Partner Highlight: Eckington Parks & Arts
When Alethia Tanner Park began welcoming visitors in June 2020, demand couldn’t have been higher. Learn how Eckington Parks & Arts (EP&A) became a community force, with ambitions to build lifelong stewards and advocate for public space in a neighborhood that lacks access to greenery.
When Alethia Tanner Park began welcoming visitors in June 2020, demand couldn’t have been higher. Learn how Eckington Parks & Arts (EP&A) became a community force, with ambitions to build lifelong stewards and advocate for public space in a neighborhood that lacks access to greenery.
In June 2019, a few dozen Eckington residents came together with a vision for a neighborhood with better access to greenery and a culture of stewardship toward public space.
Today, Eckington Parks & Arts (E&PA) is a community organization that boasts a dedicated board and a voting membership body that donate their time, money, and passions to advocate and improve the green spaces in the Northeast neighborhood.
“Northeast D.C. really doesn’t have many green spaces,” says President of Eckington Parks & Arts Shoshana Sommer, “We have significantly fewer mature trees, we’re a heat sink with a huge amount of pavement, and not enough green buffer strips in our neighborhoods.”
That’s why, amidst a year of citywide clamoring for outdoor space and the opening of Alethia Tanner Park in June 2020, EP&A’s ascent couldn’t have come at a better time. The organization directs much of its resources toward maintaining the dog park and advocating for Tanner Park and other green spaces, all of which have experienced high volumes of use during the pandemic.
When District street cleaning services were suspended due to COVID-19, E&PA commissioned their volunteer force to host bimonthly cleanup events on first and third Saturdays.
“With a little less support from city services, trash and bulk waste built up in the neighborhood. We were able to take some of the frustrations of that but turn it into something positive,” said Sommer. Voicing their concerns publicly, they contacted representatives, organized letter-writing campaigns, and provided testimony at a District Council meeting advocating for more resources to clean up public spaces.
But encouraging safe and proper use of the dog park is a primary focus of the organization’s work. Without funding from the District, E&PA is responsible for its day-to-day maintenance, relying on donations from park users that go toward turf cleanings, waste bags, and signage with friendly reminders of rules and ways to get involved.
Sommer, who brings her Australian shepherd Zahvi to the dog park on a weekly basis, said, “It’s created a lot of community and opportunity to see people outside in a safe way during the pandemic.”
Now as the District reopens and emerges from COVID-19, E&PA is venturing into programming. Through the warmer months, the organization will host a yoga series and recurring storytime in the park. They will even be partnering with a local art studio to offer tours and DC Library to host book bike visits. Events are open to the public with priority RSVPs for EP&A members.
“We’re able to help advocate and give people the opportunity to come together for our neighborhood, and have a more powerful voice that way,” said Sommer.
As a partner organization of Green Spaces for DC, Eckington Parks & Arts is part of a larger citywide movement for equitable access to parks and open spaces. “We see what Green Spaces’ efforts to increase, promote, and support public spaces look like and find our own ways to work on a smaller scale for our neighborhood, said Sommer.
“Our involvement also gives us an opportunity, as a Northeast parks association, to have some input into a D.C.-wide organization.”
Learn more about Eckington Parks & Arts by visiting https://eckingtonparks.com/ and learn more about becoming a “Friend” here.
Draft DC Parks and Recreation Plan Provides Opportunity for Necessary Dialogue
In March 2014 DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) released “Park + Recreation: Vision Framework.” I urge you to take a look. It contains good ideas that can become a foundation for discussion and dialogue.
In March 2014 DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) released “Park + Recreation: Vision Framework.” I urge you to take a look. It contains good ideas that can become a foundation for discussion and dialogue. Specifically, the plan recommendations are framed around seven elements:
- Parkland,
- Recreation Centers,
- Aquatic Facilities,
- Outdoor Facilities,
- Programs,
- Bikeways & Trails, and
- Environmental Lands & Natural Areas.
This draft plan revisits many of the ideas presented in the 2010 CapitalSpace Plan, which was a collaboration among DPR, District of Columbia Office of Planning, National Capital Planning Commission, and National Park Service.
