%2B(1).jpg)
While our neighborhood's designation as a "food desert" (except for dog food) has been inaccurately attributed to lack of greenhouses, the neighbors themselves have known for years that without more rooftops, translating to a bigger local population, our quest for a grocery store and other retail (not to mention a laundromat) would be in vain. At long last with the anticipated arrival of the RTD North Metro FasTracks station we assumed that enough people to make the station a good regional investment might be forthcoming, especially considering our proximity to the Platte River Greenway and of course, given the poignant features of our historic townships: Riverside Cemetery, ASARCO, Purina, and the Denver Impound.
Mayor Hancock's North Denver Cornerstone Collaborative was intended to economically mesh the various planning efforts to maximize the value of our public investment dollars in North Denver. Instead, the north neighborhoods look on grandiose visions in vain for signs of a new school, a new recreation center, and any grocery store whatsoever amongst schemes for mosquito farms, exhibition halls, parking lots and arenas. After defunding two neighborhood rec centers and converting Elyria School to a regional mental health clinic, perhaps dog agility really is our only hope. At any rate the comment period on the $1.3 billion I-70 rebuild ends in October, and all Elyria knows for sure is that we're supposed to lose half of our interstate access. That's a prime indicator that no more people are wanted in Denver County north of I-70; begging the question, are the Cornerstoners hallucinating, or simply kissing our aspirations (and grocery store) goodbye?
Tom Anthony
5001 National Western Drive
Denver, CO 80216
303-299-0202
No comments:
Post a Comment