Yeah, these things are bad, but they are trade-offs. The number of trees removed looks really minimal, and fine when compared to the resulting improvements to the grounds. Turning over space to be used exclusively by the team is bad. A terrible precedent for a public park. The obvious thing to is for the city to pay to fix up this stadium it owns, and keep complete control. But governments seem allergic to doing absolutely anything beneficial for people unless it's a part of some Public-Private Partnership of dubious value. I'm not even mad at the Emerald Necklace Conservancy for railing against this their lawsuit. They're right. But at a certain point, I'd just like a stadium.Then there is the issue of the team taking over space outside of the stadium and cutting down trees.
Yeah, cars suck. They ruin cities. But this plan to keep cars away can work, I think, depending a lot on the details. There is literally not enough space in the area for any large number of people to drive and park, and people will figure that out pretty quick. Aggressive parking enforcement, with offending cars getting ticketed and towed, that'll deter drivers pretty quick. There aren't many spots better suited for public transit. I think this plan works.I don't buy that suburbanites are going to park near Mass and Cass to get on a shuttle to get to Franklin Park. I think a lot of them are going to drive to the stadium because they live in a suburban world where they always drive everywhere. They will be bringing tons of noise and pollution with them while they circle the neighborhood looking for parking.
This I don't understand at all. You will still be able to go to Franklin Park for peace and quiet, exactly as usual, 345 days a year. On those few game days, other people want to use the park to be loud and rowdy. They should be able to do that, too. If you still want peace and quiet on those days, the park is more than 500 acres. Find a quiet spot. There will be plenty.And then they will be bringing noise to the park. I and others go to the park for peace and quiet, not to hear "We Will Rock You" blasting from stadium speakers.
Also, I don't understand this complaint because the noise and the crowds would be there in any situation where the stadium is fixed up and filled to capacity. Even if it's just for high school football, a filled ~11,000 seat stadium will be loud from spectators and stadium speakers. So what do you want to actually happen to this stadium? Demolish it? Fix it up, but cut the capacity way down? What would you actually want here?