Immediately after the kickoff of the DPR master plan project in June 2013, I wrote an article voicing skepticism about DPRs commitment to public involvement. As it turns out, my apprehensions were justified. The only public meetings held were those to kick off the project last June 15th, 17th, 18th and 20th. It appears that most of the input for the new plan came from an invited steering committee of regional park and recreation experts. It is shameful that this expert panel did not identity public participation as an essential prerequisite for a sound plan.
It is also ironic that DPR would slight face-to-face public engagement, when the Park, Recreation and Open Space element of the DC Comprehensive plan mandates “…responsiveness to the preferences and needs of the neighborhoods around the parks.” See below:
•Action 1.2 B: Public Involvement — Consult with ANCs and local community groups on park planning and development to understand and better address resident priorities.
• Policy 2.1.4: Responding to Local Preferences – Provide amenities and facilities in District parks that are responsive to the preferences and needs of the neighborhoods around the parks. Park planning should recognize there are different leisure time interests in different parts of the city. To better understand these differences, the community must be involved in key planning and design decisions.
DPR’s draft 2006 Master Plan was blunt: “Based on interviews with staff and external stakeholders, DPR is not effectively communicating with internal staff and external stakeholders. Common complaints were a lack of consistent communication by DPR with the Area Neighborhood Clusters (ANC) and neighborhood stakeholders.”
Enough said about what was not done. The new “Vision Framework” provides an opportunity to redress past deficiencies. DPR should take the draft plan on the road to every ANC to solicit comment and engage the community in dialogue on how each of the different neighborhoods can benefit from enhanced parks and green spaces. As stated in the DC Comprehensive Plan, “To better understand these differences, the community must be involved in key planning and design decisions.” Finally, these meetings must be facilitated by neutral public participation professionals that understand how to build the capacity for community members to convey their needs and desires. Just as all neighborhoods have different needs, each has a different capacity to participate.
The District has never had a parks and recreation master plan. This first plan should be an exemplar of best practices. By committing to a robust public engagement process, the District of Columbia can take a bold step toward achieving that objective.
John Henderson, President, Green Spaces for DC
GSDC Celebrates Completion of PhotoVoice Project
Through a D.C. Urban Forestry grant, funded by the U.S. Forest Service, Green Spaces for DC conducted a youth-led PhotoVoice project. The theme is “if trees could talk.” PhotoVoice engages participants using photography as a way to discuss the circumstances that the images represent as a means of personal, community, and social change.
Through a D.C. Urban Forestry grant, funded by the U.S. Forest Service, Green Spaces for DC conducted a youth-led PhotoVoice project. The theme is “if trees could talk.” PhotoVoice engages participants using photography as a way to discuss the circumstances that the images represent as a means of personal, community, and social change.
Ten young adults and ten late elementary and middle school youth are participating in this eight-week project, managed by GSDC Director, Autumn Saxton-Ross. After being taught the basics of photography and how trees are important to our environment, the youth were given a digital camera for a week to take pictures around what they have learned. When they turned in the cameras, we reviewed the pictures with them and asked why they took each picture and how it relates to the theme. It’s a process of learning how pictures can help create change.
As part of the project, a variety of speakers interact with the youth. We’ve had an engineer speak on storm water management and conduct an experiment to help the youth understand how trees and green space play a part in managing storm water. A master garden has instructed them on how to conduct tree maintenance.
Project goals:
- To create an awareness of the importance of trees in an urban environment,
- Give youth in Wards 7 and 8 opportunities to engage with members their community and to voice their perspective, and
- To show the utility of PhotoVoice as a viable method to promote urban forestry.
Join us and the youth at an end-of-program exhibit of the photographs at the District Architecture Center. We are inviting elected officials, community leaders, and neighbors to meet the youth and engage with them. We want to have the youth share their understanding of the process of change and talk to them about the issues, how policies impact trees, and what changes are needed.
Read more about this project and the views of GSDC Project Manager, Autumn Saxton-Ross.
Please join us on July 31 to celebrate the youth accomplishments and support the work of GSDC. Donations are encouraged.
