I attended the 7th Annual Neighborhood Summit meeting last evening at the Woodlawn Community Center.  I was disappointed.

The attendance was dismal.  This could be attributed to the lack of advertising about this event.  I happened to know about the event when I stumbled upon it with a three line entry on ProJo’s 7 to 7 blog.  Thank goodness for Twitter and Google Reader. 

There were approximately 35 people in the audience.  Of those 5-7 were elected officials (State Rep O’Neill, Councilman Tetreault were present when the meeting started 10 minutes late.  Councilmen Barros and Vitali arrived shortly after the start, as did Council President Kinch.)  Also part of the remaining 30 or so were various officers of neighborhood associations, development agencies, etc.  I’d say I as a simple interested city resident was in the smallest minority. 

I don’t know a lot of my fellow Pawtucket residents.  I’m trying my best to get involved, but it felt very cliquish.  I felt I was on the outside looking in.  As has happened at other civic meetings I’ve attended, I was asked by an interested party if I was, “one of our city representatives?”  “No.”  “A reporter?”   “No, just an interested resident.”  “Oh? [puzzled look] Well, enjoy.”   This is the third time I have been questioned about whether I am a member of the media or some city official.  I guess I should lose the suit.   At the head table there were approximately half as many as in the audience.  Yep, the mayor and about 15 or 16 of his administration sat at the head table. 

Ed Testa (I missed his title) kicked things off as the MC and handed off to the mayor.  Mayor Doyle apologized for the late start.  Something about an important City Council meeting that ran long.  (Hmmmm…that Council meeting got about as much publicity as this meeting did.  If you don’t  subscribe to the Pawtucket Times you would not have known about it.)  The mayor introduced his administration leaders at the table with him and explained the process.  This was an opportunity for the local residents to address the mayor and his staff directly.  They may have an immediate answer, or they may have to get back to you.  Fair enough, I thought.  But, why was this not announced in advance?   I really had no idea what to expect.  I could have come with some real questions rather than most of the fluff I heard. 

This “annual” meeting warranted more than just three lines in ProJo.  Is it on the City Website?  On the Events Calendar for June?  NO!!!  What’s on the City’s Events Calendar for June 2nd is a PawSox game, a Board of Canvassers meeting, and a Parks Commission meeting.  Hmmmmm…I don’t see that Special City Council meeting there either.  What was so important at that City Council meeting that the Mayor and a few Councilmen were late to the mayor’s own meeting?  That’s for another blog, but a little secret…it was about the CITY BUDGET.  Wonder how much public input was received.  I digress.

There were four, then six, people signed up to address the mayor and the panel.  The Woodlawn Association president was first.  She applauded and thanked the mayor and his staff for all the work that had been done in the past, spoke about the condition and decay of the Urban League’s Safe Haven Program building on Slater St., and then about the Conant St. Bridge.  It was good to hear the Zoning Board rep indicate he would send someone out tomorrow to check on the condition of the property.  The Public Works Director addressed that the city has been meeting weekly with RI DOT about the bridge.  One more hurdle to overcome and it would be ready for bid.  It was expected that hurdle would be cleared in about two weeks.  Fingers crossed.  ;-)

There were a few more speakers who I couldn’t keep up with.  Most had nothing but praise and thanks.  A woman from Pleasant View stepped up to address the condition of Broadway, how vital it is to the city,  it’s direct connection to downtown, historic homes, etc.  She even had and showed a 2003 Broadway StreetScape that has been on the table for…well, six years.  She also encouraged the use of “bike cops” for the Broadway area.  She was well prepared and well received because of how well she presented her agenda.  Mr. Cassidy (Planning Director) whom I’ve seen and heard previously (and happen to think is the brightest voice I’ve heard to date) spoke about how that Broadway StreetScape project was going to get moving with CDBC funds.  Whether that means Stimulus $$s or not is just too confusing to me.  He expects that to happen probably Septemberish.  Chief of Police mentioned that he would be enabling as many “bike cops” as possible. Sounds good for Pleasant View.  There was another speaker, VP of Woodlawn Neighborhood Association, who put in a couple of plugs for his association’s website, advised of some poll results about the quality of this year’s street sweeping (it’s now once a month, vice once a week), and he very much applauded the city’s police department.  He also alluded to the “skate park”.  That sure got everyone’s attention.  The mayor was quick to point out that the “skate park” is NOT part of the stimulus $$s the city hopes to get.  Mr. Cassidy, along with City Clerk Goldstein, did mention that the “skate park” has been in the works for years and it is going forward.  Work starts in June at Jenks JH and hopes to be completed just around the time school starts.  There were concerns about liability, but Mr. Cassidy assured that the park was being built to standards that would not put the city at risk.

