Parks and Re-election
Building parks is what politicians do when they simply don’t know what else to do.
Imagine you’re in charge of a “down on its luck city” with high crime, low income levels, bad schools minimal industry and population loss. You have only $1 dollar, no make that $20,000,000 left to spend. The question is, on what do you spend that one time only $20M?
Hmmm …..
If you’re an observer of successful urban revitalization maybe a few things would come to mind:
- How about a stimulus package for urban homesteaders that would attract investment?
- How about site development for a light manufacturing facility?
- How about a big investment in technology and surveillance for the police including body-cams?
All seem worth a thought. But they have one problem in common. They aren’t parks.
People love parks, or at least the notion of a park. Perhaps we have fond childhood memories of playing in a well-kept park with mom and dad. Perhaps, we remember playing baseball or going on a picnic.
Parks are like catnip for residents that don’t know any better.
“People do not use city open space just because it is there and because city planners or designers wish they would.” Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities
Parks take regular expensive maintenance. Parks are magnets for drug dealers and prostitutes. Parks use up land that could be converted to taxable property. Unless a lot of operational funding is thrown at a park, it’s at best a drain on a city’s finances and at worst a breeding ground for everything wrong with a city. Parks are what we should do after we’ve achieved some revitalization success.
Parks are what politicians build when they don’t know how to do real revitalization and when they know they’re citizens can be fooled.
That’s what’s going on in Trenton. Gov. Christie says new Trenton park ‘first step’ to reconfigure Route 29
Faced with his last year in office and in collusion with a governor also in his last year in office, Mayor Jackson realizes that he can’t point to much that’s moved the needle in Trenton. Instead, he’s lost or wasted millions of taxpayer dollars. So, what to do? Build a park or maybe two.
There are a large number of Trenton residents that will immediately reach for their rose colored glasses and think back to pleasant childhood memories to convince themselves that, yes, absolutely, a park will turn Trenton around. New residents hoping to build new $300,000 homes will flock to Trenton because of our parks. Criminals will be repulsed by the beauty of the new park and will immediately forgo a life of crime, go back to school, get straight As and find a well-paying job. That’s what parks do. The power of parks.
If parks were the linchpin of our Mayor’s overall grand plan (not that anyone believes that) then why hasn’t he shared it with the public? Why didn’t he base his campaign on it? Parks were never part of any plan, they just sort of came up and he said, “yeah, sure, then the people will think I did something positive”.
It’s just the opposite, Trenton is taking money out of the “political capital” bank and instead of investing it in to trans-formative initiatives, wasting it on parks.