Check out my comments in the Chicago Tribune: Abandoned lot in West Rogers Park may soon get renovations

An empty lot near West Devon Avenue and McCormick Boulevard has been untouched in nearly a decade. The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which owns the property, hopes to get funding approved to renovate it into a productive space for the public. (Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park)
An empty lot near West Devon Avenue and McCormick Boulevard has been untouched in nearly a decade. The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which owns the property, hopes to get funding approved to renovate it into a productive space for the public. (Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park)

The slab of concrete sits at the end of miles of otherwise well-kept parks along the North Shore Channel. Untouched for at least a decade, the empty parking lot is filled with graffiti and broken glass and has become a magnet for crime. Long-patient West Rogers Park residents hope that may change soon.

David St. Pierre, executive director of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, met with more than 100 members of the community last month to hear their ideas about turning the space at West Devon Avenue and McCormick Boulevard into a park or green space. The reclamation district owns the lot.

The Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park has led efforts to upgrade the area, and its yearlong push for meetings with officials may have finally paid off.

“That parking lot is really in many ways a gateway to many neighborhoods,” said Shalom Klein, executive director of the community council. “Especially Rogers Park, Lincolnwood, Peterson Park, as well as cultures and people that live in that area.”

St. Pierre estimated it would cost $200,000 to $300,000 to tear down the parking lot, install turf and repurpose the area, but he said the district doesn’t have a final estimate for the project yet. St. Pierre said he plans to bring a proposal to the district’s board of commissioners at its next meeting April 9. If the board approves the plan, he said he hopes the project could begin “as soon as possible.”

At one end of the property sits an abandoned movie theater and car wash. Howard Rieger, president of the community council, said the two buildings aren’t owned by the reclamation district and therefore cannot be included in the renovation plans for the empty lot. The two buildings are under the jurisdiction of the 50th Ward.

Ald. Debra Silverstein, 50th, said last week that any changes to the current structures are in the “early stages.” She had no further comment.

Klein said members of the community council and neighborhood residents hope to remain involved in developing plans for the lot, something St. Pierre said he would also like to happen once the project is funded.

Although Klein mentioned one idea of turning the space into a public park, he and St. Pierre said future conversations would determine how the space could best serve the neighborhood.

Klein called the initiatives over the past year a “strong community effort.”

“We really want to represent the community that hasn’t had the opportunity to enjoy that property for close to 10 years,” he said.

pfirozi@tribpub.com

Twitter @paulina_milla

Copyright © 2015, Chicago Tribune

DNAinfo: That Old, Run-down Movie Theater Parking Lot Is Going To Become a Park

MWRDThe 2-acre parking lot attached to a vacant movie theater “eyesore” on McCormick Road will be transformed into a simple park with turf, a state official said.

“It’s been there for a long time,” said David St. Pierre, executive director of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which owns the property. “We worked for the past 10 years with different scenarios of people having interest in developing something. It just has never quite made it to the finish line.”

Residents living near the lot and former movie theater call it an eyesore and have been pushing both the city and reclamation district to fix up the property. They said it attracts criminals and gang activity.

Read more at DNAinfo…

DNA Info: Vacant Movie Theater 'Eyesore' Could Become Park, Storage Facility

Howard Rieger, president of the Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park, organized a community meeting Tuesday night about the property. He said more than 100 people attended.

“There isn’t 1 inch of the property along the [North Shore Channel] trail that’s an eyesore except for this miserable couple of acres,” Rieger said. “We’re allowing the site to be used by gangs and drug dealers. … Everything looks good around there except for this disaster.”

But now a deal is in the works to transform the property.larger

David St. Pierre, Met. Water Reclamation Dist. Exec, To Attend Meeting Targeting Neighborhood Eye Sore 6 P.M. Tuesday, March 10 at Bnei Reuven

Important Update!   Please Attend! 

 Make Your Voice Heard!

 David St. Pierre, Met. Water Reclamation Dist.  Exec,

To Attend Meeting Targeting Neighborhood Eye Sore

6 P.M. Tuesday, March 10 at Bnei Reuven

 

David St. Pierre, executive director of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, has agreed to attend a community meeting called by JCCWRP aimed at eliminating a neighborhood eye sore and sparking redevelopment at the southeast corner of Devon and McCormick.

 

The open meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 10 at Congregation Bnei Reuven, 6350 N. Whipple in Chicago.  Community members are urged to attend.

 

For nearly a decade, the intersection of Devon and McCormick has been marred by a derelict expanse of land behind Lincoln Village that is controlled by the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District (MWRD).

