Public Comments and Questions from Meeting on UWM Dorms by Sura, July 31

3rd District Town Hall meeting on UWM Dorms, July 29, 2008

From the Chalk Board:
What’s the rush? Wait for Master Plan
Dorms Downtown (all)
Engineering School Dtown (all)
Protect River Corridor (all agree)
Better public Transportation
“Code of Conduct” expectations/ agreement
Chapter 17 & 18 changes * Fast
Increase Minority Enrollment – Reach out into inner city (west of Holton) Pabst, Tower Automotive
Explain how UWM is taxed
Limit size/beds as sites dictate
So Milwaukee: Drinking Overlay Zone
What is the TRUE need & timeline for beds/sites
Temporary Enrollment Cap?
Are “Buffer Zones” effective for UWM locations
Has Riverview existed long enough to judge true impact?
Adeq. Parking – it’s site dependent
Green Built
Do dorms residents get a night parking permit?
Why/what proof do they need 1,500 beds?
What about UWM’s Lake Dr. properties for dorms?

Comments from index cards:

  • No moratorium on dorms! Why do we treat students like an enemy and not an asset?
  • Concerns and Expectations: - Protect River corridor and viewshed  -“green building”  - adequate parking and public transportation  - reasonable “code of conduct” expectations for students  - university oversight over conduct with penalties for noncompliance  -community input on location, design, and compliance
  • Criteria for sit selection: It’s very important that the site be buffered from existing residential neighborhoods. Noise, litter, student foot & car traffic can be very disruptive.
  • Comments and Concerns :
    - Impact on environment with construction & then occupancy
    - Traffic impacts, parking for residents and visitors
    - Building design that will compliment the neighborhood it is built in
    - Construction lead the way with “green” building materials and maintenance
    - Better communication and interaction with UWM planners and neighbors in the development site/sites. Follow the vision/planning of SE WI Regional Planning Commission in preserving the river corridor.
  • Consider large parking fees and use proceeds to fund free public transportation.
  • Respect the Milw River Overlay District requirements, both in letter and in spirit. No new building on the river!
  • 400 fewer new or freshman students enrolled this year. If they are having a lower enrollment, why are they building more dorms? We should wait to see if there is still a need in 2 or 3 years
  • Extension of Memo of Agreement that WTLT has with UWM & Kenilworth Dorm to all new dorms. Chapter 17 expedited to occur in 2009
  • Would encourage the “clustering” of students to encourage more active, urban lifestyles and reduce need for cars. So – Columbia Hosp, Prospect Mall, Park East, Hometown or Riverworks sites – where there is already student presence.
  • We need neighborhood approved building design standards – should fit with the neighborhood.
  • Slow this process down. What is the rush? They have been waiting years. They can wait 2 more years while good planning and neighborhood involvement will find well thought-out locations with good design.
  • What is Bob Greenstreet’s role in dorm building? It seems to me that due to his relationship to the University, he should recuse himself from participating.
    Continue reading ‘Public Comments and Questions from Meeting on UWM Dorms’

Creating a vison for the 3rd District by Sura, July 21

Join us at our planning meetings. Ideas on the table include:

  • Discussion/study groups
  • Alley/Street Art and beautification (garage murals, stencils, flowers)
  • Local currency
  • Tool sharing
  • Car sharing
  • Better bike lanes
  • Information kiosks
  • Community Supported Bakery
  • Community Pharmacy, including natural remedies for medical autonomy
  • Small scale and community solar ovens
  • Victory gardens, urban agriculture

We’re narrowing down the focus. Join us now or for future meetings!

Call or email for location.

Earth Hour - Milwaukee, join in! by Sura, March 27

From the Earth Hour website

On Saturday, March 29, 2008 at 8 p.m., join millions of people around the world in making a statement about climate change by turning off your lights for Earth Hour, an event created by the World Wildlife Fund.

Earth Hour was created by WWF in Sydney, Australia in 2007, and in one year has grown from an event in one city to a global movement. In 2008, millions of people, businesses, governments and civic organizations in nearly 200 cities around the globe will turn out for Earth Hour. More than 100 cities across North America will participate, including the US flagships–Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix and San Francisco and Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.

We invite everyone throughout North America and around the world to turn off the lights for an hour starting at 8 p.m. (your own local time)–whether at home or at work, with friends and family or solo, in a big city or a small town.

What will you do when the lights are off? We have lots of ideas.

Join people all around the world in showing that you care about our planet and want to play a part in helping to fight climate change. Don’t forget to sign up and let us know you want to join Earth Hour.

