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Are
we losing the quality in our quality of life?
"It
is not length of life, but depth of life."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Here Emerson explains that quality holds a greater
value than quantity.
Our pace of growth and change Downtown is overwhelming,
without a doubt lengthening the life of Downtown
as a viable residential community, but is the quality
of life increasing as well?
Each month, parcels of land transition into construction
for new residential complexes, hotels, and office
buildings. New businesses are opening their doors
Downtown, though not yet in great numbers.
Recently,
the media spotlight has been cast not only on Downtown’s
burgeoning residential population, but also on our
community gaining a reputation for weekend events
and festivals. One neighborhood is highlighted as
the place for young adults to go “clubbing;”
another for our newest attraction, baseball.
Additionally, our sparkling waterfront is quickly
becoming a “themed” place for tourists.
With the newest attraction, Midway, recently docked
next to Navy Pier and the potential of the Old Police
Station historical site being turned into another
tourist venue, tourists will be able to spend the
entire day and then some.
These attractions bringing people Downtown, but
at what cost?
The attractions’ employees are unable to live
here, so they must commute into our community.
Tourist attractions bring with them tourist food,
tourist goods, tourist service and tourist prices,
in other words, inflation and exploitation.
When a neighborhood is largely made up of tourist
attractions, there is no community ownership or
pride. The attractions bring traffic, congestion,
drunkenness, crime and rubbish, increasing the duties
of already overstretched police and fire support.
The invasion of the tourist lifestyle makes it impossible
for residents to accomplish daily routines and activities.
Do we want Downtown to be branded as one big tourist
attraction? Or, do we want to be known as a world
class city filled with commerce, WiFi hotspots,
renowned museums, fine dining, quality entertainment,
tasteful community festivals, safe streets, and
quaint neighborhoods; the role model of Smart Growth?
Do we want our visitors to go away with an authentic
city experience? Or, a visit to San Francisco’s
Embarcadero?
I worry…Are we losing
the quality in our quality of life?
" While San Diego's done a good job of getting
people Downtown to live, government agencies need
to start approaching this area as a residential
community, too. There's no reason we can't offer
visitors AND residents exactly the experiences they
expect to find." Jim Abbott,
Meridian
“ I like living in the middle of all the activities
and excitement. I am concerned about the increase
in traffic, congestion and shortage of street parking.”
Judy Speaks, 600 Front
Apartments
“ Residents must stay on top of livability
issues to maintain an appropriate balance. It’s
human not to get involved until something goes wrong.
Then, it’s too late.” Wayne
Metlitz, Parkloft
Tourism should be just one element of our community,
accepted only when it doesn’t deter from the
quality of life for those of us who live here.
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