. The Uptown Master Development Plan, available for all to see on the City’s website (see https://www.parkridge.us/assets/Upfinalplan.pdf), clearly shows this land to be used for “transitional residential,” which is defined as condominiums or town homes (p. 16). It is not to be used for commercial at all!
If that’s not bad enough, I learned the same day that the City was talking with CVS Pharmacy about putting in a store and parking lot across the street on the site of the former Napleton Cadillac property. This too is addressed in the Uptown Master Development Plan. That land is to be used primarily for town homes.
As citizens we have to ask ourselves: who is this benefiting? Whatever answer you find for yourself, one thing is clear: it is not benefiting us. Just because the current developer is no longer interested in building town homes on the site doesn’t mean that the City can step in to help Napleton sell their property to any available buyer.
No one who lives near uptown, no one who uses Hinkley Park, and no one who is concerned with the character of Uptown wants a car-traffic-heavy (and perhaps 24-hour) drug store like CVS on that spot. Neighbors and park users do not want the bank across the street. These two businesses seem to mainly benefit people driving through town. Neither are pedestrian-oriented.
And neither of these is supposed to be allowed under the Uptown Development Plan, which was unanimously adopted and amended into the Comprehensive City Plan in 2002 (p. i).
The same Plan lists two of its primary objectives (p. 3): 1) Maintain Uptown as a small, compact, and well-defined geographical area, and 2) promote a pedestrian-oriented shopping environment.Both the CVS idea and the bank violate both of these primary objectives.
I don’t think we as citizens can allow major decisions about the character of the City, the traffic safety of our streets and parks, and the quiet altering of long-time plans to be made in back rooms, restaurants, or golf courses and then later be presented to the citizens as the new plan. The citizens have a right to expect our elected officials and City employees to follow the Plan as adopted, to keep the citizens posted on developments, and to act and communicate with full transparency so that we can see for ourselves that they are acting in our best interests.
The Uptown Development plan is clear: Uptown commercial development is not supposed to creep further up Northwest Highway. The Napleton parking lot is supposed to be residential. The Napleton Cadillac building across the street is supposed to be condos or town homes.
Stick to the plan, Park Ridge. It’s what the citizens want.
Steve Kopka
Park Ridge, IL
Letter #2
Letter to the Editor:
Today, we read where Mayor Frimark had the US government funds all set and ready to cash the check to the tune of $ 500,000 for a study for the Cumberland Ave possible extension.
Its not a big surprise here to see that all was just about closed for discussion on this issue and the ink on the check was ready to dry for mailing. But Mayor Frimark forget something - the people!
What is their desire ? What is their concerns....as well as traffic flow through the town north and south and back. A major artery that would be revised and extend - all because of HIS desire to collect federal tax dollars! "Its only federal dollars" Mayor Frimark once stated at a recent city hall meeting and its not city money.
Now, US Rep Jan Schakowsky must think that we are all two sandwiches short of a picnic in asking for federal tax money and the PEOPLE have not been approached.
Mayor Frimark this is just a continuation of the type of leadership that we have here in Park Ridge - from YOUR office sir.
Grant applications, state tax breaks, state monies from Gov. Blagojevich, veterans money stolen and used for " art in the park" with Roasemary Mulligan's fingerprints all over it ?
Parachutes being given out, a screw up with the (just retired police chief 's) pension/package and the payment to our new city manager in his cost of living - here?
I ask you sir - when is this all going to come to a halt?
Are we leading from the rear - here ?
I guess you could loop it all together and call this term the following:
" the dark night" or "the joker", or even better "space chimps".
"Momma Mia" as the film title goes.... when is the next election!!
Gene Spanos
" Dedicated Twice By Choice"
Police - Marines
Det # 553 MCL
"When the City Council discussed the proposed Cumberland extension study in May, a memo from Park Ridge Economic Development Director Kim Uhlig stated the engineering study could cost between $50,000 and $100,000. When asked why $500,000 was requested from the federal government, Frimark said he could not comment without looking at the documents that had been submitted.Mayor Howard, we know math can be hard. Really really hard. But we wonder why the champion for this proposed Cumberland extension doesn't have a better handle on the difference between needing $50,000 to $100,000 and asking for $500,000. What's up with that?
The application states that the funding "will be used for the feasibility study and environmental phases I and II." Frimark could not say what these environmental phases involved."
before selecting your child’s summer program or activity:Notwithstanding the ironic recommendation of government oversight for any given program, the PRU Crew is willing to bet that if anyone from the Chicago Archdiocese Children Matter Network were asked if parents should ask these questions only in relation to issues of program employees and sexual predation on children, they would answer "No! Ask these questions of any program and facility where you send your children, to ensure you are sending them into a healthy and safe environment!"
Verify that the facility is licensed by the State of Illinois. Ask the Director to see the facility’s license and check the expiration date to ensure it is current;
Observe all areas of the facility to ensure that there are no safety or health hazards;
Ask the Director detailed questions regarding the screening of staff. These questions could include;
Ask to review their hiring application. Ask questions about the application if any areas are unfamiliar or critical information is not requested on the application.
Ask if they run a criminal background check on all employees prior to hiring? Is it an online background check or FBI digital fingerprinting?
Do they conduct a Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking Systems (CANTS) check with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services on all employees prior to hiring?
Ask if they request professional references and do they contact these references prior to hiring an applicant?
What type of experience must staff members have to work for this particular program?
What type of certifications must staff members have to work for this particular program?
1. We DO NOT INVOLVE the PADS people at all. Their screening is not satisfactory and their program has been dangerous in other towns. Their system only offers one night of undignified help and invites in homeless from other towns. PADS will increase the homeless population in Park Ridge. They are part of the problem, not part of the solution.