One hour, America. Earth Hour. Turn out for Earth Hour!

Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism: Digital Arts and Culture at UWM by Sura, March 25

Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism: Digital Arts and Culture at UWM


Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism opens Saturday, April 12, 5:00-9:00pm at Woodland Pattern Book Center, 720 E. Locust St., Milwaukee, WI.

Seeing Green
encourages artists to leave the confines of the studio and take an active role with the community, to collaborate and address issues of the environment, and to open a dialog with the public. Guest curator Nicolas Lampert invited over 40 local artists to work on a project for the duration of eight months. During the month of April, 2008 the show will be exhibited at Woodland Pattern Book Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where the gallery will serve as a hub space, informing the viewer and the public of the many environmental projects taking place throughout the city, exhibiting visual work and books, screening films and holding discussions and events based around the exhibition.

Calendar:
Saturday, April 12, 2008, 5:00-9:00pm
Seeing Green opens at Woodland Pattern Book Center (720 E. Locust St., Milwaukee, WI.)

Sunday, March 30th, 2:00pm
Reading by California author Rebecca Solnit

Wednesday, April 16th, 7:00-9:00pm
Curator talk by Nicolas Lampert 4:30-6:00 / Film Screening
(Screening of 5 minute films and videos on urban ecology issues by: Lane Hall, Lisa Moline, Lindsay Holden, Brandon Bauer, Ray Chi, Laura Klein, Eddee Daniel, Suzanne Rosenblatt, Spencer Tepper, Zachary Nesgoda).
Continue reading ‘Seeing Green: Art, Ecology, and Activism: Digital Arts and Culture at UWM’

Commodity Farming and Subsidies Benefit Big Agribuisiness by Sura, March 4

Beware the Farm Subsidy

“According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 2005, farms with average household incomes of $200,000 per year accounted for 9% of all farms but received 54% of government payments.”

My Forbidden Fruits (and Vegetables)

A couple of excerpt from the NY Times article:

[C]onsumers who would like to be able to buy local fruits and vegetables… will be dismayed to learn that the federal government works deliberately and forcefully to prevent the local food movement from expanding.

The commodity farm program effectively forbids farmers Continue reading ‘Commodity Farming and Subsidies Benefit Big Agribuisiness’

The Milwaukee River and upcoming development (more dorms?) by Sura, February 17

The Milwaukee River has become a huge issue in this race, and almost all the candidates talk about it.

Mandel Group has been floating the idea of more dorms, retail, and hotel space on the river at the Hometown site at North Ave.

The Milwaukee River Work Group (MRWG), is pushing for protections of the river’s banks, bluffs, water quality and viewshed.

If you want a basic overview of the work of the MRWG, check out my response below to the question in the Riverwest Currents on dealing with the Hometown Site owned by Mandel.

Public Trust, Zoning and Development

Cities need development to thrive—not just housing, but economic, organizational, environmental and cultural development in balance. Too much development in one area causes taxes to skyrocket. Too little foreordains blight. Cities and local governments must foster a deeper sense of “public trust” in order to be effective. Zoning, as a public asset, is part of that trust. If we want sustainable development, then we can’t allow ourselves to be held hostage to developers or to equate development merely with fast-buck condo/dorm/hotel building. In this vein, I support development that goes hand in hand with public trust. Continue reading ‘The Milwaukee River and upcoming development (more dorms?)’

Greening Milwaukee - Get a Free Tree by Sura, December 28

I spoke to a constituent a couple of days ago about the driveway of a new development in his neighborhood. The effect of that driveway was to make street parking less available (therefore netting no new parkings spaces), and the destruction of a 75 year-old Maple tree.

An irony when we are considering the potential effects of the Emerald Ash Borer on the city’s trees, and the overall need for a greater tree canopy in the city.

We need a stronger city plan to ensure the health of our urban forest, You can get a free tree from Greening Milwaukee

Trees
- Provide shade in the summer
- increase our property values
- Reduce our energy bills
- Help block harmful ultraviolet rays
- Increase our ability to concentrate
- Absorb carbon dioxide and emit oxygen, cleaning the air we breathe
- Reduce our reliance on air conditioners
- Reduce water runoff that lead to sewer overflows (green is always better than concrete or asphalt)
- Provide a home for birds and other wildlife

and make us all happier.

P.S. We need city trees on Holton St.

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Sura for Change
Jennifer Morales, Treasurer
3029a N Booth St., Milwaukee, WI 53212