4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 4, 2005 OPINION I& A- Ak JASON Z. PESICK Editor in Chief SUHAEL MOMIN SAM SINGER Editorial Page Editors ALISON Go Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE He was such a brilliant light for the world." - Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles, praising the life of Pope John Paul II, who passed away this past Saturday, as reported yesterday by The Associated Press. SAM BUTLER ThE So cx i <- -- , i \ \ . 1 1 \ --s- 6 I area kind 'r' 'rrs , ,. j , -- Too green 6 ELLIOTT MALLEN .RRATION AL EXUBERANCE Margaret Wong has a vision. The co-chair of Friends of the Ann Arbor Greenway and :#' self-described accidental activist envisions cutting a swath of green through the heart of Ann Arbor - creating a continuous strip of parkland stretching from the Huron River to the University Golf Course. This vision involves converting three pieces of prime downtown real estate into parkland in order to facilitate the creation of a linear Central. Park-style strip of green. Sadly, the Ann Arbor Greenway is a half-baked proposal that falls short of its promise to support a supposedly eco-friendly city. Keeping downtown density low by snapping up property in order to make Ann Arbor feel more green is an unsustainable plan that will only stunt the city's vibrancy and lead to more urban sprawl. The Downtown Development Authority's counterproposal involves building a five-deck parking structure on one of the contested lots, as well as a medium-rise building that would place an additional 200 housing units down- town - adding to the area's density. The orga- nization recognizes the importance of building up the city's downtown in order to enhance its vitality and staunch the spread of sprawling subdivisions on the outskirts of town. After all, Ann Arbor already has 154 parks, many of which remain perennially underutilized. The DDA is facing a substantial public rela- tions problem among Ann Arbor residents, as parking garages and condos lack the emotional appeal of green space. "People have done a very good job of making this a black-and-white issue," says DDA board member and Arbor Brewing Company owner Rene Greff. "Being against parks is like being against puppies. Who is going to be against that?" This sentimental attachment to green space has won over a substantial number of Ann Arbor's residents. Wong's Friends of the Ann Arbor Greenway is circulating a petition that has gathered more than 600 signatures, and the March 21 City Council meeting was with packed with militant Greenway supporters who openly booed those who spoke on behalf of the DDA's proposal. Ann Arbor resident Steven Tutino went so far as to suggest that "next to landfills and war zones, parking garages are the worst use of our precious Earth." What he fails to acknowledge is that by impeding growth in the city center, expansion is pushed elsewhere. The most environmentally sustainable place to build housing in Ann Arbor is downtown, where high density will promote a pedestrian-friendly environment and discourage the expansion of subdivisions in neighboring Saline or Dexter. By Tutino's logic, if parking garages are indeed as unpleasant as landfills and war zones, the waste- land of cul-de-sacs and oversized ranch houses that are symptomatic of urban sprawl must be the aesthetic equivalent of one of the lower cir- cles of hell. Urban planning student Dan Ken- nelly says in The Ann Arbor News that "waving a banner of environmentalism to pursue policies motivated by self-interest undermines sincere efforts toward sustainability," meaning that the warm, Earth-friendly feeling that comes from having a big park downtown doesn't outweigh the negative environmental consequences of the subsequent profusion of suburbs elsewhere. Despite the potentially crippling effects of halting downtown expansion, Greenway propo- nents claim that it is necessary in order to save the city from stagnation. One resident, Barbara Annis, decries the proposal to increase density by saying that "if Ann Arbor loses its people friendliness through overbuilding, it will quick- ly become another tired Midwest town." Ann Arbor News columnist Sonia Schmerl paints the Greenway as an instant cure-all for all of the city's ills, as it will magically "create jobs, enhance property values, expand local business- es, attract new or relocating businesses, increase local tax revenues, decrease local government expenditures and promote a local community." Others say that there is no need to cater to the educated young people who are attracted to the cosmopolitan lifestyle associated with high density. Matthew DeGenaro, another Ann Arbor resident, says that the necessity of yuppies is exaggerated and that "we should be trying to attract more wealthy retirees to live here." He invokes Las Vegas, that paragon of sustainable living, saying that "it has a tremendous growth rate based on retiree wealth. Don't old people deserve "cool," too? Perhaps most importantly, the restrictions on downtown housing that go hand-in-hand with the Greenway would further insulate Ann Arbor from the real world, as the already-restric- tive cost of housing would only increase. Ann Arbor has the unfortunate reputation as south- east Michigan's elitist stronghold, and making it even more difficult to find affordable housing would only reinforce this image. A Greenway would exclusively serve those who are already wealthy enough to live in Ann Arbor, while the DDA is proposing to open up the city to those who otherwise lack access by increasing the supply of downtown housing. Some residents are searching for creative compromises that would maintain a green feel- ing while accommodating development. One proposal is to put a park on top of the proposed parking structure so that residents could still have a place downtown to play frisbee, even if it is a few dozen feet above the sidewalk. One res- ident even proposed combing a parking struc- ture