There were a couple of others who spoke.  Some about the foreclosure blight.  [Zoning can handle that issue if they are made aware of hazardous conditions.]  A last minute address by a downtown businesswoman asking for help in revitalizing that area received probably the most detailed response from Mr. Cassidy and the Mayor.  Revitalization of downtown is tough, but they are working on it.  When all those surrounding mills are filled there will be 1000+ residents who all will fill the downtown streets.  That’s the vision…or hope.

All in all the meeting to me was about patting on the back the Mayor and his administration.  No real issues nor anything new was discussed.  I am extremely disappointed about the lack of participation, but that directly relates to the advertising of this event.  The City needs to reach out to its residents if it truly wants honest input.  Perhaps it didn’t.  This was in a way controlled.  Those in the know were already part of the neighborhood associations (those that have them, btw).  Those association’s officers/boards already have the administration’s ear.  It’s time the City had these meetings quarterly not annually.  It’s time the City kept the website up-to-date so interested citizens such as myself could be involved without stumbling on a three line notice in a local paper.  Many of our city residents don’t have the time or means to scour the internet or the local paper.  I personally posted the meeting when I found it to PawtucketNow.  I personally posted the event to Twitter.  Is it so difficult for the City to have done the same?  How did the Pawtucket Times not pick up on this?  It’s all so very frustrating for someone interested in getting involved. 

I’ve not given up on my desire to make the city I call home a better place for me an my family, but my enthusiasm has waned.

10 Responses to “Mayor’s Neighborhood Summit Meeting”
  1. Frymaster says:

    I think I’m gonna cry. I’m just so proud.

    Everybody should know that just because I also could write as JohnS, this is not me. I will always post as Frymaster. This JohnS is one of the Three Bucketeers, and will now be contributing here. w00000000t. He’s also a big contributor to Pawtucket Now, as he indicates. So big ups to John for stepping up.

    If anybody else out there thinks they have something to contribute, you know where to find me.

    Now, to comment on something I didn’t write. (Oooooh, the luxury!)

    “Lose the suit.” Never. Just start telling everybody you’re the city’s Internet Liaison. BTW, nobody ever mistook me for anything but a troublemaker. Not much of a mistake, really.

    Two, or was it three years ago, I went to the Mayor’s annual love-fest. Much of the same, except that was when there was such a thing as PADS, who challenged the city on an actionable plan for downtown. Three years on, more of the same.

    Conant St bridge to be bid? That only took two decades. That project may actually suck a lot because of how those bridges were built. If it’s like the bridge on County St., So. Attleboro, it will be full of suck.

    I’ve had a long day that actually started last night (at MwM and then went to Chicopee…), so this is all I can muster for your debut post, my new partner in crime. I’m sure it’s the first of many. And, I hope you are the first of many contributors.

    I toast you, good sir. PROST!

  2. Pam says:

    John S, I’m curious, how long you been a bucketeer?

    Thanks for reporting on the summit, I was glad to see it as I saw no coverage of it in yesterdays times. This is the woman from Pleasant View who spoke.

    Maybe you could call Ed (I’m pretty sure) Tesner at the mayors office and suggest to him that the event be better advertised to the public. At the end, he did ask if anyone else wanted to talk, that was available to you if you wanted to speak. I do agree they should be making it more available to public. What part of town do you live in? Could you rekindle the neighborhood assoc. there? We are making a small effort to do that in PV. Are you ex-pads? join us if you want, downtown & PV are connected by the river from Exchange to Central, makes sense for us to work together.

    Yes, I suppose it could appear a bit of a love fest couldn’t it? that’s sort of funny to me, I was feeling more “festivus” and I’m surprised that didn’t come across. I thought it odd and uncool that there were so few city councillors there too.

