Showing posts with label Boston Park Advocates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston Park Advocates. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Franklin Park Coalition Annual Meeting this Saturday at the Golf Clubhouse!

Celebrate 35 years of park advocacy! Come meet Chris Cook, the new interim Parks Commissioner and hear his agenda for Franklin Park. Light breakfast refreshments, raffle prizes and a children’s corner. Bring your new membership or renewal. Can’t be there; make your membership donation nowEmail or call us at 617.442.4141 to RSVP!

Details

Date:
Saturday, Apr. 12
Time:
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Cost:
FREE

Organizer

Franklin Park Coalition
Phone:
617-442-4141
Email:
Website:
www.franklinparkcoalition.org

Thursday, December 5, 2013

From Boston Magazine: City Council Votes to Ban Smoking In All of Boston’s Public Parks The proposal was sponsored by the mayor himself.

by Steve Annear; reposted to this blog
The city is waiting on the signature of Mayor Tom Menino before officially banning people from smoking cigarettes and marijuana in all of Boston’s public parks.
During a hearing yesterday, the City Council voted in favor of the ban, which would force those who break the law to cough up $250 in fines every time they are caught lighting up where they are not supposed to. “The intent of the regulation is to protect Boston’s parks, and to ensure that Boston’s parks and recreational places are safe, clean, and healthy for all residents,” said Councilor Matt O’Malley, chairman of the Committee on Government Operations.
O’Malley put the legislation before the full council on Wednesday, following a public hearing a day prior, where he said no one spoke in opposition of the idea.
Once approved by Menino, and officials from the Parks Department, anyone caught smoking cigars, cigarettes, pipes, or “other lighted or vaporized substances,” in places operated and controlled by the city, would be subject to the hefty fines.
The ban—the brainchild of several city agencies, including the Public Health Commission and Parks Department—would update an existing law which keeps people from smoking at parks specifically for children, by inserting a subsection to cover all of the public areas overseen by the city. The law, once signed, will be enforced by park rangers and the Boston Police Department, according to O’Malley.
“This is something this body has talked about before,” O’Malley said. “This is something cities and towns throughout the Commonwealth have been doing. This is not a new thing…it’s a public health issue…this is the right thing to do.”
He said Boston will “again lead the way,” referencing Menino’s initiative to curb smoking in bars and restaurants during his time in office. The ban will extend to cemeteries, parks, golf courses, and other areas that are public space. “It doesn’t ban smoking outside, it’s just simply in parks,” O’Malley said.
Dot Joyce, spokesperson from Menino’s office, said this has been in the works in some form since medical marijuana was legalized. “[The city] has been studying the issue since the marijuana law passed. It makes sense to protect and help all individuals using our public parks, and to be able to allow them to have the ability to breathe fresh air without concern for either marijuana smoke or cigarette smoke,” she said.
The proposal stems from an idea put out there by Councilor Bill Linehan last August, which would have held pot-smokers accountable for lighting up in parks like Boston Common by raising the cost of a citation to $200.
On Wednesday, Linehan commended the city council, and Menino’s administration, for improving his original proposal and moving forward with a new angle. “I’ll be supporting this,” he said.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

What can the new mayor do for Boston's parks?

In late October, FPC's executive director told CommonWealth magazine what parks need in the future from Marty Walsh, mayor elect. The Franklin Park Coalition took an active role in supporting forums for the mayor and city council elections and helped to bring a lot of issues to light. 

The Boston Park Advocates group is suggesting the following from the new mayor:

  • create new parks, playgrounds, and community gardens in city owned spaces
  • develop a 21st century webpage and apps for Boston's open space
  • enliven city parks with vendors, programs, and community events
  • find ways to creatively build funds for preservation and maintenance

To contact Christine to help, please email christine@franklinparkcoaltion.org.