 

MWRD is an independent state agency with an elected board of commissioners supported by tax dollars.

 

In December 2014, JCCWRP initiated a letter to MWRD board members that was signed by hundreds of rabbis and community leaders.   The letter demanded an end to policies that have allowed a blighted and abandoned movie theater, car wash and parking lot to degrade the area by attracting criminal activity and quashing efforts aimed to promoting commercial redevelopment.

 

North of Devon and south of Peterson, MWRD has helped to enhance neighboring communities with beautifications along the trail that runs from Green Bay Road to Lawrence Ave.

 

Peterson Park Improvement Association and Lincolnwood residents have worked cooperatively with JCCWRP on advocacy efforts aimed at securing comparable benevolent stewardship of MWRD property between Devon and Lincoln, at the hub of West Rogers Park, Peterson Park, and Lincolnwood.

 

“It’s time to transform this blight on our communities into a welcoming gateway,” said Howard Rieger, JCCWRP president.

 

JCCWRP Updates and Shabbos Message from Shalom Klein – January 19, 2015

Friends and Colleagues:

 

On Monday, I was a guest of Governor Bruce Rauner at the inauguration in Springfield. Many of you may recall that he visited West Rogers Park a month before the election for several hours for meetings with communal leadership and tours of our non-profit organizations. He also visited the abandoned movie theater/car wash at Devon and McCormick and agreed that this eyesore needed to be removed from the heart of our community.  Now that he is Governor, I have been in close communication with his senior staff and they have expressed support for our work and commitment to help us build bridges in local units of government.  Hopefully this will open additional doors that will enable us to address this problem, and will serve as a boost for many of our other initiatives.

 

Tuesday was filled with meetings at JUF with Emily Sweet of the Jewish Community Relations Council who we have been collaborating closely with on creating programming across the Jewish and east-Asian communities that call West Rogers Park home. I also met with John Lowenstein to start a dialogue with the Hillel at Loyola University about working on resources for students and faculty in East Rogers Park.

 

To wrap up the day on Tuesday, I presented to the semester’s first session of the UIC urban planning department’s commercial revitalization graduate seminar . Several of our lay leaders joined me in presenting the background of our neighborhood to the group of students who will be spending tens of hours this semester developing a plan to help us attract new businesses to the Devon and Touhy avenue corridors. Our former consultant, Michael Schubert, opened the door for an introduction at the college of urban planning and I am pleased to report that we have leveraged that relationship to bring more resources to the community.

 

On Thursday upon our initiative, a meeting was convened at Alderman Silverstein’s office, along with representatives of Agudath Israel, Chicago Rabbinical Council, Anti-Defamation League and the Jewish Community Relations Council, to discuss the recent acts of vandalism that took place in West Rogers Park. Subsequent to the threatening graffiti that was smeared on many structures in the community, we collaborated with ADL and JCRC to request the above meeting.  With the recent tragedy in Paris, we also discussed the concern of possible local threats relating to the terror attacks in France.

 

Today we will be meeting at Alderman Silverstein’s office with a developer who has a plan to purchase the abandoned/blighted movie theatre and car wash at Devon and McCormick, and convert that site into a public storage facility.  The developer has other facilities which are attractive and well-designed.  The facility would require only five parking places, and that would open the possibility of the unused parking lot just behind the existing structures being redeveloped as a park to enhance the bike trail adjacent to it.  We hope that our participation will demonstrate community support for the immediate improvement of the site.

 

To further encourage cleanup of the Devon/McCormick site, this week we sent a letter to the top leadership of the metropolitan water reclamation district signed by 26 rabbis and co-signed by 350 members of the community, inviting them to a meeting on March 10th at 6pm at Congregation B’nei Reuven to explain why the property they control at this site has been allowed to become a symbol of decline at the gateway to our community.  We tried over the last six months to arrange a meeting with MWRD officials, to no avail.  Now we will schedule a public meeting of our own to which we will invite media, and offer MWRD leaders a platform.  If they come we will ask the tough questions and gain media coverage.  If they don’t come, that will become a story in itself.  It is MWRD policies that have led to the blight that gets worse day after day.  We await their response and will continue to mobilize the community in support of our advocacy on this issue which will not stop until something positive is done to resolve this problem.

 

On Friday I will be continuing our development plan by asking local organizations on our list for financial support for our work. We have made progress in mobilizing our community and with your help we are building a sustainable base to continue our critical work in the community.

 

 

Wishing you and your family a wonderful Shabbos.

 

Best,

 

Shalom Klein

Executive Director, Jewish Community Council of West Rogers Park