    Neighborhood associations might have the cities ear, but not really any more than a private citizen. Sometimes cops go to meetings I guess. That forum is really the only format to cover all the city offices. It doesn’t always mean they do anything with the info either. It’s all about bugging our city councillors, right? They say if you want change, you’ve got to bug them and the city both.

    The last summit I went to was 3 or 4 years ago. There were definitely more people and speakers there. That older man from Fairlawn (north of darlington/bordering pleasant view, s. attleboro, seekonk, I think) apparently gets up every year and grooves on his single family “gods country”. (He really did call it that tues.) Anyway, the last time I went, someone from his area, not sure if it was him or not asked to have their crime watch signs taken down, thought they made his area look trashy. This bugged the crap out of me, the issues in our hood seemed more than a little worse than that.

    One thing that was really nice this year is that someone got up from Barton st and talked about how much better Barton st is now with PCDC housing and a revitalized neighborhood. This is particularly notable because the last time I went, like I said, a few years ago, someone got up from Barton St and proclaimed how awful it was and how they needed help with serious drug and gang problems, prostitution, etc.

    I want to respond to the “Sounds good for Pleasant View” statement, to me this comes off a little flip. This is because I’ve been living in PV for almost 10yrs and our neighborhood has had extremely tough times. I’ll admit it, my sweetie and I gaffed and bought our first house in one of the semi-ghettos of Pawtucket. It was a freaking 1919 bungalow for a song, what are ya gonna do?! Anyway, our elementary school is the last in Pawtucket to still not have a playground of any sort, seriously, it’s just asphalt for Winters School and barely a tree. Thank god we are finally getting play equipment summer 2010. Our neighbors have recently had breakins, I’ve got some shopping carts parked next door, we have just about no public green space. The statement I prepared for the summit was a plea to the city because I’ve been seriously fed up. I’m realizing many people share my frustrations. PV (and all of Pawtucket) has definitely improved since I’ve gotten here thats for sure, but it has a way to go.

    I totally agree on the city budget/no public input thing, not right.

    Hey, my Gram was from Chicopee.

  3. John S says:

    Pam, nice to “meet” you. Thanks for your comments. Sorry that I missed your name. As I said, I came totally unaware of what was to transpire and I scribbled notes as fast as I could. Your name escaped me and unlike my DVR at home, I could not rewind. I also want to ensure you I did not mean to be flip about my “Sounds good for Pleasant View” comment. It was meant to put some lightheartedness into the post. I hate being all negative. I, in fact, tried to add some postive by mentioning how prepared you were. Yes, I would agree to your address came across more “festivus”. You were serious about your concerns. That certainly came through. It’s why you received not an obligatory applause, but an honest one. I felt people were impressed you called out the mayor and his administration about issues that concerned you. I think what bothered me most about your portion of the meeting (and probably resulted in the “Sounds good” comment) was the fact that you voiced your concerns about the Broadway StreetScape and the response was basically “we’re happy to report that will be happening this year with CDBC $$s”. Why was this the first time you or anyone else from Pleasant View was informed of this? It was another clear of example of how poor the city’s communications with it’s residents is.

    I have been a bucketeer for six years. My wife and I bought our home in what we were told was Oak Hill. (I drive by a city sign which tells me so every day) The line now seems blurred as there appears to be a neighborhood called West Riverview. I really don’t know what neighborhood I live in. I’ve searched high and low for Oak Hill neighborhood association and it seems to have existed, but not so much any longer. I’ve also searched high and low for a neighborhood boundary map. No go on that either. I have contaced Mr. McGill from the City’s Board of Canvassers about a map of various neighborhoods. Nothing exists that I can find. He’s pointed me to someone at City Hall who I hope to follow-up with today or Monday. Once I have that info I’ll be preparing a map for anyone to use, both current residents and possibly future ones. You’d think that would be available on the City’s website, but it is not. More on that in a future post. Oh, BTW, there’s nothing about voting districts either. Who exactly is my Council representative? I know, but if I was a brand new resident, how would I?

    What I meant by the neighborhood associations have the city’s ear is that as an outsider to any neighborhood association, it appeared to me that the officers of the various associations who spoke were known by those at the head table. I assume they have engaged in the past.

