The pictures of the people opposing the stadium never surprise me, must be an average age of 65. It feels like such a microcosm of the larger issues that city planning and community meetings face today. A group of very vocal elderly, car-favoring NIMBYs who have the free time to hyper-focus on a project, show up to all the meetings, start a lawsuit, and go to small protests every few weeks. The vision they have for a place is what it would have looked like 50 years ago. While time has basically stopped for them since they bought their house, the younger generations are actively struggling through the lack of progress that the city/state has made in terms of housing, transportation, energy, public school investment, etc.
I've been to as many meetings as I can for this project (a bunch of times I'm not even aware that a meeting was happening and I hear about it in the Globe or on the Boston City YouTube), and every time it's the same 5-10 seniors who are saying the same thing.
- "I speak for the trees" (A bunch of those trees are dying and legally the plan is to add 100 more trees than those taken down over 10 years)
- "How will I park at church on the 6 Sundays a year when there will be an early Sunday game" (This stadium will be actively hostile to people trying to drive in and young people who are more likely to attend the games are also less likely to be car reliant in the city)
- "There has been no community input!" (Sir, you've said this at 5 straight meetings now, this is literally community input)
- "A private company should not own a stadium in the park" (The city owns it, and BPS will get the most use out of it. And a soccer team in the city will be a great community asset)
- "This is not what Olmsted wanted" (The area of the park was originally supposed to be a place for people to gather, it was an active part of the park. Do you see how run down the park is right now? Is that what Olmsted intended?)
There's no good faith, it's cater to me and my outdated views on what the city/world should be or else I will make it my passion project to halt progress for the next generation. At the meetings I've been to most of the supporters of the stadium are BPS students, teachers, coaches, and young families in the neighborhood. They talk about the lack of safety, the way the rest of the state looks down on BPS athletics, how this project excites them about growing up here or raising a family in BPS, how they will spend more time in the park, how they think that a local women's soccer team is a great community asset, etc. You often won't see them at more than one meeting but yet they are the ones who will be most affected. This sort of thing is true in community engagement processes around the city and It's the same with the federal government; a bunch of old wealthy individuals refusing to let go of power for the well-being of my generation.
Community meetings are important to some extent but we must understand that in many cases for Boston (especially this one) it's not at all representative of the community.