- If just 20% of the properties in my neighborhood changed hands from slumlord landlord to owners with dignity, 80% of our problems would subside. There is a common rule of thumb in business and statistics that says 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes. Read about the 80:20 rule, or the Pareto principle here.
- I feel after 8 years in St. Louis Public Schools, my kids are getting about as good a public education as you can in the region. I feel like I have the tools to understand my options should I need to make a move, they are here: www.stlcityschools.org
- It would be great to perform neighborhood-wide tree surveys. This could lead to sensible and calculated plantings of new Missouri natives street trees planted and harvest the dying/misplaced/dead ones and make firewood for the city to sell/give away. This would go a long way to improving curb appeal. Has anyone out there done this? I think it would be awesome to completely plant an entire neighborhood. The benefits of street trees are undeniable.
- Weird to say, but these days downtown feels less dead at night and more so during the day. Lots of jobs lost at AT&T, etc.
- I am amazed at the amount of development between I-44 and Delmar. I love what's happening in the middle part of the city.
- After visiting and writing about nearly all of our 111 parks, I think our department heads in the city should have valid credentials/experience. For instance, the forestry dept head should be an arborist and the park's dept head an urban planner, etc. We have a beautiful park system, but there is no leadership or vision that I'm aware of to elevate or maintain our parks. It is done on a ward by ward basis by politicians vs. the park's dept.
- I am weening myself off of social media...it really changes the way you are viewed by people who don't really even know you. It is an obvious advancement for our society, but at the same time, I don't necessarily think it benefits my life or my goals. Reading the Circle by Dave Eggars is helping me frame this technology. His fictional concept of privacy vs. transparency has changed my worldview on social media and the information age.
- If I hear one more suburbanite from the inner ring suburbs tell me what is wrong with St. Louis and why they left my head is going to explode. You are either part of the problem or the solution. Quitting and moving is the easy part. Abandonment and apathy are legacies that take much more time to heal.
- It seems like the Post-Dispatch has been more accurately reporting locations in their stories. They are becoming less lazy in saying "St. Louis man murders 2"...now they are getting it right and saying Bel-Nor man murders 2 in Jennings...baby steps are important in understanding our region and who we are. #Ferguson has been huge in building accuracy in reporting and honestly talking about our region vs. tagging everything to St. Louis. The honesty is refreshing. The people of Ferguson are the ones who can vote out the old ways and build new policies and ways of doing business. The ball is in their court and I'll watch and hope for the best on the sidelines; wish I could vote for change, but that's not how we are structured. It's Ferguson's problem to fix.
- We are a zero to negative growth region, meaning St. Louis and St. Louis County are collectively losing population...together...for the first time in STL County history. When this is the case, regional battles exist for jobs, tax base and residents. As it stands today, Clayton is St. Louis' greatest competitor for jobs. Centene expanding in Ferguson is great for Ferguson, but another snub to St. Louis. Remember BPV/Cordish and Centene parting ways? Centene surely hasn't forgotten, and they are doubling down in the burbs...not St. Louis. A central, bustling city mean a lot more to me than a sprawling region of suburban campus and "job centers".
O'Fallon Park
This is a beautiful park. One of my favorites. And you can't help but draw the comparison of O'Fallon Park to Carondelet Park as both have popular fishing lakes, extensive paved walking trails, picnic places, a wooden home, similar boathouses, nearly identical service buildings and massive modern Recreational Complexes.
Unity Park
Father Filipiak Park
Tambo Park
Okay, in visiting and blogging on all 108 St. Louis parks I've come across another mystery. The city website lists Tambo Park, a 1 acre park at Rutger and Ohio Avenues in the Gate District neighborhood as being placed into ordinance in 1985. Google maps has it listed here...
14th Street Mall Park
Per the city website, 14th Street Mall Park is a 1.27 acre park placed into ordinance in 1976. Well, if all that is true, I certainly can't find it. Of course, I found the amazing 14th Street Mall re-branded as Crown Square...but no park.
Rumbold Park
Hickey Park
The park was named after David Hickey, the first St. Louisan to lose his life in WWI. Per the city website:
Dedicated April 10, 1941 and named in honor of David Hickey, the first St. Louisian who gave his life for his country in the World War in the Battle of the Toul Sector, February 24, 1918. (source)
River Des Peres Extension Park
River Des Peres Park
This park is really a narrow strip of land along the western edge of the city as well as some islands of land in sections where River Des Peres Boulevard splits. The land in between the north and southbound lanes of River Des Peres should really be no-mow, not unlike much of the easements of I-255 in Illinois.
Joseph Leisure Park
St. Marcus Commemorative Park
I used to live near here for years, so this review will have some personal perspective. For instance, there are red tailed hawks and fox that hunt in this area. I cannot seem to find the proof, but I am convinced this part of the city was either a former landfill or common dumping grounds; or maybe when the cemetery was abandoned, it was filled and graded with crude fill dirt. Why?
W.C. Handy Park
W.C. Handy spent time in St. Louis around 1893; enough time to inspire one of his best known works: "St. Louis Blues", one of the first blues songs to succeed as a pop song. The song was published in 1914 by Handy's own company. The song gained so much popularity that it inspired the dance step the Foxtrot.
North Riverfront Park
This park is great for two reasons. First, of all the parks, this one has the best relationship with and access to the Mississippi River. This is the spot most popular with fishermen. Guys drive and walk right up to the banks and fish for mainly buffalo. This local delicacy, usually fried as described to me by the guy I talked to. You cast with heavy test line and poles that look like they are intended for the ocean. These fish get big.
Tandy Park
The park was named in the honor of Captain Charlton H. Tandy. Per the State Historical Society of Missouri, Tandy was born a free black man in Kentucky and went on to great things, serving in the Missouri Militia during the Civil War and a respected member of the Republican Party and civil rights activist.
Hamilton Heights Park
This park is in an improving area just south of some really, really nice urban new construction just east on MLK Drive called Arlington Grove. This is a great example of urban infill that is sensitive to its surroundings.
Lindenwood Park
Per the Lindenwood Park Neighborhood Website:
Here is a history of Lindenwood Park as relayed by Mr. and Mrs. Schneidewind of the 6600 block of Pernod.
Lindenwood Park did not exist until after the 1955 bond issue. Then it was a four-block-long by one-block-wide area of woods with sinkholes and kids’ club houses.
Tilles Park
This rather large, 29 acre park is a staple of the surrounding areas. In fact, there is a volunteer association established for the park. It's called the Tilles Park Neighborhood Association and you can read all about their concerted efforts here.
Amberg Park
Per the city website, the park was named in honor of Richard H. Amberg (1912 1967) for his personal distinction and his contributions to the parks and playgrounds of the city. Mr. Amberg also served as publisher of the Globe Democrat for a number of years. (source)
Ruth Porter Mall
The park was placed into ordinance in 1975 and is the result of housing clearance in the late 1950's. The park used to be pretty tired and abused looking. Recently, it has seen an amazing transformation by the Great Rivers Greenway organization. Funded through a tax increase voted on by the people of St. Louis and surrounding small towns in the suburbs of St. Louis County and St. Charles County to create the Great Rivers Greenway District, this pedestrian/bike trail is absolutely fantastic.