    The City does a lousy job at communications. This meeting is a prime example. What was the purpose? Had I known what to expect, I might have stood up at the end when the call was made for any further comments. I didn’t feel like shooting from the hip. I also was frustrated at what I saw (lack of attendance) and about hearing for the first time that the “important special city council meeting” had transpired an hour earlier. I know my frustrations would have masked my serious concerns.

    Bottom line: I’m engaging in my way. This blog, attending City Council meetings, Bridge 550 meetings, looking to join other civic orgnanizations. I, like you, want a better Pawtucket. I don’t see myself leaving anytime soon.

    Thanks again for taking the time to comment…John

  4. Frymaster says:

    Overheard: Ed Tetzner is the guy who advised Doyle not to have a website for his campaign. “Nobody ever read them.”

    I also have written Barros on the maps issue, specifically, ones that show the councilmanic district. You may have seen that I’ve been making Google maps, so we’re just going to have to do this ourselves. Check out this one I made explaining Main Street. Not perfect yet, but I can just keep editing.

    Pam, you should totally build out the PV section in Pawtucket Now. On the Neighborhoods page, click the red Pleasant View link, then just add content and save. Don’t worry if you have a little trouble with the markup/the formatting looks weird. We’ll fix it and teach you how. Mostly just get the content in.

  5. John S says:

    Here’s a map I’m working on. You’re right, we are going to have to do this ourselves.
    http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF&msa=0&msid=114496760379569653233.00046b78107bf3e4c583b

  6. Pam says:

    Huge thanks to you John for making it to those meetings despite the poor advertisement of them!

    Seems there’s a few vague areas of Pawtucket, I honestly don’t know the neighborhood borders beyond my own. I wonder if city planning would have it, try Barney Heath maybe? I’ll dig through any community stuff I have saved from over the years, you never know, I might find something in there.

    The city had told me that something along the lines of revamping the sidewalks and trees on Broadway was coming, but I was skeptical about when and what exactly the scope for improvement would be. I was pretty dumbfounded that Mike Cassidy actually had such a good answer.

    Frymaster, I’ll try to duke up PV on your wiki page, never wikieed before and I’m a wee bit ascared. I’ll get up the jam this weekend for sure, tough week & I’m sleepy. I’ll post the farmers market info there too asap.

  7. Jason K says:

    I’ve been wondering about the neighborhood borders myself..

    Pam, I actually don’t think that my house is part of Pleasant View at all, i was talking to the mayor and the way that i understand it is that Pleasant view starts after Central… when we bought our house it was advertised as being in Quality Hill and we are beginning to think that’s correct.

  8. Melissa says:

    Goodness, Pam…how did I miss you at that meeting? Granted, I was hiding up front and then Barney suggested I pipe down while in the back (frantic phone from husband while dealing with a Chihuahua puppy pooping issue), but I can’t believe I didn’t see you!

    If those meetings weren’t in Woodlawn, I’d never even know about them. This’ll be the fourth year that I’m on the periphery of them, and I truly feel that the lack of advertising is intentional.

    I’ve gotten maps of PLeasant View from Planning and Redevelopment and the community center pretty much made up its own map of Woodlawn. Other than that, don’t know of any others.

    John S…if the Oak Hill Neighborhood Association still exists, Arthur Plitt would have info on that…I think he used to head it up. I just moved from downtown and wondered what neighborhood I live in now. Almost certain that it’s not Oak Hill, though we’re close to it. If a neighborhood called West Riverview truly exists, I think I live in it!

  9. Pam says:

    as far as city planning has it and according to the Preservation Society of Pawtucket, Pleasant View starts at Exchange st downtown and includes a wedge shape which continues to widen as it spans north to the mass border, running along Cottage st and then the industrial hwy as an eastern border, the western border is the river/hwy.

  10. Frymaster says:

    Pam,

    On the Pawtucket Now Neighborhood Map I have PV running out Cottage. What, then, is the neighborhood east of Indust. Hwy? Is that Pinecrest – which I had never heard of before – or some other mystery neighborhood.

    And big thanks to the City of Pawtucket for providing NOTHING AT ALL. It give us PN do-gooders a serious running start.

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