DC Parks and Recreation Master Plan is Off to a Shaky Start
A master plan is the fundamental planning tool for a parks and recreation department. The DC Department of Parks and Recreation has never had a master plan to guide its decisions, although the DC Comprehensive Plan refers to a 2006 master plan that has never been publicly available.
A master plan is the fundamental planning tool for a parks and recreation department. The DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) has never had a master plan to guide its decisions, although the DC Comprehensive Plan refers to a 2006 master plan that has never been publicly available. On June 11, 2013, the Department in partnership with the Office of Planning launched an initiative to create a master plan. According to the press release, “The Parks and Recreation Master Plan project team is interested in hearing residents’ ideas on the District’s overall parks system, including what is working well, areas that could use improvement, and large-scale ideas to be considered for implementation over the next ten years.”
The June 11 press release included one-week notification for the “first 3” public workshops on June 17th (Deanwood Recreation Center, 18th Judiciary Square and 20th Raymond Recreation Center. Really? Professional planners know that attendance at public meetings in the summer (i.e. Between Memorial Day and Labor Day) is not ideal and should be avoided. Also, if you are serious about public engagement, notice needs to be well-publicized at least two weeks in advance with plenty of constituent outreach. A notice of less than one-week is a patently inadequate. With this feeble start, the Office of Planning and DPR have conveyed the message that they are not interested in genuine participatory planning.
If disdain for public input wasn’t clear from the handling of the public meetings, it was from the announcement of the master plan kickoff. Once again short notice was given. The kickoff event was held on the same day and time that DPR was holding its first “Park Partners Summit.” If there is any group that should curry favor in the master planning process, it would be those organizations that have become officially designated DC park partners. Why disrespect Park Partners by forcing them to choose between the first-ever partners’ summit and the master plan kickoff?
The rationale for planning the initial three public meetings is not clear. Why was there such short notice; why only three meetings; why locate the meetings in Deanwood, Petworth and Judiciary Square; and why were these first meetings so lacking in substance?
I attended the first public meeting at the Deanwood Recreation Center, which was attended by approximately 20 residents. When questions about the short notice were asked, some in the room indicated they were given advance notice, while the meeting facilitator countered by stating that public meetings were one of several public participation tools, including a statistically valid survey and an on-line survey tool called Mind Mixer. Attendees were given business cards with a web address and encouraged to participate online. Mind Mixer does not yet have a following; none of the 19 “Great Ideas” posted apparently by the same person received more than 21 votes.
Office of Planning Director Harriet Tregoning and Parks and Recreation Director Jesús Aguirre provided generalized overviews about city growth and the changing needs for parks and recreation. There were allusions to the challenge of doing a master plan when DPR manages only 12 percent of DC parkland—even maintenance of that 12 percent is now outsourced to the Department of General Services. Mention was also made of the recent park scorecard issued by the Trust for Public Land showing DC as one of the overall best-served jurisdictions in the nation on a per capita basis, while suffering from an inequitable distribution of large useable parks.
The project consultants have done a condition assessment of 67 of 325 DPR sites and facilities. They indicate that there is no intent to complete the survey because of inadequate resources. Furthermore, the scope of the master plan is ill-defined. The PlayDC website states that the master plan will be “comprehensive,” but does not say how. Will this be an update of the CapitalSpace Plan which looks at all parks and green space in DC, including what is managed by National Park Service and DCDOT or, is this just a comprehensive look at parks and programs under the purview of DPR?
The parks, recreation and open space element of the DC Comprehensive Plan indicates that the 2006 master planning provides a detailed assessment of recreational needs in each of the District’s 39 neighborhood clusters. DPR should post the 2006 plan, and make available the planning maps for the 39 clusters. Each neighborhood can then make recommendations on how to review and update its plan.
For the master plan to be truly comprehensive the following steps must be accomplished:
- Post the 2006 Park and Recreation Master Plan including the plans for the 39 neighborhood clusters
- Map of all parks and green space in every neighborhood, regardless of management jurisdiction
- Assess the condition of all parks and recreation facilities, both DPR and NPS
- Substantively engage the public in each of the 39 neighborhoods to ascertain current needs and desires for parks and recreation facilities.
John Henderson, President
Green Spaces for DC