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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Comment
Letters to the Editor

It’s past time for the city to do upkeep on long-neglected Jackson Park

A classic Jackson Park pavilion stands near East Marquette Drive. An SUV recently smashed into the structure, which has long been neglected | Anthony Vazquez | Sun-Times

Thank you for running the editorial on the golf course shelter building, crumbling away in Jackson Park.

Sadly, this is only one of over a dozen long-term maintenance issues that trouble not just buildings in Jackson Park, but the park’s lakeshore. Please take a look at the crumbling step-stone revetments, at Promontory Point and LaRabida Hospital. Yet they are pouring millions into a breakwater, designed and built for the benefit of yachtsmen, not the public. Note the women’s comfort station, dating from the Columbian Exhibition — closed. Also the comfort station at 6200 South Stony Island, next to the park’s running track — closed.

The Darrow bridge has been closed going on 10 years. The 63rd Street beach house has maintenance problems, and the historic Coast Guard Station appears to be abandoned, in need of repairs. Finally, the most important building in the park, the field house, is outgrown and dilapidated. Built in the early 1950’s, it has only the one gymnasium. The field house has been (notably) left out of the Obama Center plans.

Yes, before the city and the Obama Foundation pour millions into the center, they need to do some maintenance on this park.

Ross Petersen, former president, Jackson Park Advisory Council

SEND LETTERS TO: letters@suntimes.com. Please include your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be 350 words or less.

South Side vs. North Side parks

Evidently South Siders owe a debt of gratitude to the Jeep SUV driver who inadvertently brought needed attention to the crumbling condition of the Jackson Park Pavilion by crashing into it, bringing needed press attention to its not-so-benign neglect by the Chicago Park District, in a March 7 editorial lamenting its long decay. As the editorial said, “ . . . . many of Jackson Park’s . . . structures are in need of critical attention and repairs.” It goes on to name them.

Washington Park is the next nearest park. An instantly visible eyesore is a crumbling caretaker’s cabin last repaired in hopes of hosting the 2016 Olympics, but neglected ever since, its roof slowly collapsing. It should be fixed or demolished. By contrast, every park along the lake, from Grant Park northward, is kept in pristine condition. Why the questionable contrast?

Old-timers can recall that a federal discrimination lawsuit had to be filed in 1982, accusing the park district of under-spending on South Side parks and using the funds on the North Side. A 1983 consent decree required equalized spending. Is the park district quietly violating that decree?

The editorial named other upkeep failures on the South Side. What might an all-out audit of other parks in mainly minority areas reveal? The editorial notes a 2018 South Lakefront Framework Plan that prescribed several “other big-ticket improvements for Jackson Park.” Among them, only the outer harbor breakwater has been completed. Nor can their incompletion be explained away as deliberately waiting out finalizing of the Obama Center plan recently added to the total mix.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot has inherited these upkeep failures. While her options have been limited by the pandemic, the ball is in her court.

Ted Z. Manuel, Hyde Park

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