with a rock-climbing wall whose "natural textures and contours" would "soften the visual impact" of such a blight. One might argue that the lack of affordable housing or even a viable pedestrian-friendly grocery is a more pressing concern than the lack of a downtown climbing wall. Nonetheless, the versatility on the part of some residents is encouraging. These alterna- tives show that it's possible to turn something as drab and mundane as a parking structure into a usable recreational area, and they are certainly preferable to outright rejection of anything even resembling development. There's no reason Ann Arbor can't become a more aesthetically pleas- ing city without dropping an ultimately harmful Greenway through its center. Mallen can be reached at emmallen@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR UAC did not encroach on E3Ws editorial freedom To THE DAnLY: In last Thursday's article (E3W Content Criti- cized, 03/31/2005), the Daily asserted that First Amendment issues were raised because of the interaction between the University Activities Center and the Every Three Weekly. This assertion stems from the Daily's lack of understanding of UAC's structure. UAC was chartered by the University Board of Regents in 1965 to provide the campus with student-led and produced programming. We currently fulfill this mission through 15 commit- tees. Each committee is given virtual autonomy in its undertakings. All committees are in equal standing within UAC and together they make up UAC. The executive board is an extension of all of the committees and serves to organize and sup- port the committees, as well as coordinate UAC's finances. UAC and the E3W are one and the same. Any censorship undertaken by UAC (There has been none, and there are no plans for any in the future.) would be an act of self-censorship. Despite my explaining this structure to the Daily and it being laid out in UAC's constitution, the Daily chose to publish its article that makes contrary assumptions. To provide an accurate pic- ture of the events in question, I offer a summary of what occurred. As president of UAC, I stand behind all of our committees and serve as both spokesman for all of UAC and, when need be, defender of its prod- ucts and productions. In this capacity, I met with the Athletic Department. It had voiced a concern about the E3W's depiction of student athletes and their actions, and I felt meeting with them was the action of a responsible student organization that was proud of its product, while sensitive to the concerns of the campus community. I asked the E3W's editor in chief to join me in the meeting to shed light on editorial processes with which I was not familiar. The Athletic Department voiced its perception of callousness on the E3W's behalf vide the campus with the smiles and laughter that accompany it. UAC shares the Daily's concern about the First Amendment, because we do not want to lose the protection it provides. For more information about UAC and all of its committees please visit www.umich.edu/-uac. Mark Hindelang LSA senior The letter writer is the president of UAC. E3Ws content is not unbe- comiung' to the community To THE DAILY: Without getting into the foreboding implica- tions of an official University committee meeting to "discuss" student newspaper content, I'd just like to disagree with Michael Stevenson's charge that the Every Three Weekly's content is "unbe- coming" to our community. While skewering student Michael Phelps's alleged zeal for his female classmates may not exactly match the satirical caliber of Chaucer or Swift, the E3W's got a likable bawdy insolence that enlivens this campus. We live in an era of increasing anxiety and elastic civil rights, and so thank goodness the E3W is around to stir (and crack) us up. Long may it misbehave. Nicholas Allen Harp English lecturer Daity is misir nz rand about school re fo)m To Tm DAilY: Your interest in school reform in Michigan is commendable (Saving schools, 04/01/2005). Your command of the facts is lamentable. First of all, Carmen Park Elementary School is not in the city of Flint. It is in the Car- men-Ainsworth District, which is not without troubles of its own, but nevertheless is a pre- Ainsworth - have done it previously under the rubric of "learning communities." Third, you commit the logical fallacy of the "strawperson argument" - the invocation of the archetypal teacher who has been doing the same thing the same way for 20 years, who belongs to a union resistant to change. The teachers of Flint - the real Flint - have incor- porated many good ideas and many fads into practice over the years and have been advised by researchers from well-known universities, in and out of state. Most recently, we have been mentored by Harlem educators who founded their own academies outside of the New York public schools to accomplish their goals but expect us to move mountains within our given system. Moreover, our union is rather weak in enforcing quality of worklife issues and rules. I personally had far better working conditions when I was a nonunion teacher in another state. So, take your interest in school reform out of well-meaning, misinformed editorials and bring it to urban areas like Flint or Detroit. By all means, do not go to the School of Educa- tion. Join Teach for America, pay your dues in the trenches, come back ready for another career and then we'll talk. Catherine Meza The letter writer is an instructor in the Flint Community Schools. LETTERS POLICY N The Michigan Daily welcomes letters from all of its readers. Letters from University students, faculty, staff and administrators will be given priority over others. Letters should include the writer's name, college and school year or other University affiliation. The Daily will not print any letter containing statements that cannot be verified. Letters should be kept to approxi- mately 300 words. The Michigan Daily 4 Fmw.,sf ~.ntwin ome IA ' ekwoSan mdr OM